“ FT ins ; A * - . 7 > i fy 4 - - <— : : - : 7 — . + Che Guardian | he ts ay ee | Signs That May j ae O19? "er Segeaes fn NOTES BY THE WAY. — Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew the awareness of the divine foolish- Denote. Dea ess a fy Publsned every week-day morning at 165 Prince Sires ness is lacking.” ° : oo et : ¥ ; BIB ys, CRaricuetown P_E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. Herman N. Bundesen, M. a) > oe. Pbiianer and General Manager At the Roman Catholic Cathe- Ec "M0 YOU aul Sad have come Ghost: “I drove for 20 years Sos to eet iat ee Publishers Daly New ritis? Don't be too sure. Re : , we Member Canadian Daily Newspaper dral of St. Matthew, the Rev. Dr. The oan and only had one accident!— | Tussaud's waxworks in Londow ~ “Member of ‘The Canadian Pres William J. McDonald, rector of the Arthritis Rocumatiom |Canadian Highway Conference | takes stock and reshuffles fem- at Summerside, Montague and Albertea Foundation recently revised Safety ous personalities. And this is the Member Andi Burves. of Curculations ‘Catholic University of America, |> : criteria for the diagnostic classi- season when some heads. are “sAdverising Service" ~— | preaching on “Ideals and Idols in | told arthritne “hey hove made| OUR YESTERDAYS | melted down 10 be replaced by ~ 4 King Sireet West Toronto, Ont. a ; ' 5 (From The Guardian Files) others. Since there is room fot — seae ence St. Montreal Scientific Progress,” told the scien- i> them mor’ - definite. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO | Oly about 500 models, the fad- Carer Charimitows, P Summnerage se ger wwe | tists that “though scientific know- Gee, Feamiatie sore” @0t 01. he inte nae” ty trun | soe Toes ote heneient ST __"_ Provinces and United Siates $12.00 per asim | ledge will increase immeasurably, | haqnecie of einecleal shevencteld tng nae eee ue Bem | cat to make recm for Anctrotien PAGE 4 ‘MONDAY, FEB. 16, 195% | it always will open new vistas of ‘ oe at least seven | ied on Wednesday owing to the paw eemoinng ae Bre ee ; "| the ‘unknown, leading to God.” ! 1. Morning stilfeees 7 | Seene eae an eRe, SURE | con” te etomaent- te tien ae tabling the hospital survey re- | search consultant, told a gathering. e e ‘mat ear i ENDO , : ‘yes “pe, ee or vere , : 7 c 3. Swelling in at least © | passengers were carried latest development made | port in the Legislature ‘on- Friday, of the Washington: Ethical Society joint. brought back. Ths’ mode a total under “divection of the British Health Minister Bonnell intimated that “the laws of Nature and Na- Pf “vig, coe at least Ome@! of nine passengers for the day. | Electrical nee Ameen : , ; : ’ : ; 2 se other J ‘ ‘ ‘ce. | sends a tractor a that he would introduce the Hos- | ture’s God cannot be tyrannized 5. Symmetrical joint gwelling ween Sr oe how dump off fertilizer at an allotted pital Insurance Bill today, in time with.” He pointed out that the with simultaneous involvement of | hers of the Charlottetown Male.| place. Technicians are hopeful for all members to study it thorough- | scientist does’ not make the laws of ee agp Jaint on beth sides of | Chorus held an informal banquet | they ean direct the machine te 3 : ’ : g . ~ | at te Canadian National Hotel | plow, to cultivate and to reap. ly before it goes into committee. physics, . chemistry, biology and BONY PROMINENCES last evening. Present among oth- | And the machine has safety gad- There has been no official. statement electricity; he merely discovers 6.Subcutaneoups nodules|ers were the president, Dr. | gets too. zs stops for a red _— as to how the provincial share of the | them. “There are laws that no one gh iz or in the Ssakaant: ue = _ . ae a “All ies Genenier need do is scheme is to be financed; but unof- | can evade or get around, violate or — po, ange re Bae TEN YEARS AGO a = * Wangewray 4 os inte . ; : . . . X-ra os ‘ ; ‘| ficially it is reported that it will be | infringe updn, break, disobey with 4 , rheumatoid arthritis. A ‘sia’ eae es wiia,| ccntiencend Oo shane tee under a premium plan, rather than graft or delinquency.” c er 8. Positive agglutination | dwelling attached, together with | @ control panel. =~ , ene ee ; ‘. ES test. all thei t n't have to watc robot. by a sales tax. Of these alternatives, a alle = 9. Poor cin _ precipitate | destroyed > ae sk Ceateed at can take another Job in town.— Price Agreements London Free Press from synovial fluid (with shreds and cloudy solution). _ 10. Characteristic some provinces have favoured one, Hothers the other. The| Nova Scotia plan, which went into effect on Jan- uary 1, imposes a 4 per cent retail British industry, like Canadian Le byhe industry, has priced some of its — THRE. ATS ty goods so high that they are at a : d disadvantage in world markets. One building and was owned by Mr. J. Loring Taynor. The loss was estimated at $30,000. As far as can be learned the fire was caus- for heads of families. sales tax is regarded as plained. One thing seems certain. A great deal of promotional work will be ne- cessary in making the premium plan the most co-operative section in ® this case—shoulder a disproportion- : the Queen, the announcement is | to the Canadian people tional affairs. Services Pensions) Act may be = ate share of the hospital insurance EDITORIAL NOTES = in eeae. Wellington or | Lately; the emphasis has chang| It might be argued that the | used to grant a life pension of $964 Just ; : mberra as the case may be. (ed; and the result has been to | appointment of a Commonwealth | annually to a 30-year-old man in ust $a burden. 5 The juke box has returned to Hun- In practice, there is rarely any | make the Governor-General | Governor-General would conflict | good health.” y No doubt. the Minister—if indeed gary after being banned for several question r. sed about a Domin-| more of a representative of the | wilh constitutional propriety Since then, other interesting ® the word! fon’s choice. It has ‘at times been | Canadian people to the sovereign. | Yet the constitutional functions | cases of a similar nature have § he has planned legislation of the pre- | : ; years. Which proves that Commun: thought that because so many {| Yet these alternatives are not | of a Governor-General differ lit- | come to light i'mium kind—will have the answers. ist leaders are not even as wise as Governors-General came from mutually exclusive; nor are they | tle from one Dominion to another. | gn. y- THE SURFACE Britain, that the appointments | the only possibilities. For the of- | What would be lost from the lack ‘A former Air Force officer ' Much study has gone into the bill, » which was certainly not.an easy one to frame. It represents a major ad- ® vance’ in provincial health services, Mand as such should be debated on ’ a strictly non-partisan basis. We be- M Jieve that this will be the case, and pose the premium plan, effective wJuly 1, the rates being $2.10 per month for~single persons and $4.20 From. local! merchants, at any rate, reaction to the premium plan has heen strongly favorable. The “obnox- fous.” There appears, however, to be anything but unanimity in New Brunswick over premium payments, which involve compulsory payroll de- ductions and municipal collection of the tax. How the scheme could be applied generally in an agricultural Province such as Prince Edward Island—if indeed that is the Govern- ment’s intention— remains to be ex- effective here. It must not only be made “available” to all our people, as the Throne Speech promises, but it must be made applicable to at least a very large proportion. Other- wise the rates will be unduly high or pavoided is class distinction, and’ the be to have one section of our citizens ious firms producing the yarn for export have had a price fixing agree- ment. Under this arrangement, no firm would sell its output under a certain price. Some time ago Parliament passed the Restrictive Practices Act. Under its provisions, a special court called the Restrictive Practices Court is re quired to outlaw any price fixing agreement, unless a number of con- ditions are met: One is that the plan benefits the general public; another is that its abolition would contribute seriously to unemployment. In its first ruling the Court set aside the agreement of the Lanca- shire Yarn Spinners Association, on the ground that the agreement was contrary to the public interest and that the price of yarn was too high. It also held that the agreement handi- capped the export trade because of high prices. The Court agreed that the abolition of the agreement might | and thus increase unemployment slightly in some areas. But it said that the effect on employment would cents a pound, some sort of tribunal with the power to keep prices of certain commodi- ties from getting out of hand. they used to be. * * + In a speech in September 1955 Soviet Premier Khrushchev advised those who might be waiting for the Soviet Union to abandon Commun- ism to “wait until a shrimp learns possibly close a few inefficient mills | ae STILL COLD ENOUGH FOR SNOWBALLS One of the important.-decisions that must be made soon concerns the appointment of our next Gov- ernor-General. Adequate tribut- es will of course be paid to the great services performed by Mr Massey, when he retires; no one will deny that Canadians are still further indebted to him, after his - distinguished term of office. His quiet dignity and efficiency have earned him nation-wide respect and regard. But quite apart from his un- questioned personal abilities, his appointment raised wider issues of constitutiond importance There were fears, seven years ago, that the appointment of a Canadian to this office, for the first time in the history of the Do- minion might appear to lessen the status of the office, and ‘to “nections. These apprehensions have been entirely eliminated At the same time, doubts were expressed about the propriety of selecting a former Cabinet Min- well established. Names are put forward by: the Dominion Govern- ment, and after consultation with have been made or yetoed by the United Kingdom Government No evidence exists to substant- jate this view. TREND CONTINUED Nonetheless the trend towards appointing a national of the Do- minion has been continued for several reasons: the desire to weaken our Commonwealth cor- | } other realms and territories. ; istocracy. who should act as a Our Next Governor-General John S. Conway in the Winnipeg Free Press relic of political control from Whitehall, and a subtler convic- tion that the constitutional fune- tions of monarchy are no longer so necessary in our present situa- thon. Are these reasons really ade- qQate? In the first place, no one today could doubt Canada’s po- litical maturity. Second, only the most biassed observers could now believe that Great Britain wish- @s to subjugate the members of the Commonwealth to centraliz- ed rule. And third, a clearer up- derstanding of the functions of the Governor-General may re- veal opportunities of which the advantages have not yet been realized. The Governor-General’s func- | ai tative might properly be chosen from any of her subjects, and from any of her realms and ter- ritories. WAY NOW OPEN ‘Thewxa y is surely open for the consideration of a Commonwealth Governor-General, who would be selected for neither purely per- | sonal, nor purely nationalistic, reasons. What would be the advantag- es of such an idea? To appoint a Governor-Gener- from another Commonwealth country, besides Britain, would surely deomonstrate, in a most tangible form, Canadian assur- ance that the Commonwealth connections are effective and welcome means of uniting coun- tries, which, though geographic- ally distant, share the same pol- | ical beliefs. Yi It would cement the ties of tions can be roughly divided into two categories, the representa- tional and the constitutional. ‘In his former capacity, the} Governor-General represents the | Head of State, the Queen of Ca-_ nada, while she is resident in. her | fate from among the English ar- | representative of the sovereign | fice of Governor-General is not | the same as that of a President. He does not have to be the epi- | tome of political life within the | Dominion. The Queen's represen- friendship which Mr. Diefenbak- @r on his recent tour so success- fully fostered. And Canada would undoubtedly gain from the exten- sion of her horizons if she were to benefit from’ the contribution that could be made to her cultur- ance Canadians may rightly claim to possess, would be an incalcul- able factor for good in interna- of detailed knowledge of the nadian political scene, would made up by the broader knowl- edge and experiencé of a wider viewpoint ~Mr. Dul es’ Illness sales tax, but with a large nu r of a Ob. ; : ed by an explosing that occurred ; B Wek ) _. | instance is the cotton yarn industry “eft a. Soares, 0080) FS ae wore rece. iow er in Lancashire. For 20 years the var- : "in edaition, coy “are other | ® £26 lantern for tse. coematie qualifications on some of these individual points. For example, in Numbers one through five, the joint symptoms must continue for a period uf at least six weeks before the trouble can be considered as rheuma- toid arthritis. For a diagnosis of definite rheu- matoid arthritis, at least five of the points must be present. And for a diagnosis of possible rheu- matoid arthritis, at least two of them must be observed by a phy- sician. - CAN'T DIAGNOS So you see it isn't possible to diagnose accurately a case of rheumatoid arthritis simply from a complaint of a stiff elbow or | knee. Diagnosing is a job for the phy- sician. And even he must make High Cost Of Retirement Arthur Blakely in the Montreal Gazette THERE is reason to believe ; that the armed forces’ policy of retiring able-bodied personnel in their thirties and forties with generous pensions for life will be studied with great interest by Parliament .at the current ses- sion Auditor General Watson Sellar started the flurry of interest when he reported on the case of an RC.A.F. officer, who held a observed that “one may wonder whether Parliament contemplat-. es that section 49 of the ‘Defence signing himself “L.P.J.”" and giv- ing his address as Sherbrooke St., Montreal, wrote to an Ottawa newspaper to say that Mr. Sellar “has only scratched the surface in the matter of unrealistit-R.C. A.F. policy.” L.P.J. told this story: “For example, last year I was On Monday the ice in the Mon- tague River was tested and deem- Montague. Many farmers have |, already expressed their appreci- ation since it marks a safe trail over the ice to haul produce for marketing. a careful and prolonged. examin- ation before he can say definite- ly that the trouble is arthritis. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. R. S. M.: Does using sac- charin in coffee and tea cause dryness in the throat and on the tongue? Answer: Not unless the user is unusually susceptible to the com- pound. most brilliant soldier, from his post of Chief of the Canadian Army General Staff at the age of 52? FROM KING RICHARD ff For within the hollow crown That rounds the morta] temples of a king Keeps Death his court, and there the antick sits; Scoffing his state and grinning at his pomp; Allowing him a breath, a little scene, To monarchize, be fear'd, and kill with looks, Infusing him with self and vain conceit, As if this flesh which walls about our life Were brass impregnable; and humour’d -thus Comes at the last and with a lit- tle pin Bores through his castle wall, and farewell king! —William Shakespezre t DRY CLEANING? : a : ay ae ee wt al and social life by an Indian, or = eres p the scheme will collapse financially. be localized, while, if the agreement se Pang om cl baparsage May be QUEEN IN RESIDENCE | an Australian, Governor-Gener-| Commission for six years after RENT TV «No doubt provision will still have to | were allowed to stand, the nation as pen nad’ eee : al serving “almost five years” in} AS A GIFT : ; ; : . of the day. Again these Whenever the Queen is in Ca jo : the ranks, who retired at age 30 FOR A i, be made for indigent cases; but what | a whole would have to pay in higher | doubts bony been seoeen by the | nada, the Governcr-General. al- EFFECT OF EXAMPLE in good health with a life pension moerrtas. cl : exports ease and success with which Mr. | most literally, disappears from Much more important, however | o¢ dollars annum. And happens to others, not in (a a oon Sie “= loss of - As Massey has discharged his duties | the scene. This fact makes it | would be the effect of her ex- a cone a done after | . PATIENT who nevertheless do not participa soon as tie ruling was announced, | particularly in the | potentially | easier to realize that the Gover-| ample. For if other Dominions | the Treasury Board had. accept- CUDMORE'S # voluntarily? One thing that must be | the price of yarn dropped about 7 | difficult circumistances since the | nor-Genera! is the Queen's per- | were to follow our precedent, the |eq a Defence Department cer- P : advent of the Conservative Gov- | sonal representative. That is why | prospect of Canadians making | tificate that this early retirement B Oo Ww L A N S DRY CLEANERS ? : ernment to power. |in the past, it was thought desir- | their contributions to such grow- “will promote economy or ef- : % worst kind of class distinction would It may be that Canada needs The procedure for the selection | able to appoint a member of the | ing nations a3 Ghana or Nigeria | ficency.” ..._ , TELEPAONE 9624 120 Kent St. Phone 22 of a jgovernor-General ‘ig now | Royal Family, or a close assoc- | who need the kind of expert guid>| yr Sellar, in citing the case, call up ...come in... You're always welcome “ BENEFICIAL The home of BILL CLEAN-UP LOANS . P ff iled-up bills now with a BENEFICIA Bill Geeteitier Laan Then, make only one monthly payment instead of several . . . and have cash left . over each month! Remember: it's just Tike 1-2-8 te and pick up your loan at : yep : j ij - demonstrate th litical tur- By George Kitchen ; \ ~ that if criticism is offered it will be | to whistle”. Commenting on this, a | tty a chee o Soliee that Canadian Press Staff Writer | yenggfe Stat pesaginge ge Phone el a Ne of a constructive eas aa si writer in the New York Times says a British -Governor4ieneral is 2) now appears that it will. be | when the long East-West struggle | istrative officer, having been pever $500. Tour an ean be life-insured at Beneficial help rather than hinder the “ir | that, although Mr. Khrushchev ap- | a long time before ailing John | over the German problem may | Commissioned from the ranks 4 ; skit e Foster Dulles returns to his: job 3 ; just four years before the re- 253 GREAT GEORGE STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, @ ister in latinching the plan under th parently hasyt.heard about tt, PUBLIC FORUM ;: cuciaay of cea ee mene oe a climax. eeeniot oe Wels aabutin ibe Y 7 Ny He has return at all . t has been caused, | highest medical category, I Phone: 6518 + Ask for the YES @ most favourable auspices. » a right to appeal for the fullest co- ® operatian, not only’ from our legis- it of our : pondents. — » . cles — despite White House at- coe make jt clear that he was not 5 lators, but from all classes submarine defences. | heamehe he lene lation — beaptel fate years and his | compiaining that the. Air Force ba citizens. . ° . SEEKING INFORMATION | that he might go into retirement, | ©°0' ae oa oe had treated him ungenerously, # Science And Religion At the recent annual convention BP ef the American Association for the ™ Advancement of Science in Wash- igton, D. C., several prominent ha gcholars spoke of science as the ally » end not the enemy of Christian be- M Hef and faith in God. shrimps do whistle—and loudly. The U.S. has the sound on tape. It pick- ed it up while experimenting with The head of a trust company in Chicago thinks that drive-in banks, night deposit boxes and banking by mail widen the “human” gap be- tween the bank and its customers. Robert Lindquist, speaking at a con- ference in Ann Arbor, Mich., sug- gested that banks make up for this by “writing customers an occcasion- This colunim is open to the discus sion by correspondents of question c. interest. The Guardian does notneser sarily endorse the opinion of corres Sir,-My father, Alexander Ro bert MacLeod, left the Maritimes the first World War. He was kill- ed in 1934, and we know little about his family. I am anxious to satisfy a na tural curiosity about his youth and family, and I think it possible that some of your readers may be abie to help me. My father was born on August for the West as a youth before | ‘There already has been a grow- ing~suspicion in American con- gressional and governmental cir- or at least semi-retirement, fol- lowing his current stay in hos- pital. There has been newspaper comment that Dulles might give wp~ active direction of the state department and become a sort of personal foreign affairs adviser to President-Eisenhower. Both the White House and the state department were vague from the start about when Dulles might return from the leave of too, by the secretary's age—he'll be 71 in two week’s time—and the fact this is his third stay in operation he is also undergoing treatment for an intestinal in flamation that has been bother- ing him since. December. SUBSTANTIAL VACUUM Dulles’ absence has left a sub- stantial poW§r vacuum in the ranks of the United States gov- ernment, largely because of his intensely personal approach toe major diplomatic problems and was retired just when I had the most to give.”’ L.P.J. was at-some pains to once the decision to retire him in the interests of “economy or efficiency” had been made. The treatment accorded to him was, in fact, of quite a different order. EXPENSIVE REPLACEMENT “Considering the short period of time served. as a commission- ed officer, the pension of approx- imately $3.000 per annum is gen- erous, and I have no complaint in that respect,” L.P.J! wrote. “In fact, the pension, added te my present salary, greatly exce- OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS IF YOUR GUARDIAN IS LATE... OR MISSED I} scientists attended a att 2nd., 1892, the son of Neil Hugh’! absence he requested early this! pis insistence a ! S00 a © ho Washington al letter of appreciation, telephon- MacLeod. His mother's maiden onl. ” . See ee yds eds my previous income, but this DIAL 6561 speci al service at ea ing them and inviting them to drop — te Pee ree The primary reason given for great questions dividing the _, not oe pote eg _? s Cathedral (Protestant piscopa in whenever the are nearb ” een : ° a ° Dulles’ stay in hospital was &/ Eastern and Western worlds. my TeAcemEM Wi - . é brother John, and & sister. caret; | Bewly developed .“hernia, for| President Eisenhower, who has | o°™" Ber annum by the R.C.A. and a paper will be delivered right to your door. ‘heard Dr. Paul Tillich, internation- al fown philosopher now teach- ai ; day. More significant, however, i icy, w ca | . ce Pr eaccalta: proclaim: Vee oe : Pearse of + gieeay ieee gree i ieee) ae |e statement by his doctors x i ee Weenie “It the Teplacement retires in a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper tis late — or ad ing 2 e niversity of Rochester School ; y smave ¢ that he was ‘‘completely worn cockeyed” was the term the nite data oo agesde seal mrgeres missed. Sh There is a basic impediment to the ., secular mind becoming mature. It g | turns away from the divine foolish- Aa ness in the ground of its wisdom: Ha and this makes its wisdom, however M successful it may be in conquering ae. the world, humanly foolish.” Ovijich reminded the scientists ‘that ti Paul’s admonition given in 1 Corin- of Medicine doesn't think much of medical insurance. He told the an- nual conference on Medica] Educa- tion in Chicago that the main diffi- culty was that insurance had made it possible for nearly all patients to pay and thus pick their own doctors. The result is that there are fewer charity patients for the “young | (ina, both of whom died in their Jate teens or early twenties after tia where my grandfather found employment in the mines in the Sydney area. When this move took place I do not.know. My grandfather remarried, but I am ignorant of the details. Upon arrival in British Colum- bia, my father worked on Pacific Coast ships and then joined the Vancouver Police Force which he left to go farming. Later he worked in the logging industry on Vancouver Island and was killed in an accident at work in 1934. which he underwent ‘surgery Fri- out.” OMINOUS DISCLOSURE - Perhaps even more ominous was the disclosure following Fri- day's operation that the surgeons had removed tissue for examina- tion to determine whether there had’ been a recurrence of the cancer for which Dulles was suc- cessfully treated two years ago. The secretary's physicians earlier had said there was no evidence of recurrence, and offi- leaned heavily on Dulles for the White House used—reports that he was considering a successor. The Age Old Story How shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heatd? WAS EDITOR, SCULPTOR TORONTO (CP) — Charles “Ad- amson, Scottish-born sculptor and F. and that with my $3,000 pen- sion, is a total of $9,000. and you continue to project this to a ‘reasonable: figure, you can readily see the high cost of re- tirement at 45." All of which winds up the case submitted for consideration by ex-Air Force officer L.P.J. - He regards his pension as more than generous. But he can't un- derstand why he should be retir- ed with such a pension at such an age in the interests, as it is alleged, of “economy or. ef- ficiency.” . Special delivery service available between 8:30 \ DIAL For the Fastest Service in Town, call _ ED'S TAXI 6561 | € thians 2, 6-1 (look it up) is meant | gpecijalists-to-be”. Presumably, what ewspaper died Fri- ' ; , . 5 , I would be very pleased to hear | cials described the renewed | former newsp man, Fri-| If it is an expensive policy to rm aad ity edi the | reti ' Great George St. Charlottetown | / the scholar as urgently as for meant w re from anyone who knew my, father | study as routine and precaution | day. A former city editor of retire able-bodied R.C.A.F. per- 178 reorg ys for he t was that there are Tewer Soa me Ge textues. Lace. * | old Toronto Mail and Empire, his | sonnel at the age of 45, it- would ‘ t the most humblé member of a con- be gregation. “For one is not mature Mf ene is a perfect brain, and one is « 3" poor patients for young doctors to experiment on. Some will call that & real blessing. 7 I am, Sir, etc. ROBERT-ROY MACLEOD 285 Island Highway, Vietoria, B. G. Much of the speculation about the state secretary's future was stirred by the fact that he left his department's helm at a time work as a sculptor included a considerable part of the memor- ial Peace Tower in Ottawa, plus be almost ruinous to retire others while they are J5 years younger Ed's Slogan: Wonder what it cost to retire many figures im Toronte paris. it.Gea, Guy Simonds, Canada’s - “To maintain the goodwill of those whom we serve — the goal for which we strive!" a caer