E - G U R D I A Ni At the same time it was revealed that a book written by Mr. Eisenhower, ”Crus- ade in Europe", and given to Mr. Truman . in 1948, will be placed in the Truman Li- brary now under construction in Kansas It bears Mr. Eisenhower's Puhliumi every week day in-uriiinp II In Vnntl street. can lmleinwn. P F: I, by the rlionuon Company Limited. 'Cueu Priun Edward IIIIII l.lII In lieu" Ildiuu no alumni. in A. lunon. uoouu Editor. run Wain: Ii-nncli omen an ii .. . Iloni-;uo' and Alnerion Aucboi ued on second Clan Mull by the Pool Omen Department. tllun Av twin-lei. rliailulii-iuwn, muiiiiirrside Il3.i.IIl per annum Else nbero in P I 39 00. Uttici Province: um U 3 DE! Illlllllll. Wlfhe ntrongest memory In weaker thou the welkut Ink." City, Missouri. lVl0.Vl;Ah'. xov. :9. ism ed to any person. admiration, and friendship." Right Honourable Knight y Sir Winston Churchill is Her Majesty's Prime lilinlsier of Great Britain and Nor- While formal courtesy. birthday, but he is far more than'that to lay tribute to a vreat st tes 1. n nd , , . . , , :,”,a, ma”. R a "1 a a prosaic political differences and, indeedp If qualities of leadership are the halli namcends mom m pubm good Fehhel mark of Ermumssy then Chumm” ranksi men. ii ho feel that they enhance then own) with the greatest. If an infinite capaci for taking pains constitutes genius then he' ranted aspcrtfions ,0" iheir plredeccssors or ' opponents, might find in the little exchange is a true genius. If indomitable courage marks the hero, then he is indeed cast in a heroic mold. If great events call forth great men, there have been few greater. Although he ran for Parliament at the ago of 23 and in the following forty years held almost every great office of state, it uas not until the second and by far the a lesson well worth learning. the war his was a voice crying in the wil-I derness, warning the people of what was to come. Had the bloody struggle beeni averted he might well have gone down int . . . . . . l history as a rather futile figure striving in telton). stood what had been happening and what, the highest. tax rate on must be done about it. He accepted the post” of war leader with a confidence and deter- mination which .he communicated to his fellow countrymen and to the llis failures were the consequence lack of means for which he cannot be held responsible. His victory, for it was his vic-, give up, tory although he was no longer Prime Min-l I loser. autograph and this inscription: ”For President of the United States, Harry S. "N, Truman, with the request that, as my Com- imander-in-Chief since the latter days World War Two, he will accept this volume , which is, except for those going to members T iof my immediate family, the first present- With lasting respect, There is in this exchange of books and them Ireland as he celebrates his eightieth ' friendly Sennmems Soniethlng more thani it would not be the countless people all over the world whoi iaasy to give it a namC' anyone can See that, lit adds a touch of grace and gentleness to, U, qualifications for office by casting unwar-I ”The Best Miikers" The concern expressed by the Canadian Minister of Finance over the high rates of, taxes, notes the Montreal Gazette, is evi-i dently shared in Great Britain. greatest World War had been going on for a l ter Harris said in Montreal that he was year that he at length achieved the office worried that the rate schedule of taxes takesl of Prinic Miiiistcir. For the ten years before away so high a proportion of the rewards, of hard work. The more a man earns, the more taxation penalizes him. Much thci same thing was said in England recently by Lord Chandos (the former Mr. Oliver Lyl- Lord Chaiidos believes there can vain against the stream of human affairs, be little question that the present tax The event proved that he was right and rates remove ”all incentive to earn above' left him as the one man who really under- about JI4,000 a year net." He suggests that earned should be limited to two-thirds. he believe that the Treasury would be the a shortage in Canada and such at The increased incentive would pro- free world.l duce a greater number of taxpayers in due Of a course, so that the government might more: gt Whatever his recognition of the political the of Hon. Wal- PUBLIC FORUM Hill tolllmll ll open In tho dlcrin mm by uuurwpondenls ul queniiiiiu nl lnlorul. Tin Gnnlliin don nnl ucunrlly union: the opinion ol -.u-rupdndcnll. SPPZAKING NAIITICALLY Sir.-We didn't have to wait ion: in I:-cl the ncsd for a controlled market for our potatoes. With such income Nor does good quality of potatoes as we hzive. there is no reason for the slump we have now. But with a little more me and a little more edu- ation it. won't. be long before. than recover the I120 million that it wouldfu-e will have controlled marketing for all our farm products. We were not quite ready when the plebiscite was taken. But. nothing stands still ister when final victory came, was owing difficulties might be, Sir Winston Churchill in ""5 0” WOW of 0”!”-ti if it (1005, to his genius for seeing what had to he would no doubt agree. done and persuading great and small to do it. large udders. ,them. These exceptionally cows are welcome. Anyone wooing Marshal Tito The Kremlin, it. seems, has suddenly de- cided to be nice to Marshal Tito. iIncidents' on the Yugoslav border have been reduced to a minimum. Diplomatic relations be-i tween Belgrade and Moscow have been re- stored to normal. In the Russian press, the 'Tito clique' has become the Yugoslav Ulster Minister Government' and vilification of Marshal recent gathering: ”After the Tito himself has disappeared. GPS Whether the Russians have merely de-lclubs varying in length from 1 ft. 8 in. t0 '3 ft. 3 in. and half a dozen steel car-springs, suggested that the procession was organized with peaceful cided to make the best of a bad job in in- ternational relations, or whether something more sinister lies behind Moscow's wooing of Yugoslavia, remains to be seen. What some regard as a far more disquieting de- velopment is Marshal Tito's seeming wil- lingness to respond amicably to Soviet over- lures. Docs Marshal Tito's attitude presage a return of strategically important Yugoslavia to the Moscow camp? Such suspicions, while understandable, would nevertheless be pi'cmaturc. With Yugoslavia's trade rela- relatively Siam; 1-avenues, tions Ol'l4'!lll(?t'l't0Wal'dS the west, and with 0 ' ' Marshal Tito's mvn keen awareness of Sov- iet fickleness, it would be improbable that authorities in Belgrade would willingly ac- cept for their country the role of a Soviet satellite. . A more probable explanation for Mar- shal Tito's attitude is that, being at once both an opportunist and a realist, he will try to exploit, the changed Soviet attitude to his own advantage, at the expense both of East and West, and strive while doing sow to maintain his own political independence. bars and bottles. Yet it is intentions!" O O I and Provinces on in BC vaccination. preliminary tuberculin tests tions. peared and 'heartcdIy accepted. 3 I O 1 out that: A Lesson Worth Learning During the recent Congressional elec-V lion campaign many Republican orators and many novelists sad." Some of them went so good for the biblical wise. I O I I President Truman. far as to cquate what they called ”Truman- ism" with tacit sympathy for Communism. Canadian Press reports tha In all this President Eisenhower had no1eralv Wildlife part; it is to his credit that he said no un- problem in a kind word, about Mr.'Truman, preferring to make his own record and that of his Administration, rather than the shortcom- ings of his predecessor, the chief argument for continued support of the clectorateuhe interesting to Service lake in the see whether "It, is thought of! great advantafle yn a dairy" said Sir Win- 91”” or ""5 ”””el'59 W” ””m”” . . thought foolish to get rid of the best milk- EDITORIAL NOTES Is Coulity Tyrone what it was? y of Home Affairs says of al hlbltlan of painting: from Western disturbance was quelled the police collected 225 wboden, ta-ins, trees terribly Canadlan-lU0k- lug, elc., no very good conipcsiilon,' practically no painiiiigs with hum-l The municipalities have too often been, forgotten when the nation's tax resources have been divided up between the Dominion the basis of need. Federation of Mayors and Municipalities has again effectively drawn attention to their rapidly expanding responsibilities and If m W,ec,,y ,.,,,,,,n ma, 5,, Ireland, like Canada, is making progress In four years 139,173 b ,made. followed by 30,006 BCG vaccina- , It is reported that apprehension on .the part of the public has virtually disap- the practice is being whole- t has licked the eel Cape Breton Highlands National Park, but it had to idiil all .the trout to do it. The lake course, be re-stocked with trout, eels can also return from the sea. It wiilinfiernoon about four o'clock. and Peake's No. 2, title ship's officers under Captain rots so we have got to have are soon to have control in the ston some time ago, ”to have cows with marketing 0; their produce, You get more milk out of, fertile Right across Canada the good . ,shlp is sailing and she is steady as much she goes. It's not the direction of be the wind nor the drift of the tide, jbui. the set of the sail that de- termines-when and where she goes. I am. Sir, ete., ELDON DRUMMOND l-lreetown, P.E,I, would xvi-EEEN .ii?r"r.i4iHnir Theo Sir,-I have just visited an ex- ' Canada. They do not appear to be of a. high standard: rosy moun- an b:ings, tlhe human figure de- manding 3. knowledge of drawing that. the artists apparently do not. possess.) Mr. Irwin has painting, "Near Glenmore l)am.,l Its tones are distinguished, very clean and pleasant. Mr. Yven has a cubist composition, rather strong and masculine, but slightly cliche. The technique of these artists is by no means remarkable and their imagination still less. Neverihelcssl one will not waste his time at this exhibition, if only it. reminds him that there are still painters paint- in: a rather lov The much better painting is produced in the West that. I -..l not bcllcve that. these are representative of what. is being done there, in the field of creative art. If more inter- est. were shown, maybe some ex- hibitions of a higher calibre could be brought. to Charlottetown. Of course the day will come when painters, actors, musicians and dancers will be able to work to- gether, and with the financial and moral support of the city, will, in I return, give it art nviiiilestatioiix worthy of the name. I am, Sir, etc. (Rev) ADRIAN ARSENAULT ave been Literary critic Walter Alien, speaking st. Dun-mn's College on the BBC on character in fiction, points "As all readers of fiction know, 'novclists are at their least convincing when ' trying to describe good people, the virtuous. This is a fact that has made many readersl The dlfficulty,i thought it politically wise to bcrate former possibly, is the substitution of the term i Olin rlott etown. Old Clio rlohioiown Inllll ARRIVAL OF THE STANLEY l "The new wintcr steamer Slam r-d A1 at. Lloyd's. She is 207 feet ley, built at Gavan, the Fed- thc Dominion Government, on what he could gat.her.from the cam of workings of ice-breaking steamer: in Hamburg and Goltenburg-up but the rived here from Plctou yesterday It now moored at nature orl w,,,,,,. The fact. of the matter is that the President man is most effective at bringing life back, "TM contract for the construc- and Mr. Truman hold each other in deep to the lake. respect and admiration. Fresh evidence of ' ' ' this mutual regard came to light the otherl day at the dedication of the new Eisen- hower Museum at Abilene, Kansas. In a name is Clive Hamilton. ident" by William Hlllman. sented to Mr. Eisenhower by Mr. Truman of books on religion and philosophy. Out- and It been this inscription: "To a great, standing is "The Screwtape Letters" in general with'klndest regards." At the tlmei which the allegory is used of the devil's the book was published the present Pres-I advocate, Screwtape, writing ldent was Supreme Cominander of Alliedi Fore! in - lvo forms of temptation. to . rilon of the Stanley was concluded about the middle of July last, and she was handed over to Captain McElliln'nty on the 22nd Novem- Clive Staples Lewis, British writer andi,,,,,,gg,b,,u, "W, m,,,,,h, me, me ' teacher, was born this date 1898. His l'e8li-5911100101 of the He followed a place of prominence is the book "Mr. Pres- scholastic career from Belfast to Oxfordi It was pre-l and combined it with the writing of a series work. On this i'19th November she left Glasgow for Plctou direct. and reached iiei (it-stiruiilnn in first-class condition gon Monday last, after A some- what rough passage of eleven days. lie: best spend on the run out was thirteen knots. At Pictou her crew. with the exception of the three engineers and the cook and steward. were discharged, and she was given in charge of Captain instruct his nephew Wormwood on the most effect-,AIInn FInln.vwn- 181-. of the Nov them Light, her future comman- I der, who. with I crew from changes: I believe it's In the divine, States. .,name and record in the Senate was i Doughty Warrior What's In lly lleatli i In this month's American elec- tion a young Republican won a swccpiiig victory in I contest for a seat in the Ohio legislature. and pruplc immediately began to talk about the next Cnngrcssioiial niec- tion when he would likely move onto a bigger Hage, to the Ameri- can Senate itself. Such a giant step in the political ladder is certainly ii-t explainablc by the young lIl:Il"i.S legislative ability which has not yet been tested - rather is it the result of the name he hears. Mr. Robert A. Taft. son of the late Senator. and grandson of ii former President is destined for big things in thc Rcpubicaii party. In other parts of the United sons of great men were appeallng for voter support, but not all did as well as "young Bob" Taft in his bid for office in Re- publican Ohio, Franklin D. Roose- vclt mot defeat in his campaign for tho post of attorney general of New York state. and Philip Wilkic, whose father 0 p p o s e d Roosevelt's father in 1940 went down to defeat in his bid for R iudgesliip in Indiana. In Wyoming William Henry Harrison, deccndant and namesake of the 9th Presi- dent also emerged a loser. But some bearers of great. names were successful. James Roosevelt won a seat in the House of Rep- resentatives in the 26th congression- al Distrlct of California. He will, however, not be a colleague of his brother Franklin who gave up his House seat when he ran for at- torney general. Then too here is the mayor of New York City, Robert Wagner, whose father's illustrious not overlooked by his son's sup- porters in last. years mayoralty election. Other family names have up- pcared at various times and gen- erations in the political arena. Henry Cabot Lodge was on: of Massachuscttsi Senators at i.hc time of Wilson, during the second war another Henry Cabot Lodge represented the state It. Washing- ton. Ony once in American his- tory however has the lion of 1 President. ever been chosen for the nation's highest. office. The second President. John Adams saw his son John Quincy installed in the office which he had vacated twenty four years earlier. Although Canada, like the Uni- ted States, does not regard po- litical offices as hereditary, there has been a good deal of attention paid to I well-established name. The ministry tf Sir Charles Tupper contained not only the son of Sir A Name? Macqunrrie known as the son of Mr. Mac- Kenzie King's leading Quebec lieutenant and long-time cabinet minister. In the provinces too there had been a tcndency for certain names to recur as with Flemming in New Brunswick, Stanfield in Nova Scotia, Roblin in Manitoba. and now it is Gardiner in Sask- atchewan. , Perhaps there is much in a name. Possibly too the record of second and third generation service might indicate that there is more to the story than just the name! Is po- litical ability transmitted from fa- their to son, or is it merely that the family environment develops a taste for public life? Without becoming involved in the complex issues of heredity and environ- ment it can be said that the re- cipe for success is not always pos- sessed by the descendant. On the other hand to have a name al- ready known in your constutuency is rarely a liability. VA? E -7oed' Qmat TRANSFORMATION I said: I'll fill my afternoon all full Of poetry, so opulent indeed And brimming shall to flow that silver streams of verse will thread the night for live. I'll read. . I said. those slim sophisticated line: That came just yesterday. and I'll sink deep As daylight hesitates in long-loved tones, That dried my tears upon ii child's round cheek. I'll read, sold I-and gathered up the books And scnnngd R surging sonnet - your word came, Your voice remembe u-I broke be- tween my eyes And print, the lesser poetry fell back - And all the afternoon rhymed with your name. Kiitliarliie Day Little in the Christ.- ian science Monitor. i The Age Old Story Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his mine: bring an offorllu. and come before him: worohlp tho John A. Macdonald but also Tup- per's own son Hibbert, although it should be said that both men were of such calibre as to makcl them cabinet timber without bene- fit of illustrious paternity. Many members of the present House of Commons hold seats which were once their father's, and the Hon. Mr. Lapolnie. min- ister of Veteran's Affairs is well- Charlottetown, brought her to thin port. "The Stanley is schooner-rigged hullt wholly of steel, and is clau- helow GIaii- in length over all, 32 feet beam, grow, by the I-lairfleid Ship Build-ynmi 17 feet depth of bold. She In In: Ind Engineering Company for 994 ion: grails and about 400 torn from registered. Her cargo capacity in designs furnished by Captain Mc- about 500 tons. She has I-Zlhlnney, nautical advisor to tho mndallon for about 100 passeng- Domlnion Government--based up- err, there being sleeping berths ICC0lI'l- fnr 32 first-class and renting no commodatlon for 68 second-class passengers. Her engines are trlplb expansion with an indicated hono- power of Ibout 1900. "Following are the namnn of Finlaynon: Pilot, Archibald Finlay- son; First Officer, Angus Brown: Second Officer, John Smith: Chief Engineer, John McMillan: Second Englnccr, John Auld; Third En- ginetr. William Auld; Purser, D. D. Ryan: Steward, James Smith: Assistant Stewards. Peter McLel- Ian and John H. Burns. Captain -Mcfilhlnmy will remain on the Stnnlcy until the Northern Light is taken to Pictou, which will nrobably be early next week. The Stanley will not leave port until Monday morning, when ,Ihe will sail for Plctou. between which part and Charlottetown the will run until further notice. Whllvi here wine will take in ice-boats -and other stores." Lord in the beauty of hollnou . . . . Let and heaven: bo (Ind, and let the earth rejoice: and lot men say among the nations. The Lord reignelli. MARK ANNIVERSARY BRANTFORD, Ont. (CP) - The Canadian Order of Fol-eaten, with head office In Bi-antford, celebrated its 75th anniversary Thursday. Memberrncrou Canada contri- buted io a fund in aid of cancer research and a 325,000 cheque for that purpose will be forwarded to the Canadian Cancer Society. AUSTRALIAN TUNA Australia has iiiartcd exporting frozen tuna to the United Staten. Previously only canned tuna was shipped. com MIBEIY. 'liK:hi0v'I. onciciim CUT FROM .3. ..',.:'..'.'”.l.73.' DAYS rolkngcykoiw Thom: i.vili.iiiin - znznllion E, 90 on to help Clio onion MN of UN! in Mun. Oct IIICKLIV1 clnnduood uounueil"P:.'g' IUIIONIIAIVI -Y3 cAPwI.lI-itn noun-pi-to cold momoni. iiwloooooyovvwioviog, iiitoyouupmd ncapuiu sl NOTES BY A liirfn futlur ll aid to hoof uvln; that but for th. m-onun thing in nature for It: also and vnlxbl. not what. about 1 wo.imn'l mm -Toronto Btu. Iron all lndiulioul. Aloiulon n- porlo. Sir Winston Churchill hu no intention of resigning, Not. at least. while thew: I ciur in the box.-Windsor Btu. Men In: hove their little full- inzs, mutter: Senator Soaper. but they .neve,r hold up the family": departure for a party while they telephone their friends to find out if they're-wearing hats.-Hamilton Spectator. Simple and ooiiplloaled way: of spelling reform are proposed. some you can read as easily as this: Merl had I lltl lam, Its flees wuz hwnlt az sno; And evri hwer that Merl went. The lam was ahoor to go. -Harvey Kinsey Boyer, in Satur- day Review. Cnlprrn winters are crntlc. You cantt. count on them being Interli- ally cold from fall to spring, like you can Edmonton, Regina or Winnipeg winters. They can get rough. There were two or three weeks of bitter weather last Jail- uary for instance, but from then on it was Just A cool, snowy spring. The only trouble was that the cool. snowy spring didn't let. up until about September.-Calgary Alberlan Chlnglng from one lane to nil- other In traffic is a hazardous practice that should be avoided. But what else is there to do when a motorist finds himself in the wrong lane for making ll turn? To show those behind him what he, is going to do the motorist will flash his tail signals. For good measure he will hold out his arm. He assumes that mot- orists in his rear, seeing what he is about to do, will slow dowil and, It necessary, come to a dead stop. But 'lhc motorists behind him will not udopt. that charit- able point of vle,w.-Vancouver Herald. The avenge puunge on engine develops enough heat to keep a six- room house warm in zero weather. says an antifreeze research engine- or as he stresses the importance of on automobile! cooling system. Of this heat one-third is consum- ed no power to drive the car. ane- thlrd goes out the exhaust and the other third is carried off by the cooling system. In other words two thirds are wasted. If some means I THE WAY ul . home: could jun be c..,,',,,f;:, ”:I" an uvinu would go ., 193' ml” toward wiping out the debt on at E; houu. -Owen sound sung 93. Statistics are figure: and p... centue: that present. a pimm with mathematical exactness. Th eliminate guesswork. hunches um tlmentnl feeling and other-'ha . blizzard factors. A speaker a-so wishes yto bear weight with an audience. therefore. will quote statistics. He will compare the figures for this year with the cor- responding figures of last year, He will cite percentages of growth and decline. To be even more immeh slve he will illustrate his talk with blackboard sketches and graphs and charts.-Guelph Mei-cm-,3 Before telun; I uni-y . wmld. crate person will inquire of persons present whether ll: already has told them the story, or if per, chance they have heard it else- where. He will add that, if such is the case. ”Please stop me," 1, could very well be that the story has been heard before. Under tn. circumstances what is the propu- reply? should one stop the narra. tor? There he is all ready to go. No doubt he has rehearsed the story quietly to himself while someone else was telling a story in which he was not interested. Tim look in his eye shows that he L. keen to begin.-Vancouver I-lei-am, Northern Ontario chuckles over the antlcs of I pet. moose that "turned nasty" on his lighthouse keeper master marooued on a sman rock island In Lake Superior. The moose. that the lighthouse keeper raised from an infant. to keep him company on his isolated island post, charged every time the keep. er put his foot outside of the light- house bulldlng and forced the man to radio for help from the main- land. Perhaps by this time the lighthouse keeper is more familiar with the life cycle of a moose - a, bull moose. During 10 months of the year 9. moose can be an d0CllP as a lamb. but in the mating sea- son of October and November- watch out! Even in captivity, tha bull moose never loses his instinct for battle. Keeper: of was where moose are In captivity stay outside of the pens during this two-month period in the year, because the males will change anything that moves.-Sudbury Star. Sale . 175 Grafton REFRIGERATOR SALE CONTINUES Not wholesale or dealers PRICES. INTERNATIONAL IIARVESTER 7.5 cubic ft. Reg. 3l290.00-Sales . . 5195.00 8.2 cubic ft. Reg. 0342.00-Sale . .. fS225.00 8.5 cubic ft. Deluxe &'373.95-Sale ................. .. R260.00 10.5 cubic ft. Automatic defrost. Reg. R5097-5 All orders can be filled as new shipment arriving today or Tuesday by transfer. STOREY ' ELECTRIC prices but FACTORY 33360.00 Phone 3237 1. Phone or stop in. need money ? bills to pay? call HF G odiiy! 350 to 51000 on your own signature No bnnlnblc security needed 0 Fun, friendly, one-day oervice.o Easy-to-meet requiremenll Sensible terms oi Loans to pay bills, seasonal expenses, fuel, any good reason. HOW TO GET A LOAN 2. Tell the manager-In privacy-how much each you need. 3. Select your own :0- pnymenl plan. Extra I AIILI IAII I iioiiiiiiv mm or ...'t.'.'... mnnm mm Om-7! man I! sou: 14.00 ll nio.u not an HMO coco. . 14 each in to near an the IIFC oHcc below ; . 2 with lolno nude on your own olnuture. t l i . -The Examiner, Doc. ll. 13. MONIV WIIIN YOU NIII II I HOUSEHOLD riiuiiici cunuonlvovnls l muion mom. mm ncoiliiiiioio ooimim manic: coimm ' I. w. GM&,Ww - no any O'oouo.lr.. uiip,i. pimioooi ' o.u.- ,