.r.1 at -s -.:..., 4-43 lvIIvIIchIbythItolilInd,foi- 710 Canadian "CovInPr1neIIInuIIl.nndl..IIhImv” hllhndnvnlinnddnl-llillullltrlnanllrni OI:-IIInbnrn.P.l.L.Iyhn'I'bQ&CnuIIn:lJ4.. III A. lnnnu Inn Gunnl luau: WIlkIr. mm lnmbu Cnnndinn Duly Nenmnpu rn Auodl Iy Cnrrier Du" nun Elnnwbern in . . U. 8. limit but Innum. -"-The strongest memory is water than ' the nukes! ink." rain: I sarunnav. Dec. :2. in Screening Of Refugees 'l'ne squililble at a Toronto refu- gee-li9('f'iVlllg station when one Hun- garian accused another of being a S,.,.,...1 ,,.,llL-9 agent points up a prob- lem which seems to have received little attention licrctofore. F13-mt?i)i. the possibility of Communist spies' coiniiig into this country under the guise of refugees. There has been little or no scrceiiing of apllllcamsi and while this has facilitated the mmcmeiit of refugees. it has also made it easy for iiiidesirzible persons make entry. Immigration Minister jovial, always to Pickei-sgill. always C(1Ckstll'P. seems to think the danger is extremely remote. since. as he put it, ”the Communist Party never got a foothold in Hungary." This. 01' course. is nonsense. The Communist Party in Hun- gary was a strong, well-organized, ruthless force for ten years or more. And, although it has fallen on evil days in recent months. it is Still 8 force to be reckoned with. Thousands of bureaucrats and swarms Of SCCFGI agents, the traditional bulwarks of dictatorships, are still going about their work, some out of fear. no dgubt. others out of lust for petty power and gain. It would be foolish to imagine that all Hungarians have turned against the Party machine. probably very few supporters of the regime have fled the country of their own free will and choice, but t.he possibility that some of them have been sent out by the Government for trouble-making activities in Canada and other countries ought not to be completely overlooked. just because Mr. Pickersgill can find no record of a Communist Party in Hungary- It would be an excellent opportunity for establishing espionage agents abroad. if the puppet Government of Hungary and their Soviet masters were so disposed. In the United States. according to a late report. the screening of refugees in even more thorough than that used for ordinary immigrants. That is probably unnecessary. On the other hand, the Canadian method of requiring virtually no screening of any kind might be dangerous. There must be I happy medium that could look after the situation well enough without submitting the thou- sands of innocent refugees to un- avoidable delay and red tape. Another Vaccine Report A medical report which should be of considerable value in the field of pedi'dtt'icS comes from Vanderbilt tfniversity in New Orleans. It says that a ten month study by a re- searcli team has revealed that Salk polio vaccine can be given success- fully to infants in combination with protective measures against dipr theria. whooping cough and tetanus. The three vaccines are combined in stipulated proportions in one single iny.-ction. ' The new melliod is still undergo- ing clinical tents, but the results so far achieved are said to be highly satisfactory. It will not, the report indicates, do away with the need for second and third shots which are necessary for complete protection against polio. The second shot is also a combination of the three prepara- tions, while the third is polio vaccine I only. The report also disclosed that satisfactory response had come from injections of polio vaccine alone to infants only six weeks old. So. year by year the pressure against human ills takes on new strength Ind new successes. It is Iuch I short time slum In effective polio vaccine first appeared in medi- cIl records. But already vast num- TIT! of children have been freed hurt: the (E11187 of hnwm their I .ir,'nc. 93 - l Unlhinkable? A U.N. official has described as "unthinkable" an Israeli charge that Egyptian troops are following hard on the heels of Yugoslav soldiers who are taking up positions in the Sinai desert. One wonders where this official has been these past few weeks. He certainly hasn't been read- ing the papers or following the news from Cairo and the UNEF Com- mand. It must be common know- ledge by now that nothing .the Egyptian dictator may set out to do is unthinkable. In every single in- stance he has had his way. He has virtually ordered the l.'.N. force to leave the Port Said area. although the understanding was that it should remain there until 'the canal had been reopened to traffic. He has flatly refused to allow the work of clearing the canal to begin until he is readyito give the order. He has decided which countries may and which countries may not send troops to the Middle East: and he has stated bluntly that Israeli ships will not be permitted to use the canal because ”Egypt is still at wrir with lsrael." in all these things the LYN. has taken dictation from Colonel Nasser. and there is every indication that it will continue to do so. And now that Prime Minister Nehru lias worked his charm on President lCiS('llll0W(?l' and ”demanded" that nothing he done about the canal wiiliout F.E.Vl'Jt's . approval, it is quite possible that the waterway will revert uncondi- tionally to Egyptian control. Indeed, in light of what has happened so far. the only ”iinthinkable" thiniz is that the l'.N. will exercise any real influence over Middle East affairs. EDITORIAL NOTES 4, The "Magnificent" is 5: et ting ready to sail for the Middle East on Dec. ZR. Let us hope that this time the plan will he carried out. This un- loading one kind of equipment and loading another can run into money, if it has to be repeated every few weeks. 0 I D An official of the United States Brewery Foundation has complained to Congress that owing to high taxes "less beer is being sold today than nine years ago" and that therefore the industry is not sharing in the nation's prosperity. A lot of people will say that is good news, not bad. O O 0 What's the difference between work and recreation? An English judge while hearing an income tax case put it this way: Everybody who has a hobby that is losing money calls it work. and everybody who has a hobby that is making money calls it recreation. O O O Netherland butter makers solved a butter surplus problem by freezing the cream and making butter from it as the market required ii.-ills'if'Rd of making the butter and putting it into cold storage. Twelve dairies made the experiment and found that butter from frozen cream tastes like fresh butter but has a higlicr vita- min A content and is easier to Spread. 0 I O Tlic-re's more than one way to get a trip abroad, especially if you happen to be a harbor pilot. When a Scarsport, Me., pilot had taken a French freighter out of l'enobsi-ot Bay heavy seas prevented his leav- ing the ship. lie was therefore taken to Fraiicc. The ship's owners have promised to send him back by plane. Meanwhile, he will see Paris. 0 O Q A move is under way in the United States Congress to put a ban on filibustering. Almost certainly it is doomed to failure. There are con- gressmen who look forward to non- stop speechmaking as the only thing likely to give them publicity. Be- sides, even some level headed poll- ticians who abhor filibustering see in the attempt to do away with it the first phase in a majority's plan to curb reasonable debate. I I 0 According to a Democratic big- wig, Mr. Adlai E. Stevenson will re- main Is leader of the party until I "younger man" is chosen. Mr. Stev- enson is not going to like that re- ference to a younger man. in any cue, political parties is the United Itntu don't have leaders. They just IIIVI ifmlleritlnl candidates who. It soon In the Itecunn is over. win -9.5 .....u.. .. ...-.. .. "" ...i.v4:.. Lesson Fizo ESTAEZRADAY Sea Moss And lllhe Island" John Gould In The Christian Science Monitor l.lxl)tIll Falls. Maine--One of those unrelated and startling. Il- iliuugli satisfying. tidbits of gen- eral information happily cam: my way just now when 1 Wu tippy-Ioeing through -I book of verse and discovered that John (ii-eenleaf Whittier once compon- cd a poem with the unlikely title: ”()n Receiving in Basket of Sen liiosscs." This is exactly the kind of random knowledge that in mak- ing millionaires of many people, hiil has never done much of any- thing for me. it cniild be. but probably won't, that you will see me looking out of the isolation booth. my hand- some features molded into the seams of concentration, while the beemaster says, "And now. for one million dollars. what is sen inns.-x. how is it used, Ind what great poet composed I poem .- boiit it?" instead. more likely, I shall co 1 tlnue in residence here on te farm. piling up my stovewood and enlarging my pnckral know- ledge. and continuing in the mod- est. even stringent, circumstanc- cs which have formulated my en- during character and made me I fine fellow. OFF TO P.F..l. Last summer my laiindresl and I packed the family enrryali with the essentials of a tour. and took my mother to Prince Edward iii- lnnd, which was her girlhood home and whose red mud has not sqiieczeri atwecn her toes these many years. Just as we were I- boiit to cast off and depart. our telephone rang and it wnii Mrn. Paul llarqui.-i. I good neighbor. who said. ”l hear you're going to the-yigh-lands," ”li'ould you," she said. "bring me home I mess of iica moss? I haven't had any since i wns I little girl. and it would taste Iwful good," She told how the young- sters used to gather the stuff and their mother would convert it into a delicious pudding. filling I long- fcli want in I family economy that dirlnit run. otherwise. to den- xcrls. I ruiturally promised to per- form this simple errand, and we started our tour. If I iierc in the isolation booth, this is what I would say.,Sea mosl A SCOT. MAN'S AMERICAN LOG in In edible kind of coastal rock- weed usually called Irish Moss. and sometimes Cnrrngeen from the place of that nane in ire- lnnd. The moss wII pulled from tho ennside, enlent It the new tides, dried. Ind when boiled it turned into I gelatinout paste which made I fairly decent pud- ding on the style of I cornstarch, like I blancmnnge. M088 PUDDING How the first bllch of me; most Iver got cooked, I study of ren- soned procedure against all odds. is worth considering. The original sen mos: pudding was perhaps II great an intellectual triumph in Newton: law: or ArchimedeI' reasoning. But up lntll relatively few years Igo seI moss pudding was something of I staple, Ind it was kind of fun to eat if. Mrn. Marquis hId some sentimental recollections, Ind wished to in- dulge them. Now, the interesting thing I- bout sen man is that everybody. today. uses it but doesn't know it. Whorn it wu onco I Ilmpln 'lnngshore item. it has ceased to fulfill this duty, Ind hu become an important element of modern packnged-food living. to be used in I hundred wnyl. none of which in recognlznblo I such. Sen moss is gathered Ill Ilong our North Atlantic water front. dried Ind processed by the ion, Ind is con- verted to whnt is termed I "stub- ilizer." When you buy I fresh. whipped- cream pie It your bskeshop. and three weeks inter the cream in iitill standing up strong, the in- gredient which impnrtn this run- bllity is n extract of Ien moss. When lc renm melts, but still holds its niinpe. it in sea moss which is performing invialbly. If you look on the tIble of contents of almost Iny modern packaged food, you will find some double- tnlk reference to In ingredient which began life in the tidal Iurf. There in I sen moss I-plenty, but to get some for In old-time pud- ding turned out to be I poser. on Prince Edward island I just missed it. Donald MIcEIchern had shipped his total crop only yesterday. Malcolm Macbeod was off to In Ind his place locked E if iiiiiiugililis iBTlhE Potomac Ry Wilfred Taylor of The Edinburgh Sentnllnn W,iSHlX(;ili(lN. D. ('T - If you are a journalist in Washington for the first time you find yourself so busy talking and listening, espec- ially at a moment like thin when the air is clouded Villh issues and iissiics, that you tend to neglect to see the sights. That would be iinfnrgivable here in Washington, site of the nations great monu- ments. seat of government. and scene of momentous decisions. So yesterday in the company of the wife of A very old friend of ours. Mr. Coburn Kidd who. after a severe illness. has return- , ed to his important duties in tho i State Department. we set off to see something of Washington. It was a lovely Ifternoon and the white marble columns sparkled in the sunlight and you were truly conscious that you were in the pre- sence of history. JI-ZFFI-'.l.SON MEMORIAL First of Ill we drove to the Jefferson Memorinl. that shining tribute in I great Americnn hero. it stands above the Tidal BIIII and from it you ('ln see the White lloiise peeping out from among the trees Icrnss the water. The splendour of the Mcrnortnl must be enhanced during these enchant- ing days when the cherry blossom is in full bloom. On the wall! behind the gigant- l( statue of .lef.erson are curved extracts from some of his sub- lime utterances. it is moving to stand below the shine and to rend the noble words. We felt moved also for Inotlier reason. In we told our companion. An I young mII Jefferson had Is a close friend Ind tutor I Scotsman. We drove Ilmll the banks of tho of Lincoln gazes out through the pillars to the Wnshtngton Mem- orial. that simple shaft. and over to the Capitol dome. Aii you look up It the gentle. tired eyes of the stooplng figure. you can't help feeling inspired and you think of possibly the most ironicnl under- stntcmcnt of all time, these words from the Gettysburg address, "The world will little note nor long remember what we uy here Tho United Stntcs in full of atntues. Ind Wnsliington hnii more than its share. but if you hIve seen the Stntue of Liberty. the Washington Memorial. the Lincoln Memortnl. Ind the Jefferson Mem- orinl, you have seen the Ameri- can ideal enshrined Ind you hnvn felt your spirit deeply Itii-red. IN GEORGETOWN Hnving done homnge to the Iron! men we drove through the street: of Georletonn that delight- ful section of Wllililnglon -II which it is chic to live Ind when it costs you I fortune to buy one of the cnrmlng little bountl. Georutmvn. with In qunlnt dwel- lingn, irregular in ntngen. Ind three-lined streets. with its Ilr of leisure III lrnnquilllly iI indeed In Igrnenble plnce in which to set up your urea and Pennies. it reminded us, ever so Illthtty, of Anne Street. in the morning. before utgnlu the BritlIb AmbnsIIdnc's book. we had mnde I little prlvnu pilgr1In- I up. Alistair Maenougnl wouldn't siurt pulling until next week. Oh, yes. - they still gather it. but if is Processed on the mainland. Pox. ifbly 1 could set some along the rench shore of New Brunswick, where they still eat. it so we detoured on the way ham; and -paused among the French u, inquire. At one place two lobster, .m"' w"' bsndins I new comb- lnti to their smack. and I climb. ed up on their staging, hbbu" 35 I Cami The? smiled. and gave meback an indulgent Gallic nhnig, indication that they understood me all right. but didn't know whnt l was talking about, The" the b0.V on the deck threw his hands in tlie"alr and said. "Ah, oiil - pDINGl Oui, I said, pug. ding. Non. he said. no more. HI pointed off across the Northam- berland Straits It the dim loom of Prince Edward'. red 5.53,, and said. "Moose d'roches Pu- l'l-lyelnnd" I thanked them for Mrs. MIr- quin Ind moved Ilong. At Shad- lac they sent me to Ice Minn Cor- mier. whose store was rich win. cheeses. tarred rope, gingham; and sweeties, who ignored my French Ind told in precisely clip- ped English that Ian mou had hosed. it was good, she said. but Ilns, no more. I came home then. and called Mrs. Marquis to report fniiure. She laughed Ind laughed. Ina when Ill! Rot through laughing she said. "Why. I was telling Ag. thur Lawrence how I Inked you 10 let me some sen moss, Ind Arthur said hn carrien it in the store. Says he sometimen put: it in prescriptions. has it all the time. I bought some, Ind we'vI been having pudding every day Iince you left". "'0 Wellihl - we'vI chlngnd over from the Statler to the May- flower which charges you I dol- lar more I night for having TV and radio in your room - we ro- flecfed for a while on what we but soon. And we couldn't help feeling that our minds and our heIrfI might well be replenished today from that great store of pol iticsl philosophy so richly furnish- cd and so superbly furnished by Jefferson and Lincoln. Here, in this land, where union was con. celvcd. where union was tlironten. ed, and where union no gloriously triumphed, nnolher union is jeo- pnrdlscd. that union safeguarded not by any Constitution but by the common belief in liberty held by the l-Inglis-ti Ipeaking peoples, ti-at pniisionate Ittachment to free dnm which has found eloquent ex- pression on both sides of the At- lantic. That union lil. if not in peril, It least shaken. There is discord between the partners. The mindl of the men here in Washington who interpret the new: are vexed and troubled. As William Jnmnn pointed out when an Irgument over principle rages it becomes inflamed by emotion. The current Irgumenf seems to have ruched the "Tu Quoque” stage. Blnmo and expiration of sin. the exchange of recriminntlons, appear, for the moment. to hnve ousted the search for a lasting solution to the grim problem. We can well undentnnd the feelings of so mnny Arnericnnn. p Many of them, perhnpo. Ire not quite ready to shoulder the henvy responsibilities of global power Ind authority which. II we not It. in now their manifest destiny. Tlicv Ire men of goodwill but they Ire troubled Ind I lltllo uneasy Ind. very nnturnily. prone to look for scape-Iontc. ON!-I BATTLE But. lncrensingly we feel Is I Scoftiali pilgrim in thin lnnd when kindness is prescriptive Ind mu- nnntmity endemic. thnl than ll only one bnlfle to be fought. Ibo war between good and evil. And, nnscotqunrcproudufhlnk that here in this city when the language of freedom in ennrnved for In time. more Milli in the our own at the cures which hIvI been nu- gutcd Ind tried by pcrnonn tbrouglnul. the world during tho but I!) yearn for out common Illmnnt. crnmpu. Here In Just I few of the remo- diel that people actually have tezleiln Ind Ippnrently have believ- Wonr In eeI'I skin on the iinked leg Ind you will never liIvI I cramp. Go to bad with the skin of I IIIOII Iround your left thigh. Lay your shoe: across the cramp to at it to dinnppenr. Place cork between the bed and the nut! or between the abeetn. USELESS ETIIODI These suggestions; Ippnrently pnuod along from one well-meIn- in: person to mother. aren't nil- ly-l.liIy're ti-Iglc. Vnlunble time is wasted on these and other worthless quack "rem- edies" when it should be spent consulting with your doctor. lt'I true. of course, that many cramps are of minor concern. But it it also true that cramps can bn I wnrnlng of serious trouble. Applying firm pressure with your linnd to the muscles of the limbs often relieves the crnmpl. ABDOMINAL CRAMPS If the cramps are in the abdo- men In ice bog might be applied to relieve the pain. However, I urge caution if Ip- pendicitis is suspected for any reason. The cold might denden tho pnln to Iuch In extent that you will mistakenly assume the It- tnck has pnsled. ThIt could be I fatal error. Ap- pendlcitln needs prompt medical Ittention. QUESTION AND ANSWER S.W.: Do doctor: over do blood- letting? Answer: Yen. in certain uses of heart failure which are due to high blood prelsuro. drnmntlc re- sults may be obtained by remov- ing I pint or no of blood in I few cnsen. OOUTH-WINNING BIRD! AI if Iomn force impelled them III In one. some mutcr bird-t -” ding than be gone. I see I flock of thounniidn riu. Ind then Forget to heed. Ind nettle down bid- Ignin. And rile Ind fIll. A meadow seems to move. Almost to breathe, I of dark fenther. How do they have it In them no together... Against the wind and cold Iouth- ward to turn. And uorthwqrd cnmo in iieuon? Men might learn Something from thin going with the weather. wfuli Nunlisl. in the New York Herald-Tribune. The Age Old Story But in Ivory nntlon be tbnl fenh eat him. and norketh righteou- nou. In Iccepted with him. OUR YESTERDAYS Front The Gnncdlnn File: TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (December 11. I931) A very plnnlpg ceremony took plnce It the Snnntorium yIIter- dny afternoon when I completn librIry was presented for the use of the patients by the Study Lov- er's Club of the City. This col- lection of books was presented to Dr. Croeimnn by Mu. if. R. Hill- Inn. pulse-bent. Mr. F. F- Baird. district Ilieep Ind Iwine promoter, has been transferred to UHJWI and will leave in I few dnys to take up his new duties. Monday evening the memberii of the staff of the Dominion Live Stock Branch of this city entertained Mr. Baird It I farewell dinner prenided over by Mr. H. W. Clny. TEN YEARS AGO (December 22. 191!) Fire of unknown origin yester- day morning destroyed the barn, five horses. Ind I qulntlly of grain. the property of Joseph Power of Greenfield. A ruinniity of fnrm mnchinery in one part of the burning building wns saved. ii iii understood flint the loss in pIrtly covered by lnsurnncn. One of the Province'I oldest Ind moot widely-known Protutnnt clergyman in the person of the Rev. Dr. Morgan E. Genge. Pb. n.. pnsud away yonterty morn- inggin the Prince Edward lnlnnd Hospital. HI in: 84 years of III- MAXIMS Tlnbelntofwlndnnilnlahbo iblnnnntbeyntmnnltolnnl Iponhoi-Intnllbennlllenee. Ilnnd for m.'i.e... rouoii. Ind light. for decency. dignity. hum- Ind honour. Inn for unity, ofldftedmfld ALIAII no mm of (Junta . plot: ocononile ' I llnrnlu Ila pound near I ul- rund cronlinlz "'rIkII lnurtna seconds for I trntn to DIIIJIHI cronnlu-whether your one in In it or not." - Edmonton Journal. Pcrlnpn we'll I;V.&f IIVI cou- Iverybody gets iiiihnt lhlnkn II in entitled to-cwlel In much In anybody elII.- Hunltton Inu- tor. no attitude of parent: that children linvo been mixed up in lctl of deutructhn Ind dnmnpn. when confronted with tho lnua has been to tell the oomplnlnnnu to "try to,collect." If the Inn made them financially ponnllr le for the destruclivn nets of tint! children. they would be concern- ed with wbnt their cblldtnn did and the city would be I bottle plnce in which to live Ind in which to own property. - Moose Jnn Times-I-fernld. Burke, Electric Electrical Wiring Repairing uni sunli- Oil Heating Household A plhnool Televin on DIAL 4021 156 Great Goo. SI. ' NOTES: .ri-is WAY- rm .lbn Jeans! and change tin upon. but it they worry bun bI'nnI Ilwnyl engage I public nlnthnn counsel to per- Iuuk people that they're really bcnuty Innis. - St. CIt.lier'ine'. Itnndnrd CIIIIIII lbn Innnd with which Ibo United Nations Icted for I eoue-fire in Egypt with its inef- foetivInIII in lbn can of Hun- ury. 'l'bI blunt truth in that the can influence Gov in Britain Ind Frnuce. Ruuln II impervious to such in- fluence. - The Times. London. Stay At The Cornwallis l Hotel” HOLLIS 31.. HALIFAX. N.S. Just two minute: walk from Railway 8 t I tie in, Stumship Plan, Bunlneu Ind Theatrical District. REASONABLE DAILY BATES Single looms from 82.50 in 34.00 Double from 34.00 to 35.59 single with bnll 34.50 to 85.50 Donbln with bath 36.00 to sum Weekly Bnten Arranged For our Guest: Enhymenl TV Entnrtninment In our com- fortnble Lounge. Ilso Snack BIr. Mngnxlnen, Toiletries and Barber Shop in Hotel Building. 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Write gnapnauwmbountonreqileit rnianouiiuwmdunloo-at-i H-Iiunlwunnnm OIIAH.0'l'l'lTOWI v'-"u"f-'IL.- omcwnunnuanonnunn-nlovlfollvlmlitvtll IY THE SEA" by I couple