l Piece FOUR _ THE GUARDIAN I llornfag Dally (Found-u tn Ill?) Authorised u nerund Clisu Mull, Pole Office lllpnrtmenl, Ottawa. Th0 lnllnrl llunrdlnn Publishing Co. ldltor and Managing Director. d. It. Darnel- Annotate Editor. Irnl Walker. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.“ CHABLOTTETOWN, THURSDAY, M-AY 26, 1909 “lln ‘llro March" Yesterday's reorganization meeting of Young Progressive Conservatives of the Province was largely attended and caused much interest and enthusiasm. Apart altogether from the Dominion election campaign now under way—and the importance of the meeting in this connection is self-evident-the reorganization of the younger members of the Party should prove of far-reach- ing value. The Provincial body links up with similar organizations across Canada, which were strongly represented at the last national Party convention and had much to do with framing the aggressive policies on which the Party can- didates are now appealing for support. The objects of the Association are: (l) to interest the youth of Canada in the policies and personnel of the Progressive Conservative Party and to organize them to income an effective force; (2) to provide Party material and assist- ance to young people in order that they may plan on active part in the election of their Par- liamentary representatives; (3) to afford to Can- adian youth the opportunity of participation in the formation of the policies of the Progressive Conservative Party; and (4) to afford to the Party a reliable guide by which they will be assisted in forming policies for Canadian Youth. All are worthwhile objectives, and together they form o stimulating programme for present and future activities within the Party ranks. Llttlo Tlmo Left Hope that by "continued, patient and per- sistent efforts" by the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission, and through meetings to be held this year, it will be possible to carry "conviction" to the peoples of the Soviet Union, is expressed in a special report prepared for the Canadian Geographical Society by General A. G. L. McNaughton, member of the Commission and Canada's Permanent Delegate to the United Nations. lin his report, which is published in the cur- rent issue of the Society's publication, the Ca- nadian Geographical Journal, General McNaugh- ton says "there is a little time left which can safely be given to this process of education and appreciation and it must be used to the best odvanme." He states that the far-reaching project for the international control of atomic energy, which has been evolved by the commission, has met with acceptance by the great majority of the nations. We can feel, he believes, that the pro- ject commends itself to the conscience and rea- son of the world. Adding that it is most important for the future because it is the assurance which was sought when the Canad-ian Delegation took the case to the General Assembly in Paris, General McNaughton says: "it has been given in gener- ous measure and even the Soviet must now rea- lize that they stand in isolation in their failure to accept the new conditions of international or- ganization which seem to be an inescapable con- dition for the survival of civilization in this atomic age." No Magic Formula ‘The following article from "industry," pub- lished by the Canadian Manufacturers‘ Associa- tion, call for no comment: "The more any government actually dis- penses in the way of social security, the more irresponsible people expect of it and the more they squeal when they don't get it. "That is why Britons generally gasped with pain and gloomy despair when the political-ly courageous Sir Stafford Cripps brought down a budget which not only failed to give some relief in the matter of the world's highest income tax, but actually hoisted the cost of already severely rationed foodstuffs. "The Labour Government in a bare few years since war's end has indulged in one of the greatest social security orgies since the time of the Romans and their ‘bread and circuses’ policy and, in ‘his budget address of April 6th, ‘Sir Aus- terity’ Cripps told Britishers flatly that high taxes must be continued to pay for such things as so- cial services and food subsidies. Surely, British- ers must now understand that government lar- gesse cannot be freely distributed unless the tax- payer himself forks over the money freely to the government. Governments alone have no money and no wherewithal to create it except by taxation, and if governments want to retain their popularity by the bribe of bigger and bigger social services they must at the some time risk the people's displeasure by imposing bigger and bigger tax schedules. ‘ "ln effect, Cripps’ statement made it crys- tul clear that the cost of social services is foot- ed by the beneficiary of thesrsan-ie services and that the obligations were assumed not tempor- arily, but for all time. _ ‘lit is the ‘for all time’ remark that is sharply pointed. The British have found out the hard way that one can't get something for nothing, and Canadians who are ioger to try the experi- mge of socialism here should stop and think before they demand more and more social ser- vices, which simply add to the burden of their qww taxation, dlrec and indirectly, and de- stroy incentive and e sense of responsibility. . "We now know there was no secret formula for Greet lritein and there is none for Canada, either. that funds for social services “I benefits eon be obtained from rlah people corporations Iron been exploded ' re tim- il.‘ "' “if”... fillfllll" Ill: 2' . HE §UARDIAN. dollars in. lf there is such a miracle-maker, by all means let us expand our social services, but until such a one is found, let us stick to common sense and a tax rate that, for all its imposing height, is still, not an Everest in the tax mount- ains of the world. ./ tDIIURIAL NOIES/ Ascension Day. I I I Mr. John Fisher would make a good Maritime representative in Parliament. An American firm has taken the logical step of combining the principle of radiant heat- ing with that of the electric blanket to prod-uce a carpet that should guarantee against chilly ankles even in an otherwise cold room. "Operation Vote" being spear-headed by the Canadian Legion, B.E.S.L., is of prime im- portance. The objective is nothing less than to assure that the government returned is the true choice of the majority and not merely of a sec- tion of eligible voters who go to the polls. An active elector ventured to predict that the Liberals would score in Newfoundland, not because they know much about Canadian poli- tics, but because of their British ancestry, they know more about British Liberalism than they do of Canadian. The election pot is beginning to boil. lt has been simmering for quite a while due to the fire under it being both low and slow. Asked to ex- plain this, a life-long Liberal declared that "while the Federal leaders are all right, the candidates are not so hot." U U U Lord Bedisloe claimed recently in the House of Lords that the finest dumpling apple in the world was the Bramley Seedling and that there- fore England was the source of the finest apple dumplings in the world. Moscow is yet to be heard from. i I I Britain's decision‘ not to permit removal of air raid shelters till standing on private proper- ty cannot by any stretch of imagination be con- sidered an aggressive move. lt should help, how- ever, to convince a potential aggressor that there would be little hope of taking the Old Country by surprise. O U I Canada's action in suspending mail service to large portions of China indicates a change, not merely in the balance of the civil war but in its nature. Not very long ago the Chinese maintained postal services between Nationalist and Communist held territories, although the Post Master General could not be persuaded to explain how it was done. i i I Montreal Gazette's travelling political re- porter declares that his colleagues on the Lib- eral side in the tours in the Marltimes dis- tinctly showed their political bias, by cheering St. Laurent along with the crowd he was od- dressing. Not so those accompanying Mr. Drew, they restrained themselves to the extent of mere- ly “hobnobbing with him behind the scenes. U l! ¥ Queen Mary, mother of the King, born this date 1867. Before her marriage known as Prin- cess Moy, is the daughter of H. H. Francis, Prince and Duke of Teck, was married at St. James Palace, July 6, i893, to George, Prince of Wales a-nd later George V, who died in i935. Her Majesty is still active in all good works, and especially devoted to her family, by whom she is beloved. O‘ Q O "Let the shoemaker stick to his last" is a maxim evidently the Federation of Agriculture thinks does not apply to farming. The health committee of the Ontario Federation at a re- cent meeting suggested study of a system of licensing doctors, dentists and nurses-with the objective of reviewing th-eir efficiency and re- newing their licences every five years. The committee recommended that all nurses should be protected by o plan similar to workmen's compensation. I O I A recommendation to the N. B. provincial government that a bounty be placed on red foxes and that the closed season on tham be removed was passed at the annual meeting of the Carle- ton County branch of New Brunswick Fish and Game Protective Association. The subject was introduced by Mr. A. Craig, who said that the foxes were depleting the supply of game birds and in some areas had wiped out entire flocks. Their pelts were now so cheap, he said, that they were not worth trapping, and consequently the animals were increaslngJapidly. An amend-rnent to prevent the lrltlrh gov- ernment embarking in brewery business towards the nationalizing of the liquor business was de- feated in the House of Commons by a vote of 305 to 187. Canadian-born Beverley Baxter, Con- servative, regretted this "cncroachmenb of the state." He said: "We get'up in the morning and light our fires with state-produced coal. The housewife cooks the meal with state-owned gas. lf it has not been cut off, we light with statr) owned electricity. We travel to our offices and work in state-owned trains; we take up the telephone and get o wrong number from state- owned telephones." And now they can get get drunk on state produced beer. "Canada's balance of foreign trade in March alone this year slumped nearly $51,000,000 as compared with March, i948," Mr. George Drew declares. "These figures show plainly that state- ments made by Mr. St. Laurent and Mr. Howe that the government is meeting the trade prob- lem successfully have no relation to the facts. ln March of this year Canada exported $l,l00,- (“L000 worth of ham and bacon to Britain. In March lost year we exported $l0,300,0N worth." "In Marcll 0f this year we exported practically no eggs while in the some unonth lost year we exported 043M000 worth. So the story goes with lumber, fish, cheese, apples and most of our important experts." l-lebased his trade indica- tions on the latest figures released by the Do- CHARLOTTETOWN llo ‘flare To Get Lonely renews u. sweet uov.’ ll l | . ll y’ l l l j'l'llh‘ llll l- - "‘ _ p». - Notes By Enjoy your week-emll. Look for- ward to them, and when they fin- ally arrlve revel ln your happiest pursuits. But remember. at. this time more than any other. perll ls with you. Use caution. Be sane and sensible. It will not injure your pleasure, and it. will keep you from appearing on that horrifying list of casualties. Also. you wlll feel better lf you don't neglect your church obligations. —— Chat- ham News. For the “ ooneeeutilve you deaths from diphtheria ln Britain have been the lowest ever record- ed. Last, year they totalled 150 compared with 2,641 in 1941. It was in that year that the United King- dom Government lnltlated the na- llonal campaign for immunizing infants against this deadly dia- ease. Since then outbreaks of diphtheria have also shown an equ- ally spectacular and steady reduc- tion. In 1941 nearly 51,000 cases were registered. Last. year there were only 8.034. The campaign will he continued again this year. The elm ls to lrnmunlze three- quarters of all babies ln Britain before they reach their first birth- day. —- UK Information Office. ~r PUBLIC FDR UM Thln column ll open to the discussion by correspondents of q estloua of lntereet. The Guardian does not neeem-r fly endorse the opLnlou of correspondent; WOOWO-ZGWGWNQ DEDEQUE LIBERAL MEETING §9 Sun-I read where a wonderful gathering of the once-great Lib- eral Party took place last Thurs- day ovenlns ln Bedeaue Hall, and of all the mares’ eggs mot are going to hatch under the next Liberal Government, and how George Drew and Duplessis are holdins back the wheels of pro- gress. what dynamic forces these two gentlemen must have, to keep this all-powerful Liberal Government from doing all those charitable things “which they try so hard to do and which are so often countermanded by these two astounding antagonists! Whal- B- Pity George Drew wouldn't order the Dunk River to hack up-stream-dam up, shell we say-when at some point. up- stream we could have hydro and 138M all pedeque for nothing. Wouldn't. Premier Jones be de- lighted! After the chairman had show- ered Mr. MacNaught with verbal bouquets. Mr. MacNaught, as we ‘xeacl. told those of the worthles who are still left around Bedequs- llial: it was the hope-the "hope" "nark yon-of’ the Liberal Party "eveutuallv"—menmng sometime ln the distant future-to have n contributory syvsbem by which a: a certain ngo, all persons will have a pension. Sometime when? .\ hundred years from now, or a hundred and ten-which would save n lot of money to the Gov- ernment. and enable lt to perform a lot nf stunts around election time. It might evcn enable Prlme Minister 8t. Laurent to operate n canning establishment for' ibe now lllfn6d~dOWl1 fishermen of Prince Edward Island. What blackheads Mr. MaaNaught must have sized up his Bedeque audience to be. to make n speech ofvngue promises, none of which need be implem- ented for another hundred years. and still cause no scars on pram- lses already mode. "We hope to snmellmemot some cetLl-fn ego." Mr. MaoNaught went on to lay that these things cannot he done until the Constltu n ts changed. What rot! If George ew ls rnnde Prime Minister offer June 21th. the old people of this country wlll get a nslon sf sixty-five. and m. Draw will not have to change the Constitution. neither will he force the poor men to turn over his modest little hud-eexnedhome representing ht: life's savings, see- rlttces and toll to get his pension. l-fe wlll get It as of his own rflht. After Mr. Maotfurght. finished speaking It ls rumored that eorne embarrassing queetfone were esk- ed. some of which have not been rstlsfeooorlly answered yet. nedeaue rm once s Llbeul stronzhold. 1t we: common among Liberals to hear the remark, "Ito's n dyed-ln-the-wool.” This election there's no wool to dye: 91$ not-tune left he the m. one n. few old-timers have even that. nrjnion lureou of Statistics, I’, fun. Ur, eta... just. before the end?\1bfeybe at. -' TeWay- A young Japanese zh-l wot-kin: ln n Nlpponese manufacturing plant receives for a year and five months work the some amount a Canadian glrl would be paid for one week's work tn a Canadian plant, lf the latter worked B0 hours. Those ln- teresting figures on remuneration tn the land of Nippon lndlcate in a simple but startling fashion the lnhumanly low standard of exist- ence —- let's not call tt living- that prevails in Japan. -—- Kitch- ener-Woterloo Record. Whether n a and men with a soft heart, or a lovable weakllng with a veln of lron to produce ln emergencies, Wallace Beery was “typed". because his type was popu- lar. His blatant crudltles, his fumbling shyness. his apoplectlc rages, amused and touched his audiences, and invested the scenes ln which he appeared-whether Coeur de Lion's castle or a fene- menb-wllh an authentic and healthy earthlnass. lVlore, he had the great gift. of inspiring affec- flon and understanding for char- acters who possessed; many human failings. Wallace Beory had a unl- quely rugged appeal, and there are very many who will miss it. — New York Herald Tribune. The selection of a young woman from Hayes. Mlddlesex, as "Candy Queen of Great Britain for 1949" falls in. either by accident or dc- slgn with the removal of whnt most of us ohstalnatcly insisted on calling the "sweets ration." So perhaps it ls a good thing that the wards "of Great Britain" have been added to the queenly title. for without them some verbal stlck-ln- the-muds might. have blundered lnla the belief that the young woman was intended for export to the United States, where "candy" cer- tainly covers a larger selection of sweetstuffs than it does——or did- in this country. Here the term was for long confined la its original sense of some crystallized prepara- flon of sugar. On the other hand. this may be new evidence of the triumph of American English aver King's English: our "Candy Queen" may be the appointed ruler over everything from lreacle toffee to chocolates. It seems a pity that we should be invited to sacrifice our explicit English names for English sweets. but there you are—candy ls with us, and candy, complete with Queen, has apparently come to- stay. at any rate with those who would any day rather speak Am- erican than English. — Manchester Guardian. g Thellge-lllrl Story 4 of the proud; but He wlll estab- llnh the border of the widow. steed. ‘ MAN'S FUTURE Yon elm-tree towering at ft: per- fect. ease With level fleece and pendent draperies. Wlui man with all the gifts of all his lands Can match its clean perfection u it. stands? None, for that ndble and humon- ious tree Flulftlls fto laws of being utterly: What nature meant. the elm for from of yore Even now it ts, and time our do no more. _ But main is still unfinished: puny an age Must. bear him slowly onward stage by stage In long adjustment. — mind end flesh and soul finally balanced to a rhythmic whole. Installed at, last. ln his appointed place. Divine ln beauty and uudreumed of grace. -Archlbe1d Leimprnen. cr The Lord will dentroy the housel The bride used to throw i. :r getter, and the girl who _ caught it would be the next bride. an this was coosld-' cred shocking end the bride - now tosses her banquetin- Olcl Charlottetown t (And r. n. i.) _ REAL ESTATE AUCTION Wm. Dadd held l1ll sale of real estate today as advertised. The large three-storey building and land on the corner of Queen and Water streets, known as "Hynd- man's corner", was purchased by Charles Gardiner, Esq., for $5,100. The large three-storey brick bulld- lnr: and land on the corner of’ Pow- nal and Wafer streets. directly op- posite the Rankin House. was pur- chased by A. B. War-button for $1.- 800. The tract of land situated on the St. Peter's Road, and buildings thereon, known as the "Morpeth House". was purchased by Owen Connolly, Esq, for $420. The piece of land in the Common of Char- lottetown, together with the two large buildings thereon, known as "Riggs Hay Press“. was purchas- ed by J. D. MacLeod, Esq, for $500. The two building lots, Nos. 36 and 3T, on the Mount Edward Road, “rare purchased by Owen Connolly. Esq, for $180. The plece of land on the Common, on Clark street. ncnr to Bonj. Happens, was pur- chased by W. R. Waterman, for $85. —--Dnily Examiner, Nov. 27, 1884. J. P. Maoltherson & Son It’: The Flt That Counts Men‘ Custom Built and Stools Clothing II vane ‘l0 l8 A’ IIIDB come, see our exdtlng col.’ ‘lectioa of Ilhllllpifin‘ dig.‘ l mood weddingsodbetrotbel ""'I"_.“_‘R§.°E.“P!° 95°!" li. ll. TAYLOR ; ‘ Jewellers for Four Generations Mfy 26. 1949 g l Beaverbrook l “The days of a men upon the earth (says the ‘good book) are three score years and ten." On Wednesday. May 25. Lord Beaver- brook reached the normal allotted open. But when the other day some telegraphed hds wishes that he cnllht llve tlll ninety Boaverhrook was slightly annoy- ed. Ninety was not. enough. All his llfe Besverbrook has been the "out that. walks alone" and n cat has nlne lives. Beaver-brook feels that on this bash he has several more to come. So for he has had only three or four. He hopes, I suspect, to d0 much more mischlel among the politically orthodox he- fore he diles and to give his foes no rest yet e. w-hlle. Hls first life was ln. finance. starting with selling newspapers on the streets. By the time he was thirty, he was o nlllllonaire and had carried through some of the biggest financial transactions of the Oeneda of his youth. The Cement industry of Canada and the greet. Steel Company of Os- nede remain today as monuments of his work 1n this fleld. His second llfe was in polltlos. Coming to England he entered parliament st. his first. attempt in 1910. within a short. time he had equipped the Conservative party with n new leader. Within slx yearn he had brought down a government and provided Britain wlth- n new prime minister. When young Max Altken, as he then woe, entered t-he House and team- ed up with another seats-Genoa- lan, Mr. Boner Law. no one thought; of the latter as a possible Conservative party leaden. The leadership would go. it was gener- ally accepted, eftfhor to Austen Chamberlain or to Walter Long. But Max Altkcn created e sltun- tion in which the election of either would have split the party and tfhen at. the right moment. produced the modest. and unexclt- ing Bonu Law n: s candidate on whom all could agree. Years later. Mr. IAttIee become leader of the Labour Party and so. ul- tlmately Prime Minister, because of e similar contest between Mr. Morrison and Mr. Greenwood- When the weakness of Mr. As- qulthb leadership 1n the first world war became apparent, it was Max Alfken. repeating the tnotlos of the Canadian "truer-gets," who brought together the combin- stlon which overthrew him and mstalded Mr. Lloyd Goofs! H Prime Minister. Boner Law be- came leader of the House and Max Altken became the first. Lord Beaver-brook. At forty, rich and politically prominent. Besverbrook began his third llfe in the press. Northcllffe, then Fleet Street's relgnlngxnonaroh. warned him off. “Go away young man, you wlll lose all your money." Beaver- broolc dld not go sway. He bought the Daily Express — then bonk- mpt without premileen, printed ln a hlrec’ plant and with only 200.- 000 circulation. Benverbrook learned journallsm mg newspaper management the hard way. while he worked. It was n, great day when the Empress reached a mllllon circulation. It was another when ft outstripped Northcllffe‘! Dally Mull. "today- ctrculatlon stands at. over four millions. Pressing on. Beavevbrwk bought the mventnx Standard and. founded the Sunday Braves-S. brlnglng both to the top of thelr respective classes. Ho proved mm- setf the acutest. journalist and slu-ewdeef newspaper manager ln Bnflnln. More than hlrlng loimrallsle. hf "made" journalists. An astonish- lng proportion of the leading fig- ures ln Fleet. street today have come from the Beaverbroolc stable. O I Benvexlbrook’: father was l Scots-Canadian. Presbyterian Mln- lster, and fundamentally Beaver- brook ls an evangelist. a crusader with his money. hls political ln- fluence and his press. Beaverbrook sought to impose on the conserva- tive party the policies he regard- ed as vital to Britain. No: that. Beaver-brook ls really a Conser- vrstlve any more than he ls n socialist, but. as against the Lib- eral "Little Englanders" ol that dsy and a Labour Party dOYII-ifllli‘ ed by the town proletariat; the Conservative Party seemed n bet- ter bet for a policy whose corner- shone was the development, of the resources of the Ennplro, and the consolidation of the ties be- tween the Domlnlons and Hie Mother Country. Osnedo had made Beaverbrook en mrpfre man; his Scottish farm labourer ancestry gave hlm a pas- sionate lnterest. ln agriculture: temper t. made htm prefer the gospel of herd work and high wages to that. whloh proposed that men should lean for every- thing on the stale. But the con- servative mind distrust: genius; it hes never really admitted even Ohurchlll to the bosom of the fs-mlly. It dislikes young men in a hurry. ‘the party wanted Beav- er-brookh support but. feared hls pollcles. sometimes lt. ,, ed them. Bometlmes lt prrld llpser- vlce to tho-n Ind then betrayed them. Relations were never easy. sometimes they broke. Once ln n flt of spite the Tories even turn- ggeeverbrook out of the Oerlton Ilor f0 years Beaver-brook pur- lued his crusade. He made the Rouse d Lords e sounding board for it: his newspapers proclaimed If. Re promoted Parliamentary candidates to support lt and he took te the pletfonrn sddrieslne greet meetings all over the coun- try. . On the plelfon-rn he devote/nod In utonlrhlng power of oretorv and a ready wit. Onoe tn e osm- oelrn for high rum. hi! news- plntro have led Meet Qtraet in lmwovlnl newspaper workers conditions he was rpeeklng 1t Pwtemouth. A hackle:- Interrupted "Wbotnbout lemony lleoDod- At Seventy l _ i By w, .r. Brown, My. l old." In. g r1 edwt-inz Lhe tit? oiaiiiiim“ popular song of the day ,. "m" "MacDonald? Have vou by‘, 09"” a dream walking?" time a.’ it“ gow. a communist kept, trig "There's no l Russia!" aeovemlgim'°f°° u “And e there's no “ma,” Barllnnle r - y“ ll outside it." 1m“ but Id mm" be He lulled to lm l on the qm-y parligsflnfldwoollalu down Baldiwln. He we; Mo,“ time. Another German “mm. other German blockade w,“ '“‘ sary to teach the British magma" one dependable bhlng m a,.,"r'" certain world was the “mam their fellow countrymen W", a and that. it was folly 1°, m“ lend w allow llself to be W, ,,,"' dependent on imported {my "c" ' e n g When the second m; “m, Churohlll became Prime Mlnm Britain stood in deadly p511 h vaslon offer the n11 of from ' .Belglum and Ftrsnce seemed h evltable and there we; g g, ' all men's hearts. Ohurclull a Benverbrook the task ed’ PM,“ lng fighter planes to c999 ‘m, the aerial bombardment wring; n was plain, would precede mud“ AA linlnlster of nlmrafl Dwducllon he tolled night and day ‘my frenzied enemy. m bullied, chm led, pleaded and prayed, H; m his own private war raiding on. ministries for men and matrrm; for this supremely urgqnt “a When the bottle of ‘Britain “m. the planes were there. They m, the power of Goering’; bum,” force and saved Britain from 1n. vaslon. At the end of that hams there were only 1'1 tighten in rs. serve. Under Providence and un- der Churchill, who backed m; ftrroigh thick and thln. Bum. broolrs work had saved 311m, from what. seemed to be its m. tuJn fate. The immediate dimer p13, Beavefbrook set to work to pm- duce the bombers which 1m; were to repay a hunrlrerlfold when the German nlr force hail dong” Britain. Then with Victory n, sight he sought release, I O I l NW. st severity, he 1s “muwl That means that. the daily flood of comment, cfltlclsm and inspire; l.l0Il now comes. not from Limba- head, (his home 1n England) bin from Canada. Jamaica. the 3|. hamaa or wherever his resllel mind or recurrent asthma luvs driven hlm. For the numeral. his retirement ls twice as strmuoru as most people's work. It has been on sstoaleblnl ea reer; Beaverbrookb friends llll he himself feel that he might lure done even more. but there m weaknesses ln his extraction‘! equipment. Always he has been "the man who would be lung" but to attain the first place you mu! endure much boredom. He can‘! stand boredom. You must sscrlflol all to tho one end. Benvedotool could sacrifice but only in rpdlr. Your vlslon must be wide h! not. so wide that. you diaper" W!‘ fire and you must. give u» llll idea bl’ play. especially Pl lruant. . When Lloyd Goorfif‘ W" Prime Mlnlstcr he offered Beu- erbrook office but the office I'll a. minor one and Beaverbrooh l-l anger and disappointment at Ml being offered the Board of TM! which he stunted. petulant-l! 1"‘ fused lo take office at all. It ‘I'll that foolish mistake which loaded him in the House of mrdl l" u-hloh he was not suited I!‘ ivhlcti cut. him off from the! "If est source of power the HWM commons. Anobher weakness in hi! peramcnt. was disclosed 1n ' long struggle with Baldnrln. ‘m; was a stage when he couxf ha“. delivered the knockout blow a through lack of carry lhrvllfhtfll‘? tenacity he missed the row“; lt_v of attaining political W‘, which never recurred. bill.‘ when ln 1942 he had an 2n urhclmlng desire to rrsLK“ the Churchill aov@1'r~=fl""- nevertheless stayed on Hudm‘ name very difficult. fill-l!“ rough handling from 89V“: d“ consequence. All Lhrrr EFT’ paint to a measure of 901w lnslltblllly which has b-en r I'm liability to him nnd wrr\'¢“l°“ _ from attaining the sflltlfm” p" or. llfll‘ roe ‘llhe lrulrh ls that. lie has U19; fecLs of his great auilllltl- h.’ vivid interest. which make} w“ enthusiastic about one m1“ lead him la drop ll for 1 i‘ thing sblll more lnteresllrii l comes along. lfls imPll-ls“ llril1€5 rlde htm. Once hr we m“ racing. set up studs Mill ll M horses. then one day ‘mm’ he trad been cheated lbs“ Particular horse he dwPPey m, whole thing. It. cost, hlm B ° . ma; day, A: Leathcrhead 11¢ h giving horses awny- 9 __,, front asthma which the h. cannot cure. In fact theym: l‘ not try to. H-l: asthma l! H tectlve mechanism new“ V, dam. It ts also a Jolly 3°°d ’ g for escaping to the tlmfhla" _. loves. 501502131195 hiss" newspapers, en on tenterhoolu. ‘Mme: . "out", blondly einrlolfllm ,, doesn't interfere wit-h hi! m, lhl ' Hts present plsslon ls ti" slty of New Brnnswloll- nadlan Province from W‘ GIMP. but. roi- how 10mg", enoigh I guess to shake ' Institution to its foundetlon- y Re ls entirely dfl°ld b cour. thouccr newbie M.“ anger. One conciliatory him end en enema’ "i" (Continued on P!" 16' _________ rumors MIAT M" ~ More then halt of Brltrln'l' x i ed from N W-iafififio and m“