'pi1:cEMi'iER- 17. I 19;; .I.iNotesA Bx yThl3 Wax 1. one wonders if it's necessary for can be both dan erous government officials to attend ev- ifio. Drivers maygnot b."l;liil3"2 ery convention and I meeting of forego comfort but at least ill, just about every organization from should keep their arms inside El here to Quebec and down to Iijior- London Free Press. A ids. and back. and often much farther afield. And. when people who travel at the expense of the taxpayers take to the road there's no reason why they should put up at the best hotels, take the finest accomnuidation and eat fancy meals in the fanciest restaurants they can find. Travel expenses. on both federal and provincial fronts would seem to be getting out of hand. - Vancouver News-Herald. Tl-IE, gll.1kRDIA.N..WCHARLOTTET0VVN Hopeful Little Jack Hor'ner PAGE FOUR . . THE GUARDIAN Authorised as Second Class Mail Post Office Department. Ottawa. The Island Guardian Publishing Co. 2- ” f and ' Td Ian A. B " Associate Editor. Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Covers Prince Edward lsllnd like the dew" iod of transition for which neither he, nor the dairy manufacturer, is prepared. The first and best defence' against whatever the future may bring is a recognition of this y fact. Science will work for thedairyman as readily as it will work against him. Be- fore it can be put to work energetically, however, the dairy industry itself must straighten out its thinking. Science will not work for nothing: the dairy farmer must help find the money, and enough of it to do the job, even if it takes a sub- stantial amount every year for ten years, or longer. - l "New products from milk may provide part of the answer. Clear proof of super- ior nutritive qualities of pure dairy foods may be another part. The dairy industry must be -further mechanized and the cost of producing milk reduced. Some part of the answer may unexpectedly appeaf f1'0m other directions. Time, however, is run- ning short. The problems of the industry A child patient in s (1. hospital needed watermelonslnl: her treatment. It was a. tough 0, der but she got them, thanks ,” the his heart of an Orlando Fla” ride. produce man. who 'hcai-ll about the case. The world still has its oood Samaritans... 1,95,, bridge Herald. l -m The starlings that fly from ll. surrounding country to roost cacl: owing to an increasing number night in central London are known of broken elbows and arm injuries to everyone who has pmed in automobile crashes, an Ameri- through Trafalgar square at sun. can surgeon suggests that window clown, and some ao,ooo 1-00,, In an rests be made ”less comfortable." James; Park alone in July Wm Or, the window sills should he numbers are at their height A": lower or higher. Arm injuries are yet, 100 years ago the sterling wag due to the arm being outside the actually rare enough to be kept 3,; car when a sidwwipe occurs. The a cage bird in Britain.-lane 3,”, same increasing arm fracture rate letin. i f'l'he Strongest Memory is Weaker Thus the Viteokesf Ink". CHAIILOTTIJTOWN. wsnnespax, DEC. 17. 1952 lleod For llrastlc -llcusecleanlng Ci The gross irregularities revealed by the Currie report in connection with the army training camp at Petawawa will no doubt become a hectic issue in the Dominion election campaign, and for that reason it is well to confine comment at this time to the factual statements and implications of the report itself. These are serious enough in all conscience. They reveal a "general breakdown" in control of a mil- itary branch concerned with an investment of S750,000,000 in plant and buildings, and worse still ”a serious collapse in security", chaotic accounting methodsfand failure to follow up previous reports of unsatisfactory conditions which should have been investi- gated and remedied months ago. In tabling the report, Prime Minister will not await the convenience of the dairy farmer. There are resolutions to be made on behalf of dairying in 31953, and it would be well for dairymen to give careful thought to them during the next few months." Trade Matters Most In t..- House of Commons it hasbeeny suggested that Canada's northern climate and production could well be paired with has been noted in Canadian hos- pitals. Too great comfort in cars and a. smaller one is used instead. This sword is offered to the Al- tar, symbolic of use in a righteous cause. Three other swords are carried by u-blcmen before the sovereign in procession. One has a sharp point-the Sword of Justice to men: one has a rounded end-the Sword of Justice to the Church: and the third, the Curtana, has is broken point-the Sword of Mercy The fact that there are now three swords is probably due to development of trans-Arctic hical position in a world nations are concentrated in From the standpoint of non... phy and economics. however, in, air- lines, eventually to 9, very yea. extent. appears highly desirable M not inevitable. If the governmem negotiators see it that way, Ed. monton may hope to gain still more by its advantageous geogra. 1 . most of the great land masse: northern hemisphere around North Pole. -Edmonton Journal. St. Laurent expressed the hope that its . . , cl" Mn, Llppl, P. .50” sweeping and severe statements would not the tF0P1C81 Climate and PI'0dUCt10n 9f the 0 lglmlllgesrlgtlltlmtlg w".?f"l'3;,,fj,”'f,fg teacher in charge of New yum; be wrenched from their context for polit- British Wt-'St Indies by taking the lslfmd Jlzcv submlglyelxy hem. the Sovereign. l;;l'f11li;1S:fi”vi:,lhgf1'f,::d”scll;l;0;l 1111"! ical purposes and used um Smear the whole in as an 11th Province. The suggestion, Qwii Lsroreetnggem :'oer:val:)e))d10ll?:rd..:lIei: mm began smokmg me mmklfera notes,the Sydney Post-Record, has certain centuries. the chidren out-not into the army works services." The fact is, how- ever, that the responsibility clearly rests upon the higher command and the Defense Department, to which the higher command is directly responsible, and the Opposition forces would be lax indeed if they did not bring this issue clearly before the people. The Opposition leader, Mr. Drew, indicated the line of attack when he said that his party laid full blame upon the Defense De- partment and not on the armed forces. The report states that the chief auditor of the Defense Department had repeatedly reported unsatisfactory conditions and yet no adequate steps had been taken to cor- rect them until the Petawawa case broke. Each report was turned over by the Dep- uty Minister to an Army Quartermaster- General. It can be said on the Government's be- half that the defense programme has grown to such gargantuan proportions that it would be almost impossible to eliminate all irregularities in administrative detail. What the public expects, however, is prompt action in investigating such abuses when suspected, 'and of correcting "them when re- vealed, in such a manner as to serve as a warning and corrective to future transgres- sors. heavy traffic of Manhattan streets but by groups into an art. museum, e. restaurant, and a nearby home, where the mother of one of the Pupil-5 turned on television. .. Christian Science Monitor. When Edward VI. at the age of ten, saw the swords in The Be- galia he is said to have remarked: "One of them should be a Bible. for that is the swordof the spirit " Nowadays. although not strictlv part of. The Regalia, a Bible is presented to the sovereign. A Royal ringcontslnlng s ruby, attractions but it seems more likely that the British colonies of the Caribbean Sea will federate as a distinctive dominion of their own in the British Commonwealth. And they should. What Canada needs and l what the British West Indies also need, is not a federalyunion of the B. W. I. with ' Canada, so much as a system of monetary EARLIEST WINDOW exchange that will make greater trade pos- Ti sible between the island group and this dominion. The Indies are in the sterling area and in the current restrictions by Britain in protecting the pound sterling, Canadian trade has been seriously hampered. This is something concerning Canadian economics as applicable to the United Kingdom as to the West Indies and no one is suggesting federal union of Canada and Britain. "Let the West Indies, comprising Ja- maica, the Bahamas, St. Kitts, Nevis, St. Lucia. Dominica, Antigua, Barbados, Gren- ada, Trinidad, etc., have their own parlia- ment," concludes our Sydney contempor- ary. ”They can understand their own prob- lems and solve them better than we could do it for them. What is needed is not polit- ical union but economic sanity in our deal- ings with one another." The Queen's Crowns (cnun mm; In The star. London. England) eptember is the fsvorlw month of grape lovers in Turkey who will symbol of Klngship, is included in tell you that this delicious fruit is The Regalia. at its luscious best in the first of f' ' the fall monhs. Perennial reduc- And it is said that when her ers turn to grapes, to s. diet which adviser! llrled her to marry. calls for one pound of grapes per Queln E1113-Dem I lmved UP 1161' day during the first week, two finger. showed the ring she had pounds during the second week, been given at her Coronation and 3nd four pounds per day during said that she was wedded to Eng- the third week These quantum land Wm W35 h" h"5b5nd- are to be reduced a pound a week T" Swpim ml in W” Wu" during the fourth fifth and sixth pm” Th” Rwnm tn” wm 1” weeks of diet. thislintake of grapes seen again next year. , sw-rm -vm-w or Lt:..".i:”:?'.';lf;.l :3... 223.: 2?."2i.il23”tl?.'.”i2 133.31 351565.; day--Turkish Information- the crowning of King Edgar in 973 the Sceptre with the Sword ,m9,. , and Crown were the only ornam- ” OQV I" W" We Age-Old Story one Sceptre. a yard long and starred with a diamond 2y, inches .2: . And. the men lofilthe city went across, carries a Maltese Cross. It out. and fought with Josh: and represents Power and Justice. The there fell some of the people of the other is longer still and carries I white dove of enamel mounted on servants of David; and Uriah ihs Hittite died also . . . . And when a globe. It represents Equity and the wife of Urhh heard than Mercy. The Orb-"the Golden Ball" Archbishop Cranmer called it-now Uriah her husband was dead, she mourned for her hluband. And when the morning was put, David has a cross on it, its foot on a huge amethyst. It symbolises that sent and fetched her to his house. and she became his wife, and bare required for his Coronation. so a complete new set was ordered and made. as near as possible like the Crowns. Sceptres and Swords de- stroyed. The Ornaments used today date from the Coronation of 1661. Parliament put the total value of The Ornaments destroyed at about i'.2.64'l. Replacement cost about i:32,000. Not surprisingly, perhaps, the Royal Goldsmith had to wait for his money. For those Ornaments of 1661, his receipts-for a. first payment of 521,000 by the Treasury-was dated 1667. Part of the Ampulla, the nine- inch high golden eagle in which the Anointing oil is kept. is very old but it. was rebuilt at this time D I 0 Although a Coronation is mainly concerned with things of the spirit, the rules which govern it lay em- phssis on many material and tan- gible things-costly, glittering and ornamental. These are the trappings of Mel- uty, symbolic and historic, which are nowadays described as The Regalia. The older, simpler and more beautiful term is The Orna- ments. Because my earliest window faced the north. I knew Polaris as a guiding star. The Great Bear and the Little Bear came forth And Perseus, curving like secl- miter, stood by to save Andromedi. The Oldest of them. I1 '-My 110 in the Abbey next June in all their night Recurring brought the psgeantry sparkling splendour awaiting their anew- short moment of use, is a spoon. And I. the child, felt ever-fresh It is I silver spoon. gilded but delight thin with age and wear. Into it. the oil is poured for the Anoint- ing. It is- believed to date from the twelfth century. And it may have been used at the Crowning of the iirst of the Plantagenets. Henry II. or Richard the Lion Heart. Four little pearls grace the han- dle and the bowl is engraved like a flower. This fragile, lovely thing. touch- ed by the pious fingers of Gran- mer and Whitglft, gazed upon by the eyes of Kings and Queens ever since the Crusades. is all that re- Nor sensed there might be stars beyond my view. Nor dreamed that other eyes look- ed up to see Southern Cross stars that burned In splendor. though they bore no name for me, on far horizons I learned. The oil used at Coronations is called Chrism. Sometimes it is a mixture of olive Oil and balsam. But no one knows what was in the oil used at Henry IV's Coro- nation, for it was said to be mir- aculous oil sent down from Heaven to St. Thomas a Becket, the mur- dered Archbishop. It was kept over the years and now, mercifully, is no more. Queen mains of the old Coronation orna- Elizabeth I complained of the ments. Most of those used a smell of the oil used at her crown- thousand years ago were stlll'in i existence is little over 300 years The and major had never How shall we ever speak with com- mon tongue Who followed different stars when we were young! -B. Y. Williams in The Christian the whole earth is subject to God. one by one these precious orna- ments willbe handed to theQueen rig. Although the Crowns in The next year. one by one she will We have yet to hear from the Defense V Sam” Mim"'”" ago. Carefully they had been ltiegaliisi tare comparatively new- hand them back to my church mm . mm 3.", gm ulln, um Minister, Mr. ciaxton. but it is to be hoped EDIIURIAL NW5 2S2Sf.”l.,";3.ai”1iiiid:.l.l2ll?i.,?lll .:;..::.i..”;..?::..i.:”.”.3. 23:. a::..:::r..:. iii: :l”..”:.f.”” as!” M ”"'"”d and swords. names. The one which is used Then. zealous to expunge the for the actual Crowning. is called trappings as well as the idea of, St. Edward's crown. The other is Monarchy from England. the Pur- the Imperial Crown. ltan Parliament -melted them all St. Edward's Crown, with its two down and broke them up. great golden arches encrusted with ' ' ' pearls, glowing with rubles, starred , with the cooler green of turquoises, I weighs more than 5 lbs. 0 O I that he will assume full responsibility for the laxity of his subordinates, and show a conscientious determination to make a clean sweep along the lines recommended by the investigators, and further if it should prove necessary. If. as charged by a C. C. F. member, the report was garbled before being presented to the House, that too should be investigated. But the main concern of the public is with the attitude of the Government itself in facing this chal- lenge, not on political grounds but with full recognition of the .grave nature of the charges, and of their effect on the nation's vital defense programme. Old Charlottetown Ember Day. ”BLllEPRlllT FOR COM-MIINITY -PR0liliESS" , By L. P. Mclsaac "We recommend this work as an interesting trineloguo and . as something that will promote thinking on -our economic and social problems. ,It should be in every home In the Province." P. E. I. Federation of Agriculture. . . . was read with wide interest and appreciation in serial The work is of special interest to the people of ulnar-.s.r.l POLICE STATION em The Prince Edward Island Art Society . . .. . . Qosivrsns is to be commended on its initiative in - - - R 1 C d- "councillor Chsppelle at the ln:-mi ,l.”,,,"”2h:”.5l..if.l llljfllwil; brmgmg 3". exmbmo" of oya . mm "m meeting of the City Councu held mighatc have been crowned lvicn Academy diploma works. Operating on a tor; Mondfxsytxevenlliltg lastt.,tsubmit- "King Alfredtjs mwnel or gould - - - ' e s. resou on, as ing t a s. om- ke t with sight at nes decldedly. limited budget they Sun manage mittee of two be appointed tocpro- :l'3l:lrv;olll.UE!ebellB" and in such ii i0 Undefhlke W0FlhWhl1e P1'0JeCt5-. cure a. proper building for a Police Crowning there would have been station, and report on next re- nearly 1,100 years of continuity. ' ' ' lzular night of Council, oounclllm-3 Edward the” Oorglgssor, fo nderhof It is traditional, of course, that Prison- gglizlzlggllesaliindwlrslgffftlge W3"): :3; gff;'I':f””” A 'y' W” ” ers of War be carefully guarded and any glad that steps 1,, being mm, thBu3 for the rytandaligsrrli of 111649. ueen m IIEX une EVE attempt at escape thwarted by all neces- 1" W3 mm"-, and 110136 the com- "aim commufmm Mm mm the . mlttee may bring in such a. report sary force. At the present time, however, it would seem that mass escapes might cut the Gordian knot of the cease-fire negotia- tions. But even then it sounds to be lighter than the one used in Med- ' ieval times when there are records of knights standing on each side of the King to help him bear the Crown on his head. In the Imperial Crown, which is ' lighter and which is worn for the " procession after the Act of Crown- form last year. ing. there are Xnecious stones this Province." which we used in the earliest days and which were saved from the Cromwellian sabotage. Pearl earrings worn by Elizabeth I. a gleaming sapphire from the Stuarts. another set boldly on top which is the sapphire of Edward the Confessor and "a. fair ruby like a. rocket-ball" (as Elizabeth described it) which once lay in the gallant hand of the Black Prince and now fronts the central cross-all these are to be seen in this. majestic Imperial Crown, set in gold and glowing with all the suns that shone on other ages. There are said to be in this Crown 2.873 diamonds as well. Four. -Charlottetown Guardian that will warrant the Council in chm” the "may Edward "gem immediately providing a comi'ort- or hkmned trf wmb he med m ' ion able and well-appointed Statinr. me” hm ll” or M5 comm" ' The muent quarter: In I dis. Cromwells Parliament put a s 1 m we to the my-" lll.i3:.3.iii.lfLfgfi”filii.l7”.3'Ei?3. iii! TTh9 m"1ml""- Ml-Y 11- 1351- last time. Poor Alfred's Crown 1-Em (M3114) The Examiner was burnt like his cakes and the reported that the Council com- maul was valued at 5:243. niittee had recommended "the por- The comb was estimated to be tion of the building opposite the worth nothing. present quarters for a new Police All were swept away. The kingly Station. The Hook and lisdder robes of cloth-of-gold and rich truck will remain there but a parti. embroidery W616 Sold. some 0! tlon will divide the room. the oo- them I0? I Shlllinif. posits portion of which will be Only the W10 5900". broken but arranged in good order for the "W ”P31"d- f5":31f5- On sale during Christmas season for only b2.75 at local Co-op Stores. In Charlottetown, write or call The Island Co-op Services Office. PROFESSIONAL CARDS, J. A. MoGuigon ” BABIIISTER. sohlcrron. Elo NOTARY. lite Currie Bullilius J ' Clues. R. McQueid T ' Dairy Industry Problems 9 0 I Lady Wonder, the talking horse from Virginia. has given out a-good deal of ad- vice recently and now has received some in return. Learning that Lady had admit- ted shc would prefer to be a human being, a correspondent of the Montreal Gazette Soon, notes The Country Guide, the dairy organizations across Canada will be meeting in annual conventions. Wherever they meet, dairymen will face unpleasant prospects. The outlook will be disappoint- ing. .Many thoughtful observers believe Palmer & Hesleln A. J. llASLAM.g8.A., LLB. ' Barrister. Etc. Bank of Nova Scotls Chambers Charlottetown. P. E. I. MONEY 'ro DOAN thtthe'dt h'h' . . 20 ml,” us ry' Y, 1c l&ff""S. more ma." SW95 her the friendly Wammg that it nurpose. At the end or the building "We mmmenied Word! Mm .m.:...:..m... 33 m 0" anmm Y to nad13".farme15 would be better to remain a horse, five comfortable cell; wlll 1-,, mm- Twelve years later Parliament, part of The Regalia. ILA. as cash farm income, is threatened as nev- tructed, capable or accommodating aft 1:1'mih9 ggitgmg W"; 5hf:1;l,f,l;”hrijfIx"ilfe9iuif1:';” Whig" ' sand" 8' H9519” 3”""5'l'E3- 50”C”0”' 9? b9f0l'9- The C0n5e.QU9nCe-S Of f00t'3nd' . . . gglllezvslll lg”-weil'lceprrl:ii'l:ii'e"l,.',i.3, toeythe nslllonu cost. Charlesmlll Soverelgny before the gcrownirllgrl bul Omani.” A GMmET' EA" LLB EuuNo1:','g.' lgfihunt mouth disease, which have plagued the Sir Humphry Daily, English chemist, homo" M the bundmg Mcumed was on the Throne. Regalia was it would need a giant to wear it ,3d"""",'-"5 5""”m"" "' , , . . , Money to Loan 0l!ARl.0'l'TnTOWN entire livestock industry since late in Feb- was born this date 1778. A Physician. 116 M It midenct "W 10"! 511” the - ruary have been serious enough but if did chemical research in his leisure which O”"”'”'” i” the d'"1"'"' "m be O-"mm Bmk "1 cmmm 3”” Hon. ml A-s” I . - these ,consequences were now providing the soon brought him fame. A paper on "some :ri::t:l:vygl:Ea:lled;xli:,1cl7:ig:::ew5f;l'1,. Dfo A- In MCCIIGIC Byron J. Grant. 0-D- - . . R11 6 mme 3 V 011 P. , l 4 dairy industry with its most threatening chemical agencies of electricity" revolution- can TLOM wmh the own" Wm ml:f.?:'l'g:" m nmg:r':f.MFT3'51'I,mM an problems, dairymen could'stlll await with ized the scientific world. The work in- oeeuimgiiiy pins: to lvlebvzd the on; GD()BlAilD1LDINB , ioppout. Bevel-e Hotel) . V ' . rvners. e we use an ' , - -m----v--mmm'c"i' Patience the end of a frying period. volved included the discovery of sodium mm up Mr. W" WW5! mm m onnon st Phone sex Fuduic A.L.'g.' Q5. wrhe trutmn continues the Winnipeg and potassium. Davy is best known, how; :24 .;h:c gelorggsofttaththecocityiuvve . J. A. cugiinnn. mg. nmmh soucmm Notmm " ' - i to th cause 0 "9 I 90' 9 mm 99 . . orroitsralsr In sl sun. I Canada Bu farm paper, is that the chemical age has ever, for his invest gatlons in e Wm be mum may um mm. In Km am" mm. 'm r cmmuzun. E It L caught up with the dairyman and taken fire damp and his invention of the miners' l,l,,,.. "gar um, wmmut dmyp mm .6 mum!” Mn”, um on cm In, Fm, him unawares, Science is without prejudice, safety lamp. iTh9;9"'-i9 ""”'5;1'lt'l' "ill "me , c -m----a-m.:..m ,l'f0liIPN5l - It.is organized knowledge as impersonal as - - .':”:.: ;l:”S.l.il 'f..:..l".ll3l.".: SERVICE Allison M. Gillie. u..s. 9., if. A. Meeieeheru a mechanical robot, with a banner of pro- It has long been a disadvantage as well giant-ifs: corner war” Qglmklnli I y ' nusmlrmg, goucrrog, gm, osrrrlsr M d an atomic bomb in as advanta e of X-ra s that they are diff- ' "W" I - W” l”'” - area! in One ha in 8 Y bined Dufpose of a City Council - m Ilehssend It. - onuiomiown Above tlhaflethhwn cnmcw the other. While the dairy industry has icult to bend. A new type of X-ray mlcrO' a;'souMgfl'i?e nlindd I&(l,(l1i1c; rliono use gum. lei. shone scope which magnifies with X-rays instead The pm”. Om mu 'm,-, of light and is claimed to have great po- houses the Police station was not tentlalitles in medical research has had its W" "W1 1”” been shadow-boxing with margarine, sci- h bee . busy in its laboratories turn H. R; DoANI"' coMPANY em as n , I ' . . onslirlleo AOUOIJN1'AN'l'I it - I lCIiGl'lIl'0&f!I It-. Charlottetown VLK. Rogers Agencies Limited in out. in addition to margarine. other M suFutuu;.', filled milk. first trials at the Cavendishisaboratory. -p---I---r PHONE 540 mm 541 "Known " N." m :"'mermnmN' M, lrnitstions'oi".mother's wonder- Cambridge. It was -built by Dr. V. E. Coss- Twnms ml wnums , 181 QUEEN an V l- W1," "'3" "”""?”-"-l”"'v';'. '5 "'5'" "lg:u",: ”"'”"""' sngljcsnned. evaporated, lett, Physics Lecturer in charge of the "U" "E um ' ' 2 . . Iii! .. I WN, P. E. I.- Electro-Mlcroscopic Section at the Lsbora- y 9 AGENTS THROUGHOUT Tl-"III PROVINCE tory, in association with Ottawa physicist - Dr. W. S. Nixon, who has been furthering hisstudies in England. i” y ' I - . e I - , bum em ' ,M-rho!" '”' i iwhitis most disturbing, the . detectbthe substi- .- . . ' I