. ksuvplj: .-.-.. .. PAGE roux ' M , F N THE GUARDIAN Authorllld II Boeoul Ollie Ilil loot Oliloe Dopartunut. Othwn The Island Guardian Publishing co. omcuujrloul Total Oity zone ..-.. g Retail Trading Zone i All other ...-............ 168 Told Nit Plld ............ .... IIJU Editor and Managing Director. J. 1 Burma . Associate Editor, Funk Waller "Tho Strongest Memory Is Weaker Than the Weakest ink." 0llABi.0'l"l'E'l'0WN. rulsnax, sun. 1:. use Tine cancer campaign The City objective of 3i5,000 in the 1950 cancer campaign is a, comparatively small amount in view of the greatimportance of the work on which the money will be ex- pended. The drive, which opens today, is for the promotion of educational and re- search activities, which are essential wea- pons in fighting this insidious disease. This Province has made encouraging progress in cancer education as well as in other health activities in recent years, but there is much yet to be done. As pointed out in recent news items, the Canadian Cancer Society is essentially a lay organization, sparked by public spir- ited citizens who have devoted freely of their time and means to promoting its activities. Their aim is to arouse public opinion to the need of early treatment in cancer cases, thereby saving thousands of lives which are lost needlessly every year through neglect of this most vital precau- tion. Thanks to the success of previous ef- forts in this direction, cancer patients are being treated earlier than ever before. This fact only accentuates the great advantages that would accrue from making this prac- tice general throughout Canada. The pre- sent campaign is a community effort in every sense of the word, and should meet with prompt and generous response from our citizens. lib. MIN language He Ilnderstands Britain's Defence Minister, I:;ma'nuel Shinwell, has announced that the United Kingdom would be able to provide 10 di- visions .within a year to meet any Eur- opean emergency. Not long ago Mr. Churchill called for such a .'force and also for two or three divisions from this coun- try. .In the weeks preceding U. N. as- sault landings in Korea General MacArthur repeatedly appealed for ground forces to be supplied without delay. Canada's response, apart from supply- ing threel warships and a transport squad- ron, has been to begin the creation of a brigade for Korean service and the statemen-t of Prime Minister St. Laurent that no allied government has asked Can- ads to send troops to Europe and that his cabinet is not considering such a move. The question that must be answered is what action is most likely to dissuade Rus- sia from plunging the world into war? Of- fers of financial and material assistance to Europe have been made by this country and are of great value, butas long as we stand unready to supply our share of train- ed troops to meet the common peril we are not doing all that we should to avert the catastrophe of a third world war. been much overrated in terms of the bene- fits they are supposed to have wrought in restoring Canada's dollar trade balance, which, in point of fact, has improved much more rapidly since controls were re- laxed than it did while they were in force. Add to these several circumstances the effect of United States defence purchasing now operative in Canada, audit is pretty clear that the dollar problem is no" longer of significance. EDI FORIAI. NOTES Cancer Campaign opens today. I O I Trade and Industries Fair Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Windsor, Ont., has just startedua clean- up of its garbage, mess to begin a police commission clean-up. O O O The large numbers of Islanders seek- ing their fortune in oil-rich Alberta may some day make, that Province rival the "Boston States" as a colony of this Prov- ince. i , I O O The dust of threshing is a more serious hazard than generally realized. A spark is often all that is needed to produce an ex- plosion or at the very least a serious flash fire. O O O . The Bureau of Statistics' estimate that Canada's population reached 13,871,000 at July 1st will not be the signal for wide- spread rejoicing. This country is grow- ing, bu-t not at the rate at which it could and should. , I 0 0 0 Unless the remunerations of MR5 and Serators are increased it looks as if we will have to return to financially inde- pendent members to represent us at Ot- tawa, now that an all round year of Par- liamentary session is suggested. Big liners were supposed to be on the way out before the First World War. The magnificent record of the Queens and now the announcement of the United States Government that it is taking over the mammoth 48,000-ton liner now building at Newport News, Va., indicates that the days of the big ships are far from numbered. Nova Scotia apple growers are exper- iencing the misfortune of having all their "eggs" in one basket. Safety lies, as Dr. James Robertson convinced Prince Edward Islanders. that mixed farming is the salva- tion of those who depend on the soil for a living. Better have half a dozen diversi- fied crops than having the bulk of the acreage in one. 0 O I More than 80 representatives of all classes of railway workers from Britain, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Italy and Turkey are on their way over for a 7-weeks' tour of railways and allied ship- ping installations in Canada and the U. S. A. The object of the tour is to improve production and co-ordination in Marshall Aid countries. 0 O I The joint meeting of Canadian and rm: oUAgn1AN. Cl-IARLOTTETOWN, 'I'I' '--'-'-'.'..'.'l.'.'..'l.'H'.'l-l'-'.'u'd'u'iB E pueuc ronum it :3 This column is open to the discussion by corresponrlenil of questions of interest. The Guardian docsnot , ily endors the opinion of '- wuespondentl. . . 3'- '. Tiff-I FESTIVAL 0F,BRlTAlN ' 1951 Sir, - Prince Albert, beloved consort of Queen Vlctcrla. was the moving spirit of the -great. Exhibi- tion of 1851 in England, The Crys- tal Palace. huge. ornate. a glass and iron monument to most of the characteristics cf victorlanism, was built especially to house the mar- vels of British nineteenth century trade and invention. It was a mag- net that. drew not only Londoners who throngcd. it daily, but great numbers of ayerseas visitors. ago; to see and buy the products of Britain's age of industrial develop- ment, Victoria and Albert are now a part of British history. the Crys- tal Palace was destroyed by fire a few years ago, the desire to put British goods and activities 'in :1 national shop window has been less in evidence during recent. years than in several other countries. Next year however, the centen- ary of the crystal Palace exhibition. Britain is again to show the world - and her cwn people - what she can do in industry, in science, in invention. painting, music, drama. and indeed in all human activities. A great. hall is again being built in London, but not this time of glass. A fine concert hall, equipped with all the latest developments in seat- ing, lighting, acoustics, foyers. art- lstes' rooms, and so cn, will fill the gap left by the destruction of the Queens' Hall during the last war. Not London only. but many of Britain's great cities are scheduled for the exhibition of suitable icon! industries and culture. others will be centres for drama, music. opera - places like Edinburgh, stratford. Malvern. Bath. Chester. Norwich. will hold their usual annual fest- ivals in surroundings steeped in history, and will -present plays from Shakespeare to Show and Priestly: music from Purcell to Vaughan Williams, Benjamin Britten, and Alan Rawsthome; Cvlyndebourne will be the Mecca for -those pil- grims who love opera; every art. gallery in the country will exert itself to exhibit the masterpieces of pointing and sculpture from the miniatures of the Tudor Hilliardito the great. portrait painters. Rey- nolds. Lawrenoe and Gainsborough, ' CWO SONNETS Saints have adored the lofty soul of you. Poets have whitened at your high renown. We stand among the many millions who Do hourly wait. to pass your path. way down. Y0ll- 80 familiar. once were strange-: . we tried To Live as of your present:-: un- aware. But now in every road on every side We see your straight and steadfast signpost there. I think it like that signpost in my land Hoary and fall. which pointed me to go Upward. into the hills. on right hand. Where the mists swim and winds shriek and blcfw. A homeless land and frlendless a land I did not-know and that I wish.-d to know. the the but Such. such is Death: no triumpir no defeat: Only an empty pull. a slate rubbed clea ll. A merciful putting away of what has been. And this we know: Death is not Life effete, Life crushed, the broken pail. we who have seen So marvellous things know well the end not yet. i Victor and vanquished are a-one in death: Coward and brave: friend, foe. Ghosts do not say. "Come. What was vour record when you drew breath?" 30! I bit: blot has hid each yester- day 30 300?. so manifestly 'ncomblef.e. And your bright Premise, withered long and sped. is touched: stirs. rises. opens and Slow: sweet And blossoms and is you, when you are dead. ' -Charles Hamilton Sorley. (Killed in action. Aug. 13, 1915, at the use of twenty.) Horns Thai Talk (Guelph Mercury) It is surprlsim how frequemp. Old Cliarloiieiown (And r. s. r.) A MAN FROM LLOYD'S "Numerous have been the cases that have fallen under the cog- nizance of the writer, where in dispute between the shlpbullder and contractor it has turned out that the vessel in question has been insufficiently bolted and cauliced, knees apparently sound on the first view, have upon examination turned out defective in the heart: every kind of artifice was resorted to in ri-.ler to conceal latent de- feels, (31.1 at times such an expos- ure oi 1:..er recklessness and want of pr.nc.n12 as made him shudder. "It. 1:. t .- us great pleasure when we heard it announced that a building surveyor from Lloyd's had arrived and intended to take up his residence among u.s, for the ex- press purpose of examining into the construction of vessels while on the stocks, and keeping an eye upon them from the laying of the keel to their sailing out of the har- bour . . . We took the liberty of waiting upon him, and were highly gratified at the open, frank, gentle- manly ma er in which our ad- vances were rcceived by Mr. Coker. "Shipbuilding is the only manu- facture - if it may be so called - of any extent, that we have in the Island, and as it constitutes ll con- siderable itom in our articles of ex- port. it is of first importance that it be maintained at the highest standards. . . . It will be easily can- jectured, that no contractor will omit. in future specifications in con- dition that the vessel shall be duly surveyed according to the instruc- tions from 1-l0lr'd's, and that the certificate of their surveyor shall be decisive as to .whether the con- tract has been duly executed or not. In truth. no owner. will ven. ture. we should think. to send his vessel to sea, without having first submitted her to thlsiproof of her soundness. as any reluctance or un. Willingness so to do. is a species of negative evidence that there is something in her construction or equipment that will not bear in- quiring into." -4-Iaszardb Gazette. Feb. 9, 1056, . -.--so Notes syfn... way .. The -federal govunnunil uuob- oommodato the growing gumbo; heralded "Now non" for the In- of sick and injured vp.u.m,.-- I,” dianshuturnedouttoboarnhn tnblishedaoyurssgohy .i,ml' deal. A lot of preliminary work nnthropic Jain family or mm; went into the drafting of the now; the hospital at pt-cunt-cqmmu , um; but it an named nobody--3' dispensary whidi mm ..,.,;; especially the Indians . thomulvu; aurvedio. and nliopatbic medicine; -Calgary Herald. rgeneral ward and n mm", u, t-e- ' tboxeswhicbm-vouspoclulwud The sootthb Professional Piped for cases which need neg;-q.uuu' Association has .instructed MIA full um um com: gm 4,, members to boycott the highland. pdnser look after Dltients of whom Games is Oowsi. scoumd. bo- over 1.000-pigebns, , t... wow, cause the prize money is insufflci- sparrows Ind even kiiu-up N. ent. Now people allergic to bag- mined as indoorpgtienu em. pipers lrncw that money is more month. For my patient admit ' powerful than art and can buy sick or injured. tune or wild he their peace accordingly. -Ottawa" fees are charged. But after: :9. Journal. ' Ioovery the birds on not give; ibacl: to their owners, They In M A wonderful new "brain machine” at liberty. -.. Indian Information is being developed which will trans-' - late foreign languages iiterally.: Swedish scientists are com”... What newspapers want. boweveniing the possibility of increasln, is a machine that would enable the silo of the human hem public speakers who complain that- some little guys might , like am they are being mlsreportod to say but a more popular move wow. what they think they are saying in-' be to reduce the size by m 0, stead of what they really do say. eight inch. -- at the waist.-oi. -Peterborough Examiner. ltawa Citizen. A British Army court martial ' has decided that it. is no crime-to' Mme Minister Menzies. of .4... kiss a girl in the dark, at a party., V3118: his aussested the formatlo; This ruling seems, like a work owl! a c Ihonwulth division for superercgation, for the practice is "10 WIT in Korea. Coming from wel-l established and of long stand-I Ml? M81121”. thlll Dl'0posal' doe; lng. Whatever Blackstone and other ml llslcnish us at all. The pt-gm. authorities may say about it. there Minister of Australia is an old. is a wealth of precedents. Common 8031001 lmperlnllst-...Mr. Menziex law and practice, it would seem. 00mm"-5 asraveerrorwhen be up long since established the principle f0l' the formation of such a brl. that a pretty girl who lingers can Elidt AS we have already said, tlu dark terrace at a party may expect Wold Commcnwea"-h ll 5i'll0lli'moul to be kissed. Indeed, she may be With imperialism 00 the people of disappoined if she is-notl - Hall-'A51& By demanding thetormmon fax chronicle-Herald, of 9. Commonwealth division is the best possible way to play the gamq Iof Communist Russia which does not cease to exploit the just re. .sent.ment of the yellow raw ln neighboring Nova Scoiia I moose stepped on to the highway i f t f a. dri'e b Mr. Vii. lidoacgofiald, oi gort yl-Iowe. "amst the 9”” "npe””u5"l 1-1 who ummuuy Jummed on the Asia of the Great Powers. - Lg brakes. The moose. according to D”"' o”'”w”- press reports. sniffed the auto: from bumper to bumper. then u I got behind and pushed it so yards. Now this is probably the first consult inriutsuce ofla rkrligose pushing a . , , vc ic e. But n 1 art of Can- ada. years ago, xgdooso were often , "ALA. 0. P. broken in nd s to ull lods. - . An Amhergt En withp a !tame moose tested the animal's speed against that of many a racehorsc on the road from Amherst to, sackvllle -- and never lost.-saint John Telegraph-Journal. '- Chin-opodist. ill 0 George Street CIIABLOTTETOWN. P.l.l. For Foot Aliment .JR()FEiSSI(yNALdCARDS Dr. W. R. Carson Bell & Mutbioson Chiropractor BARBISTEBS. SOLICITORS, la l Delhi's, Hospital for Birds-them only me of its kind in Nortl-tern India-is soon to have a three- storied building of its own to so- ) Palmer Graduate Bull. BELL, M.l..A. CHARLOTTETOWN D. L. MATHIESON. L. L. 3.. K. G 201 Prince st. i Phone 1012 Aitorneyv at law LOANS ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES MocPhee & iromor H.l-'. MIcPllEE, B.A., K.C. E. SOMEBLED TBAINOR. ILA. Barristers, Etc. 150 Richmond St. Charlottetown. P. E. 1. .................m. Palmer & I-ioslom A. I. IIABLAM. B.A.. l.n..B. me. Bank of Nova Booth (lumber! C Irioftotown. 1.3.1. MONEY ro LOAN Mafheson 8: Pedro A.W. MATIIESON. K.0. A. ll. PEAKE. B.A.. f.l..l. Bonisiotl. etc. Collections - 'Moncy to Loan quently no criterion. Witness the .musical notes, expressive of light- ness and cheer, which are fre- quently attached to the largest and most impressive appearing automo- blles. On the contrary? a battered vehicle. with little more appearancu than a decadent, ssh receptacle, may have a particularly fierce and so Great George Street JO80pll K. MICMIIIIII. Ct lofteiown B ,0 o usiuguisn. souorron. lie -m---?-m-- Queen direct -Gander & I-losxord , room: no orrmzwr A. owner. 3. AL. or. a Money to loan collatio- lsrrisfen and solicitors o Frederic A. Large. Il.C IARIISTIB. SOLICITOB. NOTAJY Royal Bank of Cumin chamber. Cborioticiown. P.l.I. Money to loan Canadian Bank of Cornmeru Bldg A. Woltllen Gouda. i.L.B. The Government's point, that mainten- American bar associations in Washington u 00 um. uh ance of a large expeditionary force in Eur- should bring home t0 laymen the fact. W611 3: '?.,m.i.?'.'Qi.'"i'.'u?.'i mugs, eff .o.'m3"."'?.i'f xht::'ln'i':ulcri1dic:tiv1:n:f,li'1sl's ob':'ho:lr(lu:s:(r,v1)l:gb1y . ,,,o,,; .4, ms BARIIISTEB. SOLICITOB, lie. Georges J. 'rweea.y.. K.O.- ope in time of peace is too great a burden known to lawyers, that legal differences l;l';:r.n';;dH;:'I'uil N,l:u:31l:o.n.DIgl;::;l: ;ll:':lV1f;lulItlrl.gf-ecu:-d hlagiivewculil :3:-I igugmilkg mu: morals it is! null chi u'1ll"u:ll:MlnlI"::'llel” THEM Ildc- 103 GUM! 5 on this country, is certainly not without between the United States and Canada are M museums. cums”. uchuulu cu. ,,m am to uuyunu wuiuh . keen "gm; ourecwsug llxbilllfflakeulgu mm” h M” comm." . u up force but it should be practical to have not markedly greater than between State egy aspect of British life will be on ugrhasg :r ofeuuzmalufn. nothing can be done about it in M. Albdfl Furrner such a force ready and trained in Canada and State or between Province and Prov- 5 gyuuu mun uuuu, the mum, lady who was Ixhyxlltjrus 92" 6 am my me": ' ,ARu,sr:.f:"u(',':"i(':i,on mu to be available on very short notice when mce. towns and vulazeu Are they '0 ;''u'u';, '4"fu'";;"d- fho ch” R M H on: no r.oAN' needed- a ' ' ' 4 ..'i'?.'.” :?."1wi'.."lnl:h'..l?ni3'"z'.l.'ie3i 33' mvellnrltyy o.'-L u'3"?.3Z' .7 :55-' coururrr: VISUAL ' ' cc”. ""'”””"'"' "'”' ..m.E. Henry Peter Brougham, 1st Baron -mm would be .4, ,,,,t,,.,, om, .' kind by the manner in which they EA- . . . also i to , . -' Turning The Don" ml. Brougham and Vaux, born this date 1778. g:;'tot!!1u:I'iRIritl;sclifl:;ci'!is;;u:':n:&. u,,u;' wuuDlf,funf'u"V:I;l;g;upflde:n BEFBAOTION and BAnBrl:;l;Il:iYs.o:LcnoB. ;. .3. "pm" English Lord Chancellor. As Queen Caro- nu, cum, mum to nmumuu, m1u:hu:tloux;m.;: nIght.ul " Intern Trust sufiiun; . Optouirht The prospects a,e.that Canada may be line's attorney-general his management in um-onn is to be his lfeltlvll. mm. mm who" nu; hid mlrrgaslaunnlt ANALYSIS cuutmnuowu Em umuumu uu-u mud. ly A festival means A merry-mob I3 1, awe to balance he, do11m- account with the 1820 of her case won his fame. Was un- ulu, we wuuu uuuu, mm m, V". ::cll;l:;Il1l;lt:l!;r:1y::Iho:ee;ni;;m1lttlm . ' ""' 1"" Corner not A Qua: seal United states much sooner than even the popular as a politician. Versatile, egotistl- lfgedfmigldeuttzlcggmpou ummed mm. gm: hummuezzg. G. F. HUTCHESON Office Plwooitli-u nonuro I u up...” had expected. say, the nut-noma. cal, turbulent, he is chiefly remembered mm m- ma . mm") evident by his manner of doing his 3, so" -:--...........--"""""""""' 1 f d uh . PW Y I? best to imitate the closing note; 3: D tlve London Economist. The reasons as- as 8 RW re 0l'mel' all 35 all all 0l'- shows, to present its amateur plays. . 1..., ma. ,,,,,,,u we mud. um," I'. A. L Maclsooc Job P I h.' n - . .. give its concern hold its nieotinll. dent mama 1 -- -r OPWMBMW n ' "B ” ' signed are several. o o o M Wm luau uo I-mu. M mm mu ly Jud wmluau cm" ..y:::rg:nn:; nmn” 4 First is the substantial increase in Can- upukmum whose premier recently V1,, garden: as clean, fresh as beau. wmd, mm. mum in hluhoth. 53 Grafton Si. um" bu, . . adlan exports to the United States which ited Ottawa, 'is now the name of the fifth mi? 7.” 33”i?f.';m... u..;, ...., ,. '"'” "'”"”'” ”' W C" " f"- i GLORIA nunoma "”""'”;'u.'""m."' have risen from a monthly W57 million lamest nation on the planet, the Moslem especially remarkable at s umo . in nation It. , l I" ' uh cum”. in 1947 to 3125 million in 1948 and 1949, power which is more populous than an the meufggnwguoglumlgkrj , u u . Phone m '''''”'"m. m. and to s1-16 million in the first five months Other, combined... states A. Burk sumg he, um? uh. muuu mu?" dluuuu, I E . D P . 0fl1950- 7 mers in an article in the United Nations "m ”' M W” '"ud"'du'"1 " 9 ' 0 T ?i - 1. Second. there 18 the emct 0' E-CA ""5 "World" Magazine. He continues that al- mn:fio;heth':”hsvo m:3:h:.?1: ” J- - "S633?" shore" purchases made in Canada by the though Pakhtdh 1, Wu. largely an un, country 3?: tgaucloclng I an-my . . , cl. A. Ganglion 3, 0, Non". nu Uhited Kingdom and European countries. known qummy to Amemuum it is uumu. met: mg" uznuuunlznudotgnutini; no an unborn! nuoun omomumut IAIIIITII. rouorron and paid for with -Marshall Plan dollars mm to be co,,,me,ed very umuuuly in mg. .,..,,, 1.0.1,... , u an. mu or INSDIANOI unor-an W M V ” ' 0'13!!! lllll.-9130 from. the U. 8. Treasury. The Economist mm upouucm ,, the bl-Men of examlng. "ff gm ' . p ' mm A'"”Y'l' "m -J .:.M 0... -b9ll9V0l 31181 the em” W 394, 50"” 9"” tlon will show. Thd creation of Pakistan determination. and utalcvomu ' ; "'dlR"'”"”” riolrrnlrr ill Clllldl llll,b.”'l F93"? 9Xl880l" u a separatestate was widely considered ix” ,',,':',;,::flu,”,u",;',',:””u',f,' . X. 123 mm 5b l ' f if not thus 4' u m M stltll p;leg- g aaatudenta xhemevn athnpo”ibleyi' "uni Fain. u "mm" qyonud". . . V , I - u u I . hujofmuown H. u . FWPI llPll0":'.l l0 "'9 ""3 All .desirable.". almost until, on August 15, lag,-ug"-ufmmu Instruct lino an ' Phone om Adjoining lfofib anduunnoui . .. . canon-r:' about rnslnulning American 1947' it b,c.m, .- nutty. And in looking . 0" u -pg-u-nun:-n-: . I ueuvtr um. - ukdu it new nun. cunt mu ary other I r oxpcr once of over three quarters of a century as In. Vlhoriolhootu E Awnuan ' -... ' ' .. . - . , - ' , - I100. . ' solution was always impossible and even mum mmwm-m' '7 "- M" ah”-"L A i -9.. , ' C i T ' I . uiuioIirsble., The "student's scheme," now , gpproachlng its third birthday has a bai-1 , jllfitd budget, a favourable balance. or Illdt. an independent foreign policy (sym- b League). in stable rd better standard of liv- 1: reads itself and- . nurpiuror food A ,- .,..,,.,,. ; 7.,Il,lpIl.!Isros-maniacs i. -, - i "(M . .7. - -jg,-'--.,n.-.r'ut. . . 9:,-.). 4--u . a.