The title role in the opera Fal- staff proves a challenging one for British singer Howell Glynne as TALE NT GOING fo w7xI§r he dresses for a London rehearsal. It’s not that he doesn’t have. the stomach for the job —-it’s just that the chore of getting the false stomach inside the pants has him- panting. (AP Wirephoto) INTERPRETING THE NEWS Nasser Shows That He Lives In .Dicfator’s Dream World By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP) —- The border dispute between Egypt and the Sudan confirms western fears that President Nasser still lives in a dic«tator’s dream world. His bid to claim for Egypt two areas long accepted as part of the Sudan is seen by some ex- perts as theopening move in a Russian-backed campaign for in- fluence in the horn of Africa. The theory is that the Sudan is 1 ‘V just the appetizer for 'a bigger meal, which might include Ethio- pia and Somalia. Like many coun- tries in northeast Africa, Ethiopia . is in a state of flux, somewhat alienated from Britain ‘and France, her shaky economy prop- ped by financial help from the United States and Canada. MODERN HITLER Official Britishopinion has long a-ttributed grandiose ambitions to Nasser. The Suez intervention pol- icy of Sir Anthony Eden was de- termined largely by his conviction that the real danger in the Middle East was that Nasser, with tacit Russian support, would pick off one country after another, like a latter-day Hitler. In thevpresent dispute, similar warnings’ are sounded by Conser- vative newspapers. . The Yorkshire Post says Nas- ser’s aspirations in Africa are “as real and menacing” as his. avowed ambition of establishing a single Arab empire along the Mediterranean coastal area, from the Atlas to the Taurus : oun- tains. f‘The true significance of Egypt’s present actions," it says, “is not to be found in a few troop movements in a stretch of barren desert between the Red Sea and the middle Nile, bu-t in a momen- tous, long-term shift in world power.” Néinllclg Very first use of soothing, cooling Iiflllid D. D. D. Prescription positively relieve: raw red itch—-caused by eczema, rasha. scalp irritation, chafing—-oth_er itch troubles Greaseless, stainless. 39¢ trial bottle must satisfy or I-noney back. Dont suffer. Ask rout druggist for D.D.D.P 0N UNGRADED I EGGS Our paying price to pro- ducers for ungraded eggs delivered Charlotte- town today is—— ’ Grade A Larfge . . . . 31c Grade A Medium . .. 26c Grade A Small . . . . . . 21c Grade B 21c Grade C 15c Cracks 15c For quick payment and prompt return of empty cases, ship your eggs to_ CANADA PACKERS LIMITED‘ ’ Charlottetown POWER STRUGGLE Czeslaw Jesman, writing in The Daily Telegraph, looks ‘at the frontier crisis in the light of what he calls the coming struggle for mastery of the Horn, of Africa. Nasser,’ he says, would never have taken this first step toward ’ southward expansion without as- surance of effective help from Russia, “within the framework of a joint strategic plan” involving» infiltration and intrigue. Some commentators‘ are less sure of 'Nasser’s intentions and less certain of his ultimate suc- cess. A common reaction is that the overt move against the Sudan will merely harden opinion against him. Apart from wider cold-war as- pects, the flareup between Egypt Today, over one million Cross service. be calculated. Canadians have received free blood transfusions since the start of this peace-t1me Red The number of lives that have been saved, the tragedies that have been averted through this one Red Cross service, can never Nor can they be - measured in terms of money. Red. Cross blood donors ‘give their blood freely, asking neither reward, nor recognition . . . Yet, it does cost money to . maintain blood donor clinics and depots, to process, refrigerate and transport whole blood and blood products. Dollars are des- perately needed to ensure this wonderful service continues. Please help. Give . . . that others may live. support the You Serve By Giving Page-L16 The Guardian Monday. March 3, 1958 By "DON HOYT Canadian Press Staff Writer MONCTON, N.B. (CP) — But for the flip of a coin, the pattern of labor-management relations in the Atlantic provinces might have been cast in a different mould. , “Two fellows were trying to sell me steamship tickets, one to Canada and the other to Aus- tralia,” said Norwegian - born Henry Harm. “It was actually by the flip of a coin that I decided on coming to Canada." That was in 1929, when he was 22 years old. “I entered the Norwegian. la- bor movement in 1924 when I was 17,” Mr. Harmsaid. “Un- ions were then,ac'cepted in Nor- way as fully as they are in Can- ada today." ‘ Now he is the militant -— but moderate -— director of organiza- tion and education for the Cana- ‘and the Sudan poses a complex legal ‘ problem. In dispute is a rough triangle of territory north of the 22nd par- 1 allel, defined as the boundary in a treaty signed in 1899. Three years later, an administrative de- cree transferred to the Sudan two areas north of the parallel, and the ruling has been respected un- til now, with the contested areas voting in Sudanese elections. - STRONG FEELINGS The question could be an aca- demic one for international law- yers——or it could be the begin- nings of a new crisis sparked by restless, land-hung-ry Egypt, com- mitted to ex - king Fa-rouk’s dream of a united Nile valley. The Sudan, newly embarked on independenceafter a 50-year tute- lage, can be expected to resist , Nasser’s attentions. She has only 10,000,000 people in a territory not -much smaller than Australia, but she has strong national feelings og her own. Basil Davidson, an African expert now in Khartoum, writes in The Manchester Guard- ian, an independent Liberal pa- per: - ‘ “The new state engagi-ugly com- bines an Arab dignity with an stillness with a ‘paganverve, ‘a population almost entirely illiter- ate with an almost casual confi- dence in a literate future, on economy still in the pre-income tax era with a whacking big am- bition for development; and lastly a good administrative framework. It is not exactly bliss to be alive in the Suday today, but-it is cer- 62 Prince Sitrcct, Charlottetown ~ 1 tainly exciting.” Dial 8551 581 3 African tolerance, ‘an Islamic. . I-Iolman’s are offering Maritime Labor Leader ls Interested In Communities dian Labor Congress in a region enveloping Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick and Newfoundland. ACTIVE WORKER Most of the 125,000 East Coast unionists affiliated with the 1,- 000,000,-member CLC look to the short, heavy-set Scandinavian for guidance. The CLC regional office is here. But Mr. Harm and his field representatives keep constantly on the move strengthening the la- bor movement and urging mem- bers to take a greater part in community affairs. , ’ “We organize labor institutes to. . .make our members become interested in the affairs of their communities, their provinces and the nation as a whole.” For 29 of his 50 years he has been associated with trade un- ions, as a member or an execu- tive. He -was never a worker- striker. Nor has he ever been in- volved in strike violence. “Where there is goodwill and a willingness of understanding .on both sides there can be peaceful labor - management relations.” His birth in Norway, which has been governed by labor parties since the late 1920s, was undoubt- edly a strong influence on the young immigrant whose first Ca- nadian job was on a Quebec farm, for $2 a week. He moved on to Montreal with a’ smatter- ing of English, learned by match- ing pictures and words in a mail- order catalogue. » “I could make myself under- stood,” he recalled. “Then in Montreal, of course, I started to read and with the help of a dic- tionary made out all right." From a construction job in sub- urban Lasalle he went to an- other pick-and-shovel job in Dal- housie, N.B., where a paper com- pany mill was being built, then went to work in the mill. a By 1942, when he left the pap- Simplicity Patterns As a special feature during “Sew and Save” Week, —FREE——a Simp- licity pattern of your choice with any purchase of fabrics in their dress-goods sec- ti on in the amount of $1.98 or over. .“Color Vision” take-home chips match and harmonize. We set the dials . . presto - ~— your color’s mixed in seconds. Buy ONLY what you need . . . . . you can get the exact same shade again next week or next year. per mill for a better job in the war-booming shipyards of Pictou, N.S., he had been for five years financial secretary of the local u n i o n of the International Brother h o o d of Papermakers, and had married Edith Valdon of Dalhousie. They have three chil- dren. While in Dalhousie, Mr. Harm bought and cleared two acres of land and built a house which he still owns. He was elected vice-president of the Maritime Marine Workers local in Pictou, an affiliate of the Canadian Congress of Labor, formed in 1940. In 1945 he became general rep- resentative of the CCL and/was stationed in Halifax. Later he went to Saint John, N.B. in the same position. In 1951 he was or- dered back to Sydney as acting regional director of the CCL, a post confirmed a year later. LABOR UNITY ~ .. In April, 1956, with th emerger of the CCL and Trades and Labor Congress, he was chosen the Ca- nadian Labor Congress’ Atlantic director, one of five in various regions of Canada. “That was one of the greatest achievements of organized la- bor,”\he said. “We have obtained unity on a national basis.” - Mr. Harm campaigned for CCF candidates in Nova Scotia in the 1945 federal and provincial elec- tions. He has no political aspira- tions but feels organized labor should enter the field. “Regardless of party affili- ation, it should be the duty of every organized worker to take an active part in political affairs. After all, they must safeguard the rights and privileges they have won through their hard struggles for rightful recognition in the country's economic and political life.’_’ a VISITS JAPAN TOKYO (CP)—-—Dr. H. L.‘ Keen- leyside of Ottawa, ‘secretary-gen eral of the United Nations tech- nical assistance agency, will‘ visit Japan'this weekend. He is stop- ping in Tokyo en route to the 14th general meeting of the United Nations Economic ‘Com- mission for Asia and the Far East (ECAFE). ' here's your answer to paint color problems! Now you can get the colors you want AUTOMATICALLY, without, extra cos to glorify your home inside and out. Long lasting, washable paints. see the fabulous new paint invent ion . . . B-H automatic llfllallllllllllflllsflli cnoosn YOUR COLORS. The new selector will help you More than 500 from which to choose. . push a button and “'3 HQLMAN'S HARDWARE . . . both stol-‘es Tell Laura Bain Group Of Church Building Fund The regular monthly _m_eeting of the Laura Bain Missionary Group took place on Monday eve- ning at the home of Mrs. C.B. Jelly, on the kind invitation of Mrs. ‘Brent Waugh who is now residing there. The president, Miss Vera Waugh, opened the meeting by welcoming the sen- ior missionary group as guests. She expressed the wish that they would enjoy the meeting and re- ceive a blessing as a result of their attendance. Devotional op- ened by singing of a hymn. The scripture was read by Mrs. Frank Jenkins, followed by Circle of Prayer. The president gave the Devotional message entitled, ' “Does God really care about our Prayers?” Mrs. Elmer Newson read a poem on prayer. A hymn closed the devotional. Mrs. Ern- est Morrison, Mrs. Clarence Mer- cer and Mrs. John Leuty presen- ted a one-act play entitled “Do you Know?” It told how the chur- ches with their new community fund lend money to communi- ELMSDALE Mrs. Orrin Wallace, was a re. cent visitor with her sisters, M1-5, Hardy, and Mrs. Farrell, in Charlottetown. ‘ Miss La-ureen Clohossey, and Master Desmond Clohossey, Tig. ' Mrs. A. D. 0’Brien. Mrs. Basil MacNeill has re. turned from a month’s holidays, son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Claude MacNeill, and her shaw. ed from Western Hospital, where ' he has been receiving treatment ' for an infected nose. were visitors to Summerside on Monday. ,' . " . Mr. and Mrs. Merrill left on Monday for where he ha_.s accepted a in the Civil Service. His wish him every success. Her many friends in E1m‘sda1e Wallace,‘ Toronto, Position. friends nish, were week-end guests of ‘NEW their grand-parents, M;-_ and ‘End spent in Summerside with her and daughter and son-in-law, Mrs, A 1,, Wallace Bradshaw and Mr. Brad. Mm ' \ Mr. Merrill Dunn, has return- Get Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Wallace- ,1 Mr. Clay-ton" Wallace, son of ' All are pleased to know that Mrs, Frank Dunn has, resumed her ' duties as teacher in the Summer.. " side High School, following aw. _ bout with pneumoniafi in. the ’i -~ ‘ Prince County Hospital. - ” ties without churches. The money is loaned interest free for the first four years, and after at .a low rate of interest. Many of these churches are now self-sup- porting, and doing a great Chris- tian work. , Sincere sympathy is being Mrs. Ted Poole conducted‘ a mended to Mrs- Norman Green quiz on “Tidings”. Seventeen 111 the death 1'°°911t1Y~ of her ~« members were present. Plans were made to send a box of food to Rev. John Lockwood in An- gola. Mrs. W. Ellis invited the members to her home for the March meeting. During the social hour Mrs. Keith Hobson held an interesting quiz on Baptist missionaries, which was enjoyed by all. Lunch was served by the soc- ial committee. Mrs. Jack Mac- Leod, president of the senior soc- iety, thanked the Laura Bain- group for their hospitality, and wished them every success in their work. The Italian seaport of Brindisi mother, in Campbellton, N. 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