f. work PAGE roux W , T H E G U A R D I A N n-mun: Doll: (rounded la IIII) Autlwrluu on Second Clue Ilnll Pou omen ucpnnmul. Ouuvn 'I'Io Inland Olllfdlll Publllhilt CO. Idltur and uunnglng Director. J. I. Inn-non Atom-lulu Editor, flunk Wllhr. The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than ' tho Weakest ink." cmuu.o1-rm-own. 1-nunsmu-. my 4, mo Canadians Buy British Since Britain cancelled food contracts in this country to correct her adverse trade balance with us-amounting to some 55400,- 000,000 last year-she has taken steps to in- crease exports to this country. The most spectacular, of course. was the devaluation of sterling last September, but other posi- tive measures were adopted. The result, according to president of the Board of Trade, Harold Wilson, has been that trade with this country has picked up during the first quarter of 1950. Mr. Wil- son declares that the United Kingdom Gov- ernment. wants to trade with Canada at the highest level, not the lowest "because the amount we can buy is limited by what we can pay for." .. The fact that Britain has slightly in- creased the amount she is willing or rather able to spend in Canada is due to increased buying of British goods by Canadians, and it is obvious that only by still further in- creasing our purchases from the United Kingdom, and from sterling area countries, can we expect to again break into the British market on any large scale. Bigger cllom output In making his announcement on dairy prices in the Commons recently, Agriculture Minister Gardiner probably had in mind a considerable switch of milk from butter to cheese factories this summer when he anti- cipated that cheese output this year would exceed the 1l1,000.000 pounds produced in 1949. The Minister also announced that all cheddar cheese made after May 1 in Ontario and Quebec will be requisitioned to fill the contract with the United Kingdom up to 85,000,000 pounds. However, this will not mean that Canadians will be short of cheese. A surplus of 34,900,000 pounds is in Cana- dian storage in the 'process of curing. Un- like butter, cheese must be aged. An ex- change notes that it is against the lawtto cell cheese for immediate consumption that is less than three months old. Most people like it better when it is aged nine months and connoisseurs who want cheese that really bites prefer it after two years' curing. The chief distinction of Canadian cheddar is that it can be stored that long without deteriorating, While Canada's cheese has been famous for half a century in the Brit- - lsh market Canadians ate little of it until recent years. But the taste for cheese in Canada has been growing, and the cheese industry would view with alarm any failure to supply the increasing domestic demand. Sound Money Does It The l-lainilton Spectator sees an ironic rebuke for the "funny-money" theorists in Alberlals present prosperity. Not many years ago, when the application of Social .Cl't!(lli doctrine had just about wrecked Alberta's economy, the credit of the prov- ince wns at a disturbingly low point. But recent years have brought great changes. Since the war ended in 1945 Alberta's debt has been substantially reduced, taxes have not been increased and its credit rating is among the best. Social services have also been extended and the general picture is so favourable that Alberta has come to occupy an enviable place among Canada's ten prov- lnccs. What has been responsible for this ex- traordinary comcback? Mother Nature was the bountiful one in the first instance; then ,came those lieralds of new wealth, the pro- spectors for blacl: gold. They found it in abundance, veritable lakes of it under- ground. Next came the capital--the fruits of orthodox finance--to develop these rich discoveries. The rest is spectacular history. The huge pipelines are being built that will convey this oil across the continent and serve vast numbers of consumers. Oil is the exclting topic in Western Canada, and Al- berta's store of it is calculated to ensure the flow for many years to come. That same oil has also poured millions of dollars into Alberta's treasury. It ls'paylng off in "dividends" never dreamed of by Abe:-hart and his followers: this money is sound. the good kind that buys the cookies and the childfen's shoes. It is real wealth, created by those traditional processes of ; d production. Strangely enough, too, there is no evi- dmoalint the Social Creditors out there are thoturn or eventltimt - in ' ' o piouant pool- ; 1. 1 dollars EDITORIAL -NOTES Yesterday provided an excellent oppor- tunity for store people going afishing, and they sure seemed to'take advantage of it. O O 0 Punch records an alleged bulletin outside a Toronto church: Do you know what hell is? Come and hear our new organist! 0 O 0 Now Charlottetown has some idea how Toronto feels when the Calgary Rough Ri- ders take over and ride trail down Yonge St. O O O This is the last week for entries for the Rural Beautification Competition. It is trite but true that there are no losers in this con- test except those who do not enter. I O 0 Britain's Labour Government must be congratulating themselves on following tra- dition in retaining Conservative Col. Douglas Clifton Brown as Speaker. Had they Qlone otherwise. the Conservative opposition would have had one more vote and the Govern- ment one less-perhaps to its downfall. O O O The Hudson Bay Route Association is seeking to have the opening date of the sea- son set at July 15 and the closing date ex- tended to Oct. 31 instead of the 12th as at present. The late Mr. H. K. S. I-lemming was a great advocate of this route and worked to have a grain elevator establish- ed here in order to take advantage of cheap grain from that port. 0 O 0 Joseph Whitaker, F.S.A., London, Eng- land, editor and publisher of the famous "Whitaker" Almanack, born this date 1820. He first issued his Almanack in 1868, and it has long been recognized as one of the most reliable reference books of its kind. It gives an account of astronomical and other phenomena, and a vast amount of informa- tion respecting Government, finance, popu- lation, commerce, and general statistics of the various nations of the world. 0 O O In addition to Principal Frank MacKin- non of Prince of Wales College, the Univer- sity of New Brunswick is honouring the Rt. Rev. R. V. MacKenzie, President-Rector of St. Dunstan's University by bestowing upon him the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws at the convocation this month. This well merited honour is a tribute both to St. Dun- stan's, which has earned many important diplomas and scholarships for its students, and to its esteemed Rector who is outstand- ing in the field of higher education in this Province. Preliminary estimates. by the Bureau of Statistics place farm net income for the year at &1,537,387,000, about four per cent below the revised all-time high of 31,600,336,000 for 1948. Year-livestock inventories dis- played an increase for the first time since 1944, but this gain was more than offset by a substantial decline in year-end, farm-held stocks of grain. Net farm income was high- er in the three Maritime Provinces, Quebec and Saskatchewan, the gains ranging from less than one per cent in Quebec to nearly 25 per cent in Nova Scotia. The decline in the other provinces varied from less than two per cent in Ontario to over 20 per cent in British Columbia. Preliminary estimates of net income by provinces follows, with totals for 1948 in brackets: Prince Edward Island 5t11,400,000 (h11,000,000);. Nova Scotia i'511,700,000 (till),-100,000); New Bruns- wick 5li25,000,000 07.28.700.000); Quebec 3iX244,700,000 (flS243,600,O00l: Ontario 5540?,- 400.000 W-112,800,000): Manitoba 35140,000,- 000 l!ll174,300,000): Saskatchewan S382,- 600,000 (3i374,900,000); Alberta 5i?279,300.- 000 (3ii305,700,000l; Brit.ish Columbia 035,- 300.000 (M-1,900,000). O O I Egg prices on April 28 this year and previous years. The prices quoted below are for Grade A Large. At Montreal and To- ronto the prices are those at which graded shipments are selling to wholesalers. At other points quotations are prices to chip- pcrs for ungraded eggs. 1950 1949 1948 Montreal . . . . .. 39 46-46',-'; 441.4,.-4.5 Toronto . . . . . 38-38!-; 44 43 Winnipeg . . . . 32 38 38 Vancouver . . . 39 42 361.”-,- Edmonton . .. 31 37 37 Regina . . . . . . 32 36-37 38-39 Charlottetown 31-32 36-38 37V;-39 Registered Station Egg Receipts week ending - . 1950 1949 Apr. 22 Apr.1.'5 Apr. 23 cases cases cases 3,055 3,265 3.772 1,780 1,720 1,992 ,710 720 602 Que. 11,259 11,815 9,476 Ont. 61,413 63,283 63,600 Man. .. . . . . . . . . . .. 13,547 13,386 15,386 Sask. .. . . . , .. . . . .. 14.708 13,075 20,222 Alta. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17,158 15,320 21,930 9,811 10.103.10.370 ...- 1... 133.441 132,687 147,350 ...... Total Figures for 1950 are estimated. Previous an .-opt-4.!-I-.-6 v-rv-year sw W . . , . , . . THE GUARDIAN. 7: J if-le&l'i&mM MUSIC AND MOONLIGHT How sweet the 'moonlight sleeps upon this bank! Here will we sit, and let. the solmds of music Creep in our ears: and the night Become the touches of sweet har- soft. stillness mony. Sit. Jessica; look, how the floor of heaven ls thick inlaid with patines of bright gold: There's not the smallest orb which thou behold'si; But in his motion like an angel sings, Still qniring to the your-.g.eyed chcrubins; Such hamiorly in in immortal souls; But, whilst this muddy veslurc of decay Doth lzrosslv close it. in. we cannot hear it -Shakespeare .3-3 (And 9. E. 1.; yii GALLANTLY RECEIVED Legislative Council, Friday, March 6. 1846: "A petition from certain ladies. resident at St. Eleruiar's and its Vicinity. was presented by Hon Capt. -Swabey. The hon. gentleman observed that. it. bore the signature of forty-six ladies. and was couched. not only in unobjectlonable, but very flattering and complimentary terms, and directly appealed to the Eallantry of the House. The object of the petitioners was to induce the House to sanction a grant, by William weeks of the Schooner 'JI.ne. to enable him to run me and Schoon once a fortnight be- tween Charlottetown. St. Eleanor”: and Bale Verte. The petition tjocu. lsrly observed the hon. gentleman) did not say whether there was a Gretna Green for the terminus of the trip from this Island, but, he was half inclined to think there was some such wuvenlence at the and of It. , "On his Honour. the President's 9-Vllresslng some doubt as to the parliamentary propriety of receiv- "lll I lBdiES' Petition. a. search was made for a precedent. but none 13911.18 found, either for or against the 3580. their Honours gallantly agreed to receive the petition. "Which was read. and ordered to lie on the table." About Outlawing Communists (Ottawa Journal) and other Bullsh- speaking countries will watch keenly the outcome of Premier Menzies law outlawing Australian Communists. For about this mat- ter for 5, long time there has been much debate, some of it angry. Opponents of the thing Premier Menzles has done any that to out- larw Communists would be merely to drive them underground, thus making them more dangerous: that it is better to have them in the open where they can be watched. The retort of those who would outlaw Communists is that if we can't have laws to protect our- selves against .Communlsts just. be- cause such laws would drive Com- munists underground. then why not say that we should not have criminal laws because criminal laws drive criminals underground? They retort also that Fm 4 t or the worst; of them, are under- ground anyway. and that what 18 needed is police power to root them out. i The opponents of outlwwlng Com- munists say that it; is impossible to legislate ideas out of men's minds, and that attempts to do so run contrary to British ideas of freedom. The retort of the anticommun- lsts is that no theory of freedom. British or othcnvise, gives any group a right to work toward violence to destroy freedom-that if any such belief or practice in freedcm ever existed the time has comc to re-examine and change it. So the debate-vwit.h much mom -has gone. Australia as it sort. of guinea pig showing which side is right or wrong. or wise or unwise, should be interesting. Bader Wins Again (Telegraph-Journal) We forget many people. often heroes, but the name Douglas Badcr made such an impression on all who were taking I lively in- teresl in the dramatic days of 1940 that he is still instantly recalled by most Canadians. He was then Squadron Leader Badcr and he commanded the All-Canadian Squadron of the R. A. 11, fighting with bravery. dash and brilliance in the epic Battle of Britain. That alone would have won him fame in this country. Two things com- blned to make luting: he was legleu even then, having lost his legs in on accl- dent before the war: but he had proved to the R. A. 1'. till! he. with artificial legs. could handle I plane as well no any unhnndlcop- ped mm and better than moot. The All-CInudlun- squadron. which had been hammers: during the fighting over proud to follow him when he took them over. and was proudexnatlll when Elder was awarded a D.S.O. and n D.ll'.C. ' ', From August '41 wlun. with fifteen enemy plane: to his credit, he himself Iiu Ihot. down over terrltor hold by the German: un- til Apt-l,'45 ho was out of night In n.pr1.Ioncr-o-war eompf but not out'of mind. He, emerged II Group Captain Elder and won in prison he made three unluccouful attempts to escape. Each time the Germans deprived him of his arti- flcinl logs for 0 law days no pun- Dunkorque. way cnzuzcorrarowiv Vtlslllg Ilp-or. llono tLe't:'S tell gwherxe p in WINNING. an-Q secs t ether 1'11. tot MR. LUOIFER w. LOONEV, WELL Known P0l:lTl(Ai. STIIITEGISI: ctILllliEll's, BOOK Auruoll AND AMATEUR CMtl'DOlllsT, REVIEWSACHAPICR mom "PRIMER row. Pouncos," NEW PART Y BOOK BY Puvne noluce sen-rz. . at vb lshment. Lately, out od uniform. he has been travelling for an oil firm. Now, however, he has again been showing that on the golf links. as in the sky. he can still excel. . In the competition for the Golf Illustrated Challenge Cup at Cam- berley Heath. "playing with I handicap of four and two artificial legs". he won with a net seventy- five and seventy-eight for the thirty-six holes. A good many golfers with I full complement of legs would rate themselvu pretty highly if they could do that. The indomitable Buder seems to take it in his-artificial-stride. Over- coming handicaps like that is a matter of the spirit and Bader has shown repeatedly that he nur- mountn Ill difficulties. He is not a Canadian. but his personality and his command of all-Canadian squadron during the greatest sir battle of all times have carved for him a niche in Canadian anmll. and not only Canadian golfers will congratulate him on his lat- est exploit. World Poverty And World Surpluses (New York Times Service) New York. April 30 . - Unless world poverty and the world's un- marketable surpluses can be brought together, civilization can- not last. Lord Boyd Orr. 1940 Ndbel Peace Prize winner, said to- night. , The Scottish peer. an intern- tionally known nutrition expert and crusader for world govern- ment. spoke at. a dinner forum of the Nation Associates at the Wol- donf-Astotia Hotel. Fred: Kitch- wey. editor of The Nation. is pres- ident of the group. The dinner forum was the last of a series of meetings held Saturday and Sun- day to discuss "The Atomic Ero- Can it Produce Peace and Abund- once?" Lord Boyd Orr said that the "upsurge in Asia" ' and the "ad- -IZNIV” DDOt"Itlfi'90l300tZ"70lCtC"3UOD The Age-old Story :u.xo.x:vo.t.ex:t.;e-.z..zuo.,-ot...;.;tc.o-.t.;.-..-mi. If thou shalt. obey Hi: (the Angora) voice. uur do an out ll speak, than I will be on enemy unto thine ancmlol. Ind In adver- sary unto thine adversaries. vouco in technology which has changed the economy of scarcity to one of potential abundance” were factors which offered no great threats to civilization as the atomic bomb. "America is already embarrassed with unmnrketolble surpluses of food." the speaker said. "In lur- ope, even after the devastation of the last war, there is the throat of unmnrketable surpluses of steel. coal and other industrial commod- tles within the next three years. Unlesl we can adjust human so- ciety so that these two dangers - rovolt against poverty and unmar- lrotable surpluses - cancel each other out. our civilization cannot survive even if another atomic bcvmfb i.I never dropped." The United Nations, Lord Boyd Orr said, is not working effic- icntly. "There is danger of it going the same way as the League of Na- tions." he said. "because the world is distracted by ideologic l differ- ences Ibout theories of capitalism. socialism and V mun-ism and by selfish national and class interests. The Atlantic charter for peace and prosperity has been replaced by the Atlantic pact for a war of de- fence. Co-operation of the nations on a business footing to develop the resources of the earth for the benefit of all has been replaced by Marshall Plan aid from a rich and generous nation which, alas. will receive little thanks. The poor however humble and grateful out- wardly, in their heart: hate and E-oscnt anything savoring of char- ty. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Chas. R. McQuuid LA. BA.IBls'l'EIt, BOLIUITOI. NOIIAIY. nu. lluun-n Trust nulldla; unanwrrrmwo Phone Wu Dr. A. L. Moclsouc DENTIST Donal X-BI; GLORIA BUILDDVO 17! Gillian Sf. Phone 29! Frederic A. Large. K.C. IARBISTEB, SOUOITWI. NOTARY loyal Bank of Canada Ulnmbul Clnrlottatown, 9.3.1. Sucoeuor i Georgi J. Tweedy, L0. Mucfhoo 8. Trainer 8. B. MloPlll3l. J.A., no I .s0lllEBl..El) TBAINOR. BA. no mo. roombo Bldg. 105 QIIDOII it Gouda! 8: Howard GIIJEIT A. GAUDET. IA-. Ll-I Bnrrloton Ind Solicitors Money in loan Canadian Bank of Oonunorco Bldg. Charlottetown m.--.-.- .I. 8. TAYLOR Optouotrllt Gnu onnlned. than III- Oorlut In! a' queen. nu. Office Phone IIII-Home IQII lull & Muflllosoil nnusdnns. souorrons no. I. B. BELL M.l:.. . D. I. MATIIIESON, L5,, L0. Attorneys at law LOANS ON CITY AND IAIII PBOPIITIIB ID Ilohlnond U0. Obulottahwu. l'.lJ M. Albun Farmer HONEY T0 MIAN LLB. a.A.. IAIIISTII. soucrml. Ion. Olin-loctohnvl. P. I I. Dr. W. R. Carson Chiropractor hlnuunduoto OIAIIHPIIIDWN , &l Prlloo OI. Phono IMI Motlioson & Poolio A.IV.IIATIlll0N.I.0. LI. PILII. IA-. LLB &I'r&I.Ih. Oolloclon-blonvhlaul from lonfvlllc Vnuoouvu. canto Idla V x" .p W. Grunt 0.A. V Phones: 13,- Ml! . . '. lonorlbllla ODIIII, I cannon ihcoolmimrrn Montnol. Quooo. olhyn. jhthto. Joupll ll: uuguurun. , g LL08. ' nninn. common. on J. A. McGIlIgIIlI "mw E um-nv. no. --- - -- 'f:mr...':.:::.'.:'.'.:c olufouotovn II. B. IIOANI I O0. Imlm Ulvlorld Aooounllnu no OIIAIIOITITOWN IIAIOIII W. IIIIHII. .0. A. Indhll lulu. 0 lot 151 HIM WU: Iii?! I The boom in Florida citrus land power of a new Idea to work rapid changes in the economic plct re. Two year: ago, the glut of c'i.!11s fruits was a motor headache. To- geneuted concern lest the boom get out of hand Ind boost produc- tion into new surpluses. what hap- pened was the perfection of meth- ods of freezing collcentrated Cit- rus juices. Processors will use 24 million boxes of oranges this year. and prices u-e six to ten times what. they were 3 year ago. If some gen- ius will Just invent a way to make a superior motor fuel from pota- toes and butter we will have silved another surplus problem. Dont be too sure that 1'. wont be done. Gasoline was once a troublesome by-product, whose chlcf pur, osc seemed to be creeping into the kerosene and causing lump ex- plosions.-Chicago Daily Nexis or all the people who left their names in Nova Scotla. one of the most curious wus John Pcrccval, second Earl of Egpiont. we find memories of him in I-Jgmont. Lake- of 1-Innis County and cup: Egmont in Victoria. County. The Earl use I strange mixture. He served in the House of Commons and in the House of Lords: he was swo'n in member of the Privy Council. In 1786 he became First Lord of the Admiralty and while in that high position wasted between 400.000 and 500,000 pounds on ostentatious ad- ditions to the Dockyard. After the Treaty of Paris in l'l”3 he sought to obtain a grant. of Prince Edward Island, Ht idea was to divide the Island into hundreds, manor: and fret-holds. In the cen-. tn would be his castle. After con- sideration, however, the Earl's scheme was turned down. That was in the your 1761 Two years laterl he accepted I grant. of 130.020, corn on the lhubonacodie Rive:-.. -- Halifax Ohronlcle-l-lersld. ! Just between in women. don't, you think that Parisian designer of men's clothes-Gaston some- t.hlnz-or-otheiu is getting hill metaphors mixed. it we may mix I metaphor? We mean, after n'.l,' you can't expect. A man to wear those things. Or-and the thought, is just. as discouraging-ran you'll, Maroon tuxedun. black evening. (sashes, no lessli, frllled white, shirts, contrasting bindings on various garments, and those asser- tions of violet in how tics. silly" vests. trouser stripes, and what. not! -well, you saw what that reporter ' wrote from Paris about men's clothes holding their own with our Saute Couture.what man could" co-operate in such I. color scheme even to please a woman? The way, i Notes By The offers I (the illustration of the. -is that man day, land prices have doubled, and, H Chin-opodlst trousers with gay c'ummerbunds,l MAY 4, 1930 Way - we women see it-don't you Irreej like to act as a quiet background to set. usaolf. The; get their satlsf. .t.lpn by barn in, us in the most colorfrl that money lean buy. They really prefer to be-, or to seem-modest about their 0.... persons. And if thaifs the way thpy wont. it. why aliould a Parisian as. signer try to force them to contour to an order of plumage which the; would abhor? -- Christian Science Monitor. A lawyer in a legal suit. invoivln, the manumctlurers of bafmlncoy birds, or shuttle-:ocks is the nu!l1or- lty for the statenieiit that "it cut fCrCIlt'D of one main in the ucighi of a bird will lmke p' dlfferentc of a foot in play." Our readers win remember their tables of walghu and measures will recall that 2'1.- 34375 grains make-one dram. mic in drama, 44:15. grains.) matte ntio ounce. In the light. of this kilow- lcdge, bnd-mint-in players sliurlc keep a very careful eye on the con- dition of their birds. The moist: rt from a hot ham: may add suffic- ient weight to alter the flight. of the bird; a tattered feather u in: mean inches in distance, and that speck where a :ly pnused moment- arlly may mean the difference be- tween the hlrd falling over the net or staying on t-.in sorter": side. The relation of weight. to distance in liadinintmi birds should be studied as assiduously as Einstein's relativ- ity of time and space It may decide a championship We would suggest that championship contestants keep apothecarys scales in close proximity to the badminton court, and that no opportunities be lost in hustling the birds over to the scales for "weighing ln" not only before the matches, but as often during the course of play an is feasible. -Sudbury Daily Star. Far Foot Ailament consult A ll..I.ll. Bliowil II. P. '- ortllooalilc i 51. i x 143 Great George Street cuAm.o1"ra'rowN. an .I.I'. Macrherson & son "Menls Clothing That. Fits" SUITS - TOPCOATS - OVERCOATS 157 Queen Street You can not a loan of HllUSEHOill FINANCE ,-famaanceo AN OFFICE IN or trim or fill; now, convenient Household olfko 350, S100, S300, S500 Household Finance, Canada's leading consumer finance organizuiomhas iust opened on office at 1 11-1 is Grafton Street in the Phillips Building, to better serve the cou- venience of men and women of this city and nearby communities. y Our managers and staff are selected and trained to give you the kind of loan service you will appreciate. For a lulu, financial advice, or botn.::ur office will serve you. quickly and caurteoualy. Public preference for Housman in redacted in th continuing expansion of our friendly service, through- out Canada. With 72 yurs' experience, this service is meeting the needs of people in all walks of life. it is the reason why 5 out of 4 - who borrow from a Consumer Finance Company - ciiopre HOUSEHOLD. You, too, will be I satisfied customer. You may borrow up to 31000 for any useful purpose. Loans are mode on your own signature, without endor- uro or banlnblo security. You select your own plan of convenient monthly payments. spread over 24 IIIOIIIIII or less. HEC'o popularity is doc to ruoonnbio men for IIII but in Consumer Loon service. You will be welcome of thin new oici or at any of our 1 15 office: rhrougllout Canada. Phone, write or non HFC to-day for"Moneviwnen you need it." t III-I15 Grafton Strut Room 2, Phillips Ildg. 1 Phone 266 CIIAILOTIITOWN. P.I.l. llotnnloiti i”-lllmiltllf l