DECEMBER 27. 1954: T H E W E STERN GUARDIAN PIINOI GOUNTY OITIUI 'I lninniar It-eat. Bninnieralda. Phone Ital Howl. Bubperipdona, Advarttei IIJIII IIUIPIY and G 0108 CD01! J. llonae Pbonui The Guardian may be lopreaontntlvan lillandltll. bougbtatanrottne following stone in Ouinniaraidnx ggu Boohtore. nuts 0 water Itreatu ,, Iaeond Innunnr llrneti Gauriiea Drugatore. If Central Street. Ilarl (kudnt, I1 Grlnvlllo Street: ltreat: Inland Motor rranapon. Water Sign Alban'a Grocery, I80 luuell Street. I. I. Waite in Iadngton -nu Guardian will be delivered to any home In sununeraldo by Carrier - necaivna BAD NEWS - J. E. Inglis Kensington has receiv- ad the sad "news that his oldest sum (Inttle). Mn. Cecil arm.-oi shreveport. 1-. ms: v-wed -w-i suddenly on Dec. 22. one sister iaertha) Mrs. B. 8. Lanford I in Shreveport; (Ruby) Mrs. I-BM! very in spiritwood sask; (Marion). Mrs. S. J. Gotell in Hamilton. ON- lignish convent Honor Roll The fouowlng in the Honor Roll tor December. Grade X - 1. Rose Marie Bern- ard. 2. Shirley Perry. 3. Yvonne Chiasson. Grade IX - l. Jeanette Gaudet and Irene Richard. 2. Marie Chins- son and Florence Arsenault. 3. Thoresn McPhce and I-lrances liandrahan. Grade VIII - 1. Theresa Con- tray. 2. Helen Marie Mccormack. 3 Jean Skcrry. Grade VII - 1. Yvonne Perry. 2. Catherine Gaudet. 3. Marion Kcnugh. Grade VI - 1. Ernestine Donald. 2. Doris Keough. 3. Mac- Lena 1. Sylvia Hogan. 2.' Eugene Kinch. 3. Loretta Martin and Irene McPhee. , Grade IV - 1. Leo Fennessey.l '1. Henry Richard. 3. Gerald Des- R0('hCS. Grade IV - l. Audrey Richard. 2. Frances Whelan. 3. Peggy Sheal Grade in - 1 Eileen Gavin. 2., Carmella Gallant. 3. Irma Perry. Grade II - 1. Marie Buote. 2. Clifton Harper. 3. Frances Collway. sriTo.x-'6-EARTHQUAKE MEXICO CITY. Dec. 26-(AP)- It strong earthquake shook Mexico City at 7:58:31 AM. CST (8:53:3l LM. EST) today, but caused no iamage or personal injuries in the eity. Professional cards Zjunujo K. E. Ellis .. Auto - Casualty INSURANCE 5 Summer Ht.. sanuneratdo PHONE 2418 rlro B. F. Hunter. R.O. I I orrourriiiai 4 ... - Oompleto Vlnual Annlyaea Glnneen fitted PIIONI llld lMALLM.AN's BUILPINO Bununeraldu l'.ll.l. Chartered Accountant Canadian Benn of Commerce alulldllln PHDNI zsu Iununeraldo E. E. A-Partition. Obt.D.. R.O. 0PTOhl'E'I'llls'l' Eyes Exalnlned T Olaeaee Fitted 4 Office Home: 8 I to If: I to I and by appointment. BEGIN? TIIIATIB BLDG. It---mar It. Iununoralde day or no parrweok. Phone In for run service or gin the boy reaponnible tor delivery on your room I Formals . -Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Huestis, Suinmeraide, left yesterday to spend a month with their dough- ter. Mrs. P. E. Steele, New Water- ford. Conn.-S - -Miss Lucy Gallant of the staff of Olympia Restaurant. Sum- rrieralde. left Friday morning to visit relatives and friends in Bos- -Miu. Anna May Blacquiere. Summerside, accompanied by Mrs. Edmund Perry, Tignish. left Sat- urday morning for Boston to visit friends and relatives.-S -Mrs. Al Greenan, Kinkora, spent a few days at Christmas with her mother. Mrs. M. P. Di-iscoll, Sum-mei-side.-S -Miss Alice Andrew of Toronto is spending a few days with her sister, Mrs. Earle McDonald and Mr. McDonald, Summerside.--S -The Misses Anita McNelll. Stephanie Gaudet and Mary Kelly. student nurses at the Charlotte- town Hospital spent Christmas at their homes in Summerside.-S -Mr. Everett MacLcod of French River is a patient in Prince Coun- ty Hospital where he underwent an operation. His condition is favorable.-S. -Bob Bowness. student at Mt. Allison Academy. is spendzng lhc Yuletide season at t-he home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ensor Bowness, Sum-merside.-S -Mr. Gardiner Dalziel. student at Acadia University. is spending his Christmas holidays at his home in Clei-mont.-S -Mr. Francis Cameron. a stu- dent at Holy Heart Seminary. Halifax. is spending the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Cameron. Ottawa Street. Su-mmerside.-S -M.r. Jack Macl-larlane of the staff of the Royal Bank of Can- ada at Bridgewatcr. N-5.. spent the Christmas holiday with his moth- er, Mrs. Leslie Maciilalslanc. in Si;-mmerside before leaving 501” Kingston. Jamaica. where he has been tra-nsferred. He will leave Halifax. N.S. by plane on January 3 to take up his new duties.-S ...Mi5.c Dorothy McNeill, R.N., of the staff of St. Josephs Hos- pital, Saint John, N.B., is spend- ing a week with her mother. MIS- D. F. McNeill, Su-mmerside. Just before leaving for home Miss Mc- Neill received the pleasant "FW5 that she had passed her examina- tions as a registered nurse.--S ,ggg..... on TECHNICOLOR MUSICAL nns mm: HAVER -All the wanrn nostalgia, the lilting music, gay 18113115 and 099' free atmosphere of vaudeville shows, song and dance routines. waltnes and violin: in the old cafes will unfold in a colorful motion picture panorama on Tuesday when "The Daughter of Rosie 0'Grady" opens at the Capitol Theatre. Starring June Haver and Gor- don Maonae, this Technicolor film produced by Warner Bros, is her- alded as one of the best of the Hollywood offerings to cover the period of vaudeville days in the last decade. The story is heartwarming. The daughter of an ex-vaudevllllen. played by June Hover, is forbidden to try for the stage by her irate parent. She does so however. ob- taining the aid of a notable figure of the allow world of that period. This is Tony Pastor. played by Gordon Maclzae who thus- gets ample scope for his singing tal- ents. when at the climax she is fired from a new show in order to force a decision of choice upon her. it is her father who sends her back to her greatest triumph on the boards at the side of the great TERM "HCPUP VIILUI; BIKE I'VE LEARNED "IO MY AN Pastor. IIAPOLEOI and IIIIOLE .ELIY Ill Ollfford , 7 "II-f&V D MPKE THAT PUP SIWLK, 3 IN SUPERQT T HE X53 ANYTHING- TELL9 HIM TO. WATCH. 1. '0: H. C '.T..5a'. .' In-17 Burglar: Enter S'side Store Gourliea Rexall Drug 51.0", Central Street. Summerside, was entered sometime Sunday night and about 320.00 in cash gtolen from the cash register. Erin-y was gained by breaking a window in the rear of the store. It is un- derstood that the cash register was damaged by the thief or thleve: in their efforts to get into ' Aaiarucoruldbeleaniedno merchandise was stolen.-S. BIIAE SCHOOL CONCERT -Coleman Hall was packed with people on Friday night, December l5, when Brae School sponsored their Christmas concert. The hall was beautifully decora- ted with green. and red streamers and several small decorated trees was the chief attraction of the stage. A big decorated tree loaded with gifts for the teacher and children was a lively place when good, old Santa Claus arrived. The chair- man was Mr. H. D. MacPhee. The organist for the evening was Mrs. wilmont Read. Instrumental music by Messrs. Charles Caseley and Warren Lea-rd. - Mr. Harvey MncEachern receiv- ed a box of chocolates for the door prize. Following is the programme:- Opening Choi'us- Merry Christ- mas Day. spirit of Welcome Rogers. Signs of Christmas by three boys. Recitation - Smiles oi Greet- ing by Angela Rogers. Monologue-- Santa and Frac- by Russell ' tlons by Eva MacKlnnon. Recitation - Little Girl by Lorna Macxinnon. Dialogue - So Different. Recitation -- A Charge to Santa by Marjorie Macxlnnon. Away in a Manger - Joy to the World was well acted by Sandra Rogers and Audrey MacPhee. Drill - Plea of the Christmas Presents. Big Words in a Little letter Angela Rogers. Dialogue - Readin' the News. Recitation - Crippled Dolly by Sandra Rogers. Song - There's a. Hole in the Bottom of the Sea. (encore) I'm My own Grandpa. by John Webb. llis Gift by Audrey MacPhee. Dialogue -- The Lost Tickets. Song -- Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer. (Encore) Wish I was Single Again by Charles Caseley. Recitation The Night of Peace by Willard MacKlnnon. b 3' Song - Christmas Snowflakes by six girls. Recitation -- 0 Christmas Tree by Verna Wallace. Intermission and Sale of Candy One-act Play "Among Us Girls." Following are the charac- ters. Mrs. Seymour by Mrs. Lorne MacNevin. Mrs. Noyes by Mrs. Robert Ouiton. Marie. (Mrs. Darl- ing's Maid), M-rs. Harris Rogers Birdie Talcum, (old maid), by Miss Gracie Macllachem. Mrs. Darl- ing. ta young bride). by Donna Palmer. Drill - March of the Christmas Trees. ' songs - by John Webb - Re- member Me -- (Encore), Theres a Bluebird on Your Windowsill. Monologue M Miss Audrey's Christmas Presents by Audrey MRCPHOC. - Dialogue - sparkln' Peggy June by the Misses Lois and Donna Palmer. Recitation The Jeanette Macxinnon. waits by Song -- Hanging the stocklngsll Dialogue - A Gift for Grandma Song - A Christmas Good- Night. Closing address by Hillard Mac- Ktnnon. sale of Lunches. Santa arrived with a bag of candy for each pupil and unloaded the well-laden tree. The teacher, Donna Palmer. thanked the chil- dren for the gifts she received and also thanked all those who help- ed her to make the concert a suc- cess. The enjoyable evening closed by the singing of the National An- them. NDRTII TIOYON SCHOOL Monthly Report for November. Grade X - 1. Grace Howatt. 2. Ruth Thomson. Grade Ix Br. - 1. Eula wood. 2. Marion Delaney. 3. Doreen Howntt. Grade Ix Jr. -- l. Ida Wood. 2. Donald lord. Grade VIII - l. Arthur Call- back. 2. Helen l-lowatt. 8. Hazel Dawson. Grade VII 6 1 Margcy Wood. 2. Blair Delaney. Teacher -- Lois Simpson. Primary Department Grade V1 -- 1. Wlnnlfrad mom- son. 2. Ellnnbqth Thomson. 3. George Wood. Grade V A - l. Pauline Wood. 2. Roger Lord. Grade V B - lxdimmy Bherren. Grade IV -- l. Adele Dixon. 2 Jessie l-fowatt. 3. Ronnie Johnson. Grade 111 - 1. Wayne Thomas. Grade II - 1. Robert Muttart. 2. Orville Dawson. Grade I - 1.. Gerald Dixon. 2. Lowell '111omas. 3. Ruth Howatt. Teacher -- Mary Gamble. THE GUARDIAN . CI-IARLOTTETOWN Death Al S'side of Mr. W. W. Gerrler The death occurred in the Prince County Hospital. after a short ill- ness. on December 24th of William Wilfred Geri-fer. He was 64 years Of lie. He was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gerrier of Summer-side and for the past forty- slx years was employed with the firm of M.F. Schurman Co. Ltd where he was the sash and door foreman. Highly experienced in his work be filled this responsible pos- ition ln a manner which earned him a reputation for fine skilled workmanship. His wife. the former Mary Ann Gallant. predeceased him in 1948. He leaves to mourn four sons, Walter. Summei-side. Leonard. Sydney, Ed- ward, Toronto. Albany, H-an-iltnn. Ont.; three daughters, Margaret. Mrs. Fred Shields, Qumrnersldt-: Bertha, Mrs. Reg. Blanchard, Bel! River. Ont. and Una (adopted) at home: and three brothers, Walter tn Rumfcrd. Maine. Thomas. Rut- ledge, Man.. Joseph in the US. A. The funeral took place yester-.'.a,v morning from St. Paul's Church where the requiem mass was cel- ebrated by Rev. .l.A. MacLeod, The last. rites at the grave were pe:- formed by the Rt. Rev. G. J. Mac- Lellan, V.G. Pallbearers tverc Messrs Gleeson Williams. Fred Dav- ison. Harvey Wocdside, Elmer Mac- Neill. Wilbert Arsenault. Joseph Murphy. - S Bank of Montreal Business Review MONTREAL. Dec. 26-"For some time to come, rising business lndlces are likely to reflt-ct the shadow rather then the substance of en- hanced prosperity in terms of civ- ilian living standards." The Bank of Montreal makes this forecast in devoting its current Business Re- view to the "economic drama" that bczan l2 months ago with "ominous signs of recession" and is ending with "activity at a hectic pace". To an increasing degree. the B of M says, the accent lies on supply. allocation and price, for prepare- dness on the scale now required implies "avid consumption" of economic resources. The changing influences of the year, the bank finds, amount in broad outline to a. strengthening of the U. S. market for Canadian goods and a "steppln,c-up" of the rate of capital expansion at home, with these marked features of the first half of 1950 being followed by Korea and the consequent worldwide tip- surgc of demand and prices. Sig- nificantly, additlonal governmental upenditurcs for defence have not been either a large or a "crucial factor, up to the present. . "lt would appear, rather. that specific scarcity situations in Can- ada have thus far been induced. for the most part. by the chain re- action oi an anticipatory speeding- up of all phases of civilian demand with the hulk of defence outlays. as such. still to be made." Record Capital Expansion Among the miiln pressures behind demand. the B of M notes the growth of capital expenditures on plant, equipment and housing. A recent estimate of 53,900 millions for the year represents not only "a peak in absolute terms" but a record proportion, 22 pe cent. of the nation's uroducticn evoted to providing capital facilities. "Such a vigorous trend of cap- ital expenditure, unaccompanied by any compensating upturn in the rate of saving, is inherently in- flationnry in its impact." the re- view stresses. It makes for addition- al consumer income but nor imme- diately for more consumer goods. And industrial preparation for military orders competes directly with civilian capital projects for building materials, equipment and skilled labour. Against this back- ground, "a gradual. albeit caut- ious extension" of priorities and controls is "not surprising". While the freeing of the Canadian exchange rate was "perhaps the most spectacular" of the year's de- v ' , -is in the country's ex- ternal trade, the hank sees er nges in pace and direction of trade as being no less noteworthy. "Demand in the United States for Canadian products has been phenomenal." It now appears "virtually certain" that 1960': merchandise trade with the U. S. will be in balance. in contrast to the deficits of the past three years. But export trade with other markets as a whole contracted by almost as much as that with the United States grew. over-all Economic Picture "As the year progressed. the pace of Canadian industrial production quickened markedly." the B of M states. although agriculture had "more mixed fortunes." In the whole economy, the rise of prices during the first three-quarters of 1950 afforded "barometric evidence" of the pressure of accelerating demand on available supply. The official in- dex of wholesale prices advanced by over to per cent between Jan- uary and September, while the cost- of-living index rose six per cent. Significant trends disclosed by the consolidated statement of the chartered banks included a "strong Albany and Vicinity . Mr. Sheldon Dixon and Mr. l"l'ed, Laird were in Summerside on Tuesday on business. I Mr. Blackmdr oi Searletown was a business visitor to Albany' recently. Mr. Edward beard of Scarle- town was in Albany hauling feed with a tractor and trailer. He is one of the leading stockmen. Mx. Mac. McEwen was storm- stayed in Albany for two days. He was on his way to Moncton with, a truck load of cattle when the' storm struck. -Mr. Walter Gamble of the Tryon Dairying Company was in Albany on Wednesday at the Royal Feed Company's warehouse giving out feed to the patrons and cus- tomers. Mr. Vernon Muttart of Carleton Siding and Trucker for Canadian Packers of Charlottetown was in Albany last Wednesday on busi- ness. The Christmas School concert of the Cape Traverse School in the local hall attracted a large crowd of the younger folks. Many from Albany and Tryon attended and enjoyed a good evening's fun. The death of Mr. Fred R. Tren- holm of Cape Traverse in the Prince County Hospital on wed-I nesday, December thirteenth A was sad news for the people of this district. Fred Trenholm was well- known by all here and his passing was felt hy many as he had done a lot of building-moving in this and surrounding districts. The blocked road between Try- on and Albany was cleared out; on Wednesday afternoon follow- ing the big storm and blow. Curran, and Briggs put in maintainer and snow plow over the road making it passable for cars and trucks. Later in the day '.he government snow plow came through and cleaned. a wider track. opening the road hetwecn Summerside and Char- lottetown. A lnrge number of cars and trucks got caught in the storm. Delegates Leave For Heinz convention I HALIFAX. Dec. 26 - Repre- scnting various sections of the Maritimes. thirteen delegates left by Canadian National Ra.ilwa,vs today to attend the H. J. Heinz. Company convention at Montreal on December 27-29. They includ- ed G. H. MacDonald. Glace Bay; C. E. Moore. Leitches Creek; M. A. Baker. New Glasgow; W. C. Langille. Truro; G. R. Joudrcy. Bridgewater: G. A. Burreill, Kent- ville; W. Nicholson. l. M. Wil- liams, W. E. Wilson, and A. M. Hunter. Halifax; A. W. Callbeck, Oh.'.'lot.tetown: R. K. Chapman, Mnncton; and John Apple-by, Chatham. Fulli Censorship At Eighth Army Hdqs. . TOKYO. Dec. 26 --(AP) - Full censorship is operating now at U. 5. Eighth Anmy headquarters in Korea. Correspondents there were in- fonned today that the five agen- cies accredlted to Lt. Gen. Mat- thew B. Ridgeway's headquarters would be limited to the use of one two controlled telephones. The five new gathering organ- izations accredited to Eighth Army headquarters are the.As- sociaied Press, United Press. In- ternational News service, Reuters and Pan Asia. Limited censorship continues in Tokyo where correspondents cov- ering Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquarters submit copy for clearance but there is no control of communications to the United States. .......-..:..:...-...... upward" growth of demand deposits. with a slackening increase in notice deposits suggesting some decline In the rate of liquid savings. Current loans increased "substantially" in the first 10 months of the year. al- though. in relation to business activity and prices, the total out- standing could not be regarded as unduly high. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BllE- c.i...i-Andv 'It.I-901:! 'm1:d'niiinMnIiIIfl'ei'la'Io('-I -W v:.i;.:'.".:.-::".:....' ""'.'.' liufiii bile lluI,IgtoA.;wtlIIff0OIY your food --I .,, .. it hm decay in the we youz otoniae . Ul rank and the gunk. t 1 k t. mild. u-I100-IW5 1-W" uvh'i-ii'i'. worst than 2 vial,-, at :15 0".-., Ingfrealyteniakeyouioel uv "- . Meetlve ill . Ail: or catch nth world loo concert Held At Presbyterian church -'l'he annual Sunday School Tree and Entertainment of the Summerside Presbyterian Church was held on Friday evening in the Han with a. capacity attend- ance. Mr. Donald Baker. Super- intendent, presided and Mrs. Cleve Whalen was the accompanist. The following program was pre- sented: Words of Welcome by the minister: vocal duet "While Shep- herds Watched Their Floclu at Night" by Wyman and Douglas Birch; recitation, "Good Night.". Anne Hickey: vocal solo. "Away in a Manger". Bonnie Morrison: recitation, "Why do Bells for Christmas Ring?" by Beulah Moose; vocal solo. "Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer". Gordon Forbes: recitation, "A Strange Dream". Margaret Coffin; vocal duet, "Jesus Wants Me for a Sun- beam" 'by Enid Mill and Tom Offer; recitation. ”Christmls Time is Here" by Helen Bishop: vocal duet. "Jolly Old St. Nicholas". Bertie Baker: recitation. "Long Ago at Christmas." Carol Clark: a stunt ”Phe Old Lizzie" by Ken- neth Walker's Class; a Christmas Exercise by Mrs. Linklettei-'s Class: recitation "What Christmas is”, Margaret Mu-rra,v; chorus by Mrs. Linkletter's Class: chorus "Little Stars are Shining" by the Mission Band: a number of films. including Christmas carols. Mary's Little Lamb and The Night Before Christmas were shown by Mr. William Pickering; a chorus by the Junior Choir and the appear- ance of Santa Claus. Treats were distributed to all present and Christmas gifts to the pupils. The church organist. Mrs. Whalen. was prmented with a Rm On behi” Of the Senior Choir and Rev. and Mrs. J. Donald lilac-Ka,v with R pi"-rse on behalf of the congrega- izcn. The National Anthem was followed by the Benediction.-5 "BORDEII INCIDENT AT CAPITOL, SUMMERSIDE -"Border Incident". M-G-M's now power-packed drama opening at the Capitol Theatre this week, rips the lid off the dramatic No- Man's Land along the United States-Mexico border. The setting is Mexicali and the invisible line separating the two nations, where Ricardo Montalban and George Murphy, enacting immigrntion in- spectors. join hands across the ,oordcr to halt illegal imniigi-a'r.)n. The picture marks a cinemalzc switch for Montaiban, dancing star of "Fiesta", "On An Island With You" and "Neptu-ne's Daugh- ter." who now reverts to a straight dramatic role as the man who tracks down a notorious gang of smugglers. It also means ii com- plete about-face in film char- acterizations for Mluiphy. previous- ly seen in musicals, romances and light comedies. He now trades while tie and tails for brass knuckles in the part of a tough guy who slugs and gets slugged. Heading the supporting cast is Howard da Silva, one of Holly- wood's most-in-demand character actors. Noted for such pictures as "I'wo Years Before the Most" and the recent ”Unconquered." he now plays bhe "brains" behind the smuggling syndicate. Also in im- portant roles are James Mitchell. Broadway star of ”Brigad:oon". Arnold Mons. famed radio actor. Alphonso Bedoya and Jose Tor- vay. top Mexican actors who re- cently scored in "Treasure of Sierra Madre," Teresa Celli. Ital- ian operatic "find". and Charles MeGraw. , The director is Anthony Mann. responsible for such fast-action films.as "I'-Men". "He Walked By Night" and "Canon City". The producer is Nicholas Nayfack. The screen play was written by John C. Higgins. formerly associated with the Coordinating Office of Inter-American Affairs. A New Age (Contimied froi-n Page 4) Rome. Seized it peacefully, al- ghough than were. according to an account of that time. a few isolat- ed killings of Communists by Fascists. and vice versa. Thus be- gan the long reign of ii new Caesar. IL was to end in death and jgnominy; but not before it had been linked in an iron axis with the reign of another. ii rouser of vaiter rabbles, whose ambition OAMEO TIIEATIIE KENSINGTON Wednesday and Thursday 7:15- 9:15. See Glenn Ford and Terry Moore in A great Picture- "TIIE RETURN OF OCTOBER" (in Technicolor) lg hag everything. youth-np-pcal. comedy. romance. excitement, and horse-racing. Come! Bring your friends! Also Barbara Ann Scott skatlng reel. N 607A ' noon on. neoocnoot. inc. mum it Jmiliuizivn-iuiuimuu-z-iolilulr QEGEMT tom 2.30, 1.15 a. 9.15 SPECIAL CHRISTMAS A'I'I'R.ACl'lON x D1---"XI-If-C-1-. M'4'-'9",3F?M.Izz, was to rule the world. Hitler A Clioti-boy Adolf Hitler, at the time of Vie- f40rin'g death. was singing in a church chair. a boy of 12. When the Titanic went down. he was selling drawings. At the time of the October Revolution he was serving as a private in the Ba- varian army. By 1922. when Mus- solini came to ascendancy in Italy. he hndlgraduated to the beer halls of Munich to expound a theory-the Idea of an authoritar- controlled ian. totalitarian state. for and by Aryans. It came to flower Jan. 30, 1933. when his Nazi party won power by election and Hitler was Chancellor of the Thlrd Reich. From that date. for a dozen years. until he died cow- erlng in .1 Berlin cellar. his WM the world'g most-feared name. The paradox. as the half-century ended. was that the new incum- bent as lord of fear was the man whose guns sounded in dying Hit- ler's enrs. ' At about the time Mussolini was coming to the zenith of his power. and while Hitler's star was still low on the horizon. an event oc- curred which symbolized n condi- tion that was to contribute might- ily to their joint sway over land: and people. And to that other in- fluence working outward from the grey city where Lenin"; body lay. On Oct. 29. 1929, the New York stock market crashed. There is little that is compelling about (try figures. But here were figures written in blood. For the Nash itself was nnly the dramatic first symbol of a world condition. it great depression. in the that followed. the field of human flesh and hloofl was fertile to the conquest of war the to on lmwever-- )Iussolini's Ethiopia was complete. civil in Spain was under way -- world paused for a mom:-nt hear a former King: speak long last. . . . ii few words of my own." On the afternoon of Dec. 11, 1936. the British Parlia- ment had passed lnto law the first Voluntary Ahilicntion Bill in the long history of the Empire. That night the former Edward VH1 broadcast to the world his explan- ation: ”l have found it. imll-N' sible to carry the heavy burden . without the help and support of the woman I love." The Kings abdication. to make possible his marriage to a divorced woman. was the romance of the half-centur,v. His hroadcast was heard by the greatest audience up to that time in the history of ra- dio--more than had listened to the hombasz of Mussolini or the stridency of Hitler. Outgrowtah Of War Oin of the second of the two World Wars that splash with red the history of the half-century. camo two developments of which the fllll significance belong; to the future. Oneofvthese Wax the formation in San Francisco. in the spring of 1945. of the United Nations. an attempt by the victors to ensure I just peace through world-wide ruin of law. Five years later the organization --already divided by the enmity of one of its founders. Russia- held together to stand Against the Seed and Table 100 pound Bags of ten days. signalled the collapse of trade. the! derail:-' seeds of hate. And they W-'rO' sown, V in the midst of that decid-'-.. PAGE ELEVEN RECEIVES PRAISE Mrs. L. J. Morin. 0820 98th Street, Ed- monton. Alta, praises Sarnalc. She writes: ”I have been both- ered with ner- vousness and indigestion a n d I ,- . ., could find no re- .i..LL lief. After taking two hot- llcs of Sarnak, the benefits I rc- ct-ivcd cannot be expressed in words. If you suffer from rheumatic, neuritic. or arthritic pain, sciatica or backache or from some stomach. kidney or liver disorders. nutritional anemia and nervousness. try Sar- itak for one week, prove that Sarnak can help you. 31.35 at all drug stores. IIORIN invasion of South Korea by the Communist North. Whether or not this clash was the sprouting of a Third World War was still unclear. The second development -- long in growing. secretly nursed in the minds of men--was signalized by the blast which on Aug. 6. 1945, wiped out the Japanese city of Hiroshima. Of all the stories of this half-century. the harnessing I of atomic power. of which the - homb is one aspect. holds the wildest. potentialities for tile fu- ture. So much is shrnudod. It in hard in say: (Wen, wllcrn the knowledge of atomic power he- gan. . - . In the year nf Victoria's death a young New Zr-alanrlcr n'lmr-rl Ernest Rutllci-ford was professor of physics in McGlll I'nivci-sit,-.', Montreal. His i'cse.'li'l-has PSl-ill- llshed tllr CXlsL0ll('P and nnturrr cf rlldio-active lransfornlzitions. the electrical structure. of mritt:-r. the nuclear nrltllro of tho atom. He rlullllshcd books about this and in 1908 won a Nohol prize. , Enrico Fermi. an Italian pity.-1.-. lsi. and others. split llln atom in ,iho mid-thlrtirs. and Otto linim i P7 3"Tl'1n split tho uranium atom in 1939. But it is still um-ortiin whnihcr they quite know wt”! lh9.l' Wvre doing. Many nth:-rs worked npecifirally lmvnrd the "Slllt hlaznned hv that blinding flash ow-r I-lirnshimn. And OlllO'S still work. In the end it Pomcs back to pen- DIP. Whore this knowlerllzc leads -to ultimate self-destruction or I new world of arowth nnd struc. ture: in and life or to make life more worth living - depends on men. On men who en In high DlPW'S- rlllefl by the instincts. zreeds. passions and ideals that nre this cnmmnn inheritance of flesh and blood. George -P. Dunsford Crapoud Representing SELKIRK METAL CHIMNEYS Place Your Order NOW BUYING poriuons Summerslde warehouses for a period of JOSEPH READ & co. LTD. Phone: Summerside 2129: Northern 10-2 ALSO LATEST NEWS OF THE Stock Potatoes in our Northern and CAPITOI Sumnaei-side (THE BEST IN SOUND & MOVIES) Tonight 7:15-9:15 7 Thursday 2:30-7:15-9:15 V H N stirring IIOAIOO MOIITALIAI - OEOIOE MIIIPIIV - . ..... ............. DAY - -1