GIIARLOTTETOVIII GUARDIAN lfurrsllll bills (lauded u urn Prdldtt Lieut- Col. W. Chester 8. lleltwa Vice-President: J. B. Burnett, I-‘J-l. Seer-e ,- Uatst. Col. D. A. Mlelflnnon, 0.8.0. Editor and Director: J. k Burnett, IJJ. te Editors: Punk Walker and Heist. has A Burnett, B-Cfl-VL (On Asflva Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Thu the Weakest Ink.” TUESDAY, NOVEMBER l. 1M8 Airport Site Dispute While the extension of the runways to the Charlottetown airport is being urged solely as a necessary war project, it would appear that consideration is being given in other provinces to postwar civilian requirements as well. A recent despatch front Toronto indicated that the Do- minion Government had virtually decided to locate a large airport north of that city, and that land necessary to the project had already been purchased. This news has caused a furore in llamiltnn. According to the Hamilton Specta- tor, the Mayor of that city is endeavoriitg to halt the project and have the proposed airport located midway between Hamilton and Tor- onto. The Spectator devotes a leading editorial to the stthjcct, commenting on the importance of jiosr-u-ar commercial aviation and the need of keeping Hamilton in the limelight. Hitler's Ancient Prototype A parallel to the vain-glorious boasting of the Nazi war-lords may be found, for those who like robust humor, in the imaginary but un- forgettable history of the Picrocholian war, written by Rahclais four centuries ago. King Picrocholc, as Rabclais describes him, was just such a. truculattt fellow as Hitler. His neigh- bor, the good king Grangousier, did everything possible to appease and placate him. But all to no purpose. On a trumped-up excuse, the Picrocholians ravaged the whole countryside, "wasting, spoiling, destroying and making havoc of all wherever they went." At first they found none to resist them; “everyone submit- ted to their mercy, beseeching them that they might be dealt with courteously in regard that they had always carried themselves as became good and loving neighbors." Only when such meek measures had failed npeatedly did Gran- gousiar and his allies take the field. Rabelais devotes _u chapter to the Pierocholian war council, which out-goebbeled Goebbels in boastful utterances and plans of conquest. Like the Nazi Feuhrer, Picrochole had his stooges and qcophsnts, who cgged him on with fan- tastic visions of loot and glory. They urged that he divide his army into two parts, one part to fall upon Grangoirsier and his forces, the other to march into adjacent territories, “tak- ing without rosistanoe towns, castles, and forts” on to Oaswny and Bayonne, thence along Gcllicia. and Portugal, "pillaging all the maritime places, even unto Lisbon," where there would be booty galore. Then, said Picrochole’s coun- sellors-"then are you to pass by the Straits. cf Gibraltar, where you shall erect two pillars more stately than those of Hercules, to the per- petual memory of your name, and the narrow entrance there shall be called the Picrocholinal sea. "Having passed the Picrocholinsl sea, behold, Barbarossa yields himself your slave . . . Then you shall conquer the kingdoms of Tunis, of Hippo, Argicr, Bomine, Carone, yea all Barbary. Furthermore, you shall take into your hands Majorca, Minorca, Sardinia, Corsica, with the other islands of the Ligustic and Balearian seas. Going along on the left hand, you shall rule all Gallia, Narbonensis, Provence, the Allobrogians, Genoa, Florence, Lucca, and Rome. “Italy being thus taken,” pursued the royal sycophants, “behold Naples, Calabria, Apulia and Sicily all ransacked, and Malta too." "I wntild,” said Picrochole, “very willingly go to Loretta.” “No, no," said they. "that shall be at our return. From thence we will sail eastwards, and take Candis, Cyrprus, Rhodes and the Cyclade Islands, and set upon the Morea. It is ours, by St. Trenianl The Lord preserve Jerusalem; for the great Soldan is not comparable to you in power." "I will then," said he, “cause Solomorfs Tem- ple to be built." “No," said they, “not yet, have a little patience, stay a while, be never too sud- den in your enterprises . . . It is requisite that you first ltave the Lesser Asia, Caria. Lycia, Patnpltylia, Cilicia, Lydia, Phrygia, Mysia, Bithynia, Carazia, Satalia, Samagaria, Casta- mena, Luga, Savasta, even unto Euphrates.” “Shall we see." said Picrochole, “Babylon and Mount Sinai?" "There is no need," said they. “at this timc. llave we not hurried up and down, travelled and toiled enough, in hav- ing transfrcted and passed over the Hircanian Sea, marched along the two Arrnenias, and the three .-\rahi;ts?. . . “But." quoth Picrochole, “what doth that part of our army in the meantime, which over- throws that unworthy swill-pot Grangousier?" "They are not idle," said they. "We shall meet with them hy and by. They shall have won you Brittany, Normandy, Flanders, Hainhault, Brabant, Artois, Holland, Zealand; they have passed the Rhineover the bellies of the Swit- zers and Lanskenets, and a party of these hath subdued Luxemburg, Lorrain, Chsmpaigne, and Savoy, even to Lyons, in which place they have met with your forces returning from the naval conquests of the Mediterranean Sea; and have rallied again in Bohemia, after they had plund~ cred and sacked Suevia, Wirtemberg, Bavaria, Austria, Moravia, and Styria. Then they set fiercely together upon Lubeck, Norway, Swede- land, Denmark, Gitland, Greenland, the Stcrlins, even unto the Frozen Sea. This done, they conquered the isles pf Orkney, and subdued Scotland, England and Ireland. From thence sailing through the sandy sea, and by the Sarmates, they have vanquished and overcome Poland, Lithuania, Russia, Wallaclua, lhvansylania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Turkey, and are now at Copstantinople.” "Come? aid Picrochole, “let us join them qpiclfily, for I will be Emperor of Trebezonde a so. Thera was there present st the time (says Rsbclais) an old gentlemsn well experienced in wars,~who hearing this discourse said, “I _d0 greatly doubt that all this enterprise will be like the talc or interlude of the pitcher full of milk, wherewith a shoemaker made himself rich in ": but, when the pitcher was broken, he had not whereupon to dine. What do you pre- tend by these large conquests? What shall be the end of so many labors and crosses?” "Thus it returned. we shall sit down, rest, snd be merry." "But," ssld Echephron (for such was the old soldier's name) “if by chance you should never come back, for the voyage is long and dangerous, were it not better for us to take our rest now, than unnecessarily to expose ourselves to so many dangers P" , This advice was received with contempt and derision. Picrochole ordered his armies to the assault, — with the rc s ult that he was soundly trounced by Grangousier and put to ignominious flight. Rabelais wrote these things in jest; but there is much in his account of the. rapacious Pic- rocholiatts to suggest that they were the Nazis of their day, fitting jiqtotypes of Hitler and his graady gangsters. .- FDITOkIAI. NOTES — l‘ l I I Already known as the Million Acre Province, we can likewise claim to be the Three Million Dollar Leaner-three dollars plus per acre to Speed the Victory.‘ I‘ ‘I A shalter is being erected at the Charlotte- town Airport for the comfort of passengers and friends waiting there for or coming with the planes. s s n- s- Thsre has been an influx of R.A.F. main- tmsnce staff recently to take the place of those returned to England in July after completion of two years service in Canada. s n- u n- Thc Jones Government, alas, did not rise to anticipations in its subscription to the Fifth Victory Loan. Perhaps it was cautiously wait- ing for the Sixth Loan, which the Premier Fifth. a a a a Victory campaign deserve the warmest con- gratulations on the huge success of their effort. At the outset it appeared an herculcan task, and certainly it took all the time, energy and in- genuity of organigers and collectors alike to as- sure its complete success. But the powers-that- be here knew where “the pay dirt" could be worked to advantage, and never let up till suc- cess was achieved. As nothing succeeds like success the organization will doubtless be kept intact to repeat the experiment six months hence. . s s- s- s: A number of Britishguest children from both Canada and the United States, who were sent across by plane have found themselves strand- ed in Lisbon, Portugal, through lack of the necessary transport planes there to carry them to England. Their parents had been warned, but chose to take the risk. This an- nouncement is just one more incident in the long history of approximately 11,400 children who have made the journey to North America since r940. About 6,400 of them came to homes in Canada and the rest to the United States. Many have returned and although no official figures are available it is thought the contingent now is something under half the original number. s- s- : s- _ Dorothea Beale, English educationist, died this date i906; was tutor at Queen's College, Lon- cipal of Indies College, Cheltenham, where she pioneered in the suffragette movement for the place of women in the sphere of education; she exerted a remarkable influence over her pupils, and made the college she controlled the best secondary school for girls in England; she sub- sequently founded St. Hilda's Hall, Oxford, for women students, one of the first to be officially affiliated with the University: "‘Stroll down Fifth Avenue and observe the luxuries demand- ed by women, and you will understand why wars are waged,‘ was the gist of a recent statement by an American General, discussing with me commodities for which our merchants scour the earth." s s s a A novel point was raised to create unpre- cedented procedure, in a jury trial proceeding tice Fabre Surveycr. At the outset of the fourth sel for Alphonse Patenaude, attorney for the Bourassa, under the provision of Article 237 of the Code of Civil Procedure which enacts that "s. judge may be excused if he is related to one of the parties within the degree of first cousin inclusively." Counsel declared the juror in question was first cousin by marriage to Gus- tave Monette, K.C., who was acting for the plaintiff in the case before the Court. As the jury was judge of the facts to be decided. Mr. Charbonnesu argued that Mr. Bourassa, as s juror, occupied what was the veritable position of a judge in the case to be decided, and there- fore, counsel said, the motive for recusation as set out in Article 237 of the Code of Pro- cedure, applied to s juror as much as it would apply to the trial judge. Mr. Bourssss was call- ed to the-witness stand and, in reply to Judge Surveyer, said that he was married to the first cousin of Mrs. Monette. His Lordship dis- missed Mr. Chatbonneauh objection, holding that the motive of recusstion set down in the Code of Procedure applied to s judge and could not be extended by anal to jurorsf otherwise the motive for disqusli tcatlon would have been specifically mentioned in the article of the Code, which constituted a law of excep- thoughtfully announced in his appeaLfor the u, The officials who put over the Speed the i, don from 1849 to I854 when she became Prin- m in the Montreal Superior Court before Mr. jus- m day's hearing, I. P. Charbonneau, K.C., coun- ,1 defence, challenged one of the jurors, Arthur mm“, m ‘T’!!! WIARLQIFWTQWN GUABPLN A also“... Basic English ‘rho Beale Bullish has tesed pardonsbls about nature and the fuue lsnzusce so tinned the matter is cslre to s. untver l shall be," ssid Picrochole, “that when we are w“ internstfins-l and tndulce s little mom of this of word-msklng-the name is ssh not Bmsical. The initial letters of Art and Utersture do form of it. The 1s therefore, are dearly suggested. Thlsslm Englmh is not meant to be an ’ ‘ to llsh literature-o shor to 8b Johnson. It 1s ternstionsl vehicle for communica- tion On practical affairs. On the other hand, it is not meant to be s. substitute for English, a separate language, like ptdgln Any such separate language I the way to English. Basie is meant. to open the way. It has Prokresslve stages, each of which is an install- ment of the whole language. It has been said that the foreigner who has learned only the first. stages of Basic will not be able to understand s slmpie sentence in an ‘ “ wspape nor what his English-speaking employer may say to him. But partial knowledge need not be a bar to fuller know- ledae. The advocate of Basic could rebl that at least such s. foreigner woud be nearer so understandlnl them than one who had no mi; is rtunabe not llsh at all. It. unfo true, moreover, that the foreigner who had mastered Basic would be better able to express himself 1n the King's En llsh than man s. Blglbh-bom su Ject of Hts tic]- es . There remains s denser which was well stated by The ‘rlmgg L“- @111’! _S\1Dblmtent about. two years mo: ‘What if the child, man's estate, turns u ent?” It must not be That selectlo h lwted distortion. IISOISSQl/xflleglegss must m: the blace of the many verbs that have been cut out. "I will destroy this Temple," ls lain English, "1 will mtske s des ruetton of this Temple’ ts neither plain not Eng- ll-Eh- 31W 1i ll b61118 held up as an example of Enxllsh; 1t u being taught; as Basic English, Th; covers of the “teaching books" and e "learner's books" "The BMW _Way to ntsllsh." proclaim it l9 5° ti,» Quill-hot way of learning 111811“? It my t» s0; but n u a "We dlsfllrbwis to read that. Basie fll-Yefidy be K18 used to teach Eng- lish w Finnish-speaking ennui-an. The danger that teachers and "timers may rest content with the Simplified but distorted form may not be Pressing; but neither the flmllflllwe 0f Ministers set up by the Cabinet at Mr. Churchill‘; 1n- stance nor the Brltlsti éwise and e Eng lsh s lrit) are likely to °"°Y1°°l= lt- I); mieht be only fair to all learners of Basic-seeing how pouch Basic they will have to 1m. earn in their learning qr 3.1411,}. “l” mm as lime as nosubis of the merits of the New Testament and other translations from En . llsh into Basie. The striking mer t; of Mr. ogden's version of the Atlsn. tic Charter are due tar less to m; ance of the translators and; $31 00V" lbreclselv what his orig-mg] meant and than to express it pn_ (31591? in the new medium. whee. gfécthrggytiéiée (sgghphirtowlthrlvfng English will ‘be much xiliwi iii-Hi universal language when every kind l’...‘§r.°:'t.'::1it"u simple and clear. s be precise, Mas ing (Inndon s... Press) On the occasion of the 25th an. we of the founding 0g m; chos ovalt Re ubllc, Jan M". "Yk- fQWlBn mnlster, delivered a timely warning w the world t... u» maintenance of world pea“, cm. a H-un was ltifilathetalgicligryldglett mlttecl‘ that he was lbss hopeful that the free peoples wetna win t and maintain the coming a e, "I fllln fed up." he reclared, ‘wit; u... flops-n of the ba..ance of power. 1t ‘use: m» - "elm lecunt torrsfi-D, alike to de- Th have the more value Slova in th ' precedlgg out-breealtearif ’I.'.‘§'.‘°dl,,“‘§l¥ called. It ls the story of Munich. of and treachery. The lcreement, between Ger. many. Great Britain, Hang; and Italy. signed at Munich. September gérlnggtlljvniqvlrtlfia girdtns cession to districts‘ of Cmeghogloinian Gem“ I'M-n for tnvas- , Minister Ohamberlatrim flew m BliETChtEBBSdBn hanlitg to dissuade H tler from war. e outcome of s. recommends- Prance to Ore- lflee to the meeting w tlon b.v Britain blind cho-slovskia to on to German containing orig: . i; time m . British lm lnll lhwllfid by his tructBSncs returned Bnrlana and the Western Pow- umcd‘ Guano-Slovakia to 1119b- Z ._:-a i0 U?! And still may show me more- My heart's friend latrahed In all the '0!‘ Th Bfl f I told b, hi‘. Ye: stll.l the dawii “lilac perfused And sill! the dsy is brtsht; Woldlovokissedsnotltsr Andi h! Idid not 500! Ibade imtllshlsjovflfhaf. And lsulhod and wandered frea. A lift-l pang l And than the (gone isnlnew- I can be . . . But you. rm . ut you! ill Council l of ese whenkithe tragic story of Czccho- from th H. I. I. Britannia be? m‘ sunk nesr the Straits o o " casket containing the “us; or at, osnshowshtrndrcdsoafl- clepositor "are the‘ first-concern of A and have always paid in" Canada's Chartered Banks. families. Nsmrally, the first concern of these depositors is that their money, orsnyparsoffgshall -be available when called for. Tbatisrba bulffim concern, loo. The Bank Act specifies the types of transactions in which the 111M h srmv- nut- su- elm-n sin-ii Be tern - bclsfn. ybgtnsarsi). march“ ultimo? ma‘ “m” Hitler mot. at minim. mum mantis were modified-thaw in- estsrn Canada's Chartered Banks are the proud custodians of more than 4,350,000 savings deposit accounts. ‘These accounts, averaging $391, represent the work and thrift of you and your neighbours-of heads of businesses 4.4 heads of O nnsdsdepcsladwlflllafiuiaradluihfemllialaasfrferlonsh hdvldtralqlssabssssehiltdlassnldavasarusmhtrsavhaslhtnhab lessvldlubauadfvlycdlsapaaasdwaluaallltaadiaal. THE CHARTERED BANKS Dttnean, 1w ' Governor V“ i Over 1 ora m am my i . w» wtfls- mod Aaltlllu“ iiiis m9sillst'§'ttt'l'5 Chartered Banks of Canada may engage. Bu: it is the banks’ responsibility to analyze the assets and prospects of the in- tending borrower. They must be such as would satisfy you if you were asked to lend your money.‘ OF CANADA 1.000.000 Mons: l — vet the Powers accented them. All the areas Hitler wanted were ceded to him without a plebiscite. ‘I'M bod into German army Osecho-slovskla on October 1. 1% In Brtteglrt ‘:16. 1n fits-mos “IQQI W u bflfl.‘ in: ‘peace tn our time.‘ But than were those who criticized the past was - whatem left of Bitch ‘S! This th o Ont-ha ms , resistance to aggression ‘fif- plsce of appeasement. r ~. In fitféit”.°““ua"°f“ iil€t.l“'i§§i§‘ u. ant thro his of turnfn point Arwlnv-vgenoh Dolloyitowsrds is here recited for m. obs-tn that he was sincere in his and that after Munich ‘ ‘ n ISTRQ-SCIIQ ex on . A. l". which raved her Bottle of Britain two . Chamberlain Y? should have known before, e en- onrtmis . .,,. fanths coygsrstotra cf e new Dun- st the endof the. First Great War. oururs couim Progressive Conservative AssociatlonArtuual Meeting K . RAW FURS Forty years buying fun market value for Musing, Mink, Coon, Red Skunk, Squirrel and Wes; skins. - For the convenience s; its-uppers our office will be open Saturday nights he. 7 to 9 o'clock. , i All furs shipped by malt] should be plainly marked: NOTE:- g We have a limited» qusnt. lty of Gibbs Double Jump Traps which we will q. change for furs. No losses as animals are killed as soon as caught. Be sure you hav _ proper address. - J. D. JENKINS or THE ROYAL PACKING O! Grafton St. Charlottetown, P. l. I. \ E? HY HAVl- , x tttr. $ORE awélh FEET? s! A HOW Ar? Your‘ Eyes? eyes or dllllnesl -- consult specialist. M your aervlca ‘with years} of experience and a thorough retracting service. I Call ln and discuss your’ difficulties. Write or “phone m! appointments. Magi-q; Ii. F. llutcheson AND SON" I‘. G. HUTCHESON G. I. HUTCHESON will be held in the B. I. S. Hall, Canadian Bank of Commerce Building on Tuesday, November 9th, 1948, at 8 P.M. Prior to the annual meeting district meetings willba held commencing at 7:80 PM. to appoint members for the County executive. All poll chairmen are requested to call meetings of n their polls to appoint five delegates to attend the annual muting and district meetings. ' WALTER S. GRANT,‘ President. If. A. FARMEB, Secretary. military power of Ger- manv. and Hitler's intention to use h thlesslv. Nazi Th war. suffcrinizs will d, for s. lastinr peace will have been made possible. War—-—25 Years Ago Today n Chancellor s; Ber- ststc of revolution. CllnQ I “n QHSCYQd I sans n: courts-rows An sown - to n - m _=t Ips- -—llssslvsiflttlbn Offices: Charlottetown, Summerslds, Montague '80! nouns a» srssn vrcronr nswruns llssltrsts, lllnlt, ltstl Fox Mail. 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