E;rUIna!.' liationalism in ll. 8. Stirs Religious Thought gvcdnoi W. wINll.t.. Yosui, (AP!-One of the tenets being pnached PIHIIVJ in the United states hlhy is this: That a nation, like a naniimxidnotnbwaysdouit Isa. Around his view revolves a tune lane of the times. It has stirred wide discussion. usually under the labols of "international- iau" versus "nstiionai.lmi." !hnidr-eds of rciigovus leaders have entered the fray. onetime that a fundamental law of God is involved, Most of them hold Ulint ii nation's doolsiona should be guided by the interests of all peoples everywhere. But they grant many Americans any national self-interest as the governing rule. "Tlvicre is mounting evidence." says a recent interdeiiominational report. "of n resurgent . . . moral isolatlonism which falls to recog- nize our dependence on other peo- plos or our responsibility to t:hc-Irn." Buy lsolationlsm wrong Iudi an zmltiide. denoiiiliiatiniial leaders say. is contrary to "God order.” All this ioiiclins on mine rur- rrntly aciiin mniii-rs. such NS for- pign aid iirrvtzrzims mid co-oiic:'a- fiTr prolivs of the Uliled Nations But is also l"llS('S some general qmmnng c n n c e r n i ll g "national BOVFrPI:nIi' " Re1'vrnsnittalii'aJ of most W.C.T.U. NOTES .:m. A TTMELY MESSAGE major Scripture: James V: l6. 1953 is gone vi-loh its hrnkcn rs- soliitinns. some disappointments and mime. discoiirngnmonls. Let us. not forget the battles TOllgTlI.. and victories won, and as God's people we are glad for flllBNi'Pl'P(l prayers. We enter 1954 with cour- age and a new determination to "fight tiho Rood fight of faith." There is R motto I have seen whloli spurs me on . . , ."Prayer changes things" I have also noticed that prayer changes the pray-er, as well Mt people Could we make that motto our own this year, putting God in tfhe test. This world of ours is surely in a tragic state. With war-clouds hang- ing low, while our finc youth mav be sent. to far off battle-fields with no promise of victory. Don't. you think it is time lo piuiv? When We consider filial: our ria- lion ls spciidincz fir more on lriznlizr-cl snln of lloiior thnn is spent on all Chrlsiianlzluz and Ediicat-ional efforts Arimbined Isn't. it time to pray? Since over h,ilf of run and ymiiii: in-opic iieyer at- tend n Elundav Scliocl or church, it. is no wonder Ci'lTllP is challeni:- ing our homo: and increasing: the divorce rate. and the annalllng i'-ici is that the ma-iority of crimimils are iiitder twcnlr-onc Vt-tii's , Erl- ivard Hoover mic." snlrl' "If I had my way I'd snnrl r-ivory boy and .?Il'l to Siindny School in nrdrvr to stun orlvie . . . Criminals do not come out. of Siirirlav Schools." Tan't it time to nrav. when We consirlcr that the movies are park- ed with lHIl"'llIS and ti ilriren in l'-iaibll rlrmri".'ili7.ii": scenes. -time some cliiircli doors arc closnd br- caiise so few atii-n,rl7 our child- Our Sunday is fast hz-inc Frl'l- aidrred "out of date." and His God-orrlziiiierl rlev is for iiiwni mr-relv 71 hrilidav or ii clciy in ll'h:('1 Ir ("(lIA".Il inn on so-no ii-cck.rlii- Iillsilllwi TSll'I ll i'iiir- to pray" What do tho liter-iture ta')lrs Phil iii-vs-staiirls offer our votirvz pccplc in ihn ii",-iy of ii-liolesurrie Fl'I7ll”'.lCIPi'-'”)llIll'TIll” i'carlln':'l Wiiiil I7lYlllI l7'lflllV of Mir rwrlin l)rn""1nVs and tclcvisio-i ni'ot:rrims” Those thins: shoiilrl sllr mi in the ricnthii of our hmrts as wc nrav TI is l"llI Wc cannot in our own slrrrctb ziovi the rlnivriir-rrl trends. but GOD can and will in .'wisii'cii tn pr.-i'.'r". "The nffectiinl fervcnt nravnr M a YlQ'llI"rlllS man m':iilc'li much" lift us priiy and prnvo His prom- ises. Barbers - Hairdressers WANTED Learn these Trades st iii) TRANS-(lANAl)A BEAUTY INTIFRTRIES, LTD. Mniiclon, N. B. FRIDAY & CLUSED FDR STUCK - TAKING SATURDAY January 19. (30 rue ROGERS HARDWARE COMPAIY LIMITED ahurches, at a recent oanfounce. declared I nation should recognise it is "bound together in mutual responsibility with all others whun God made and loves." "Hie key word for this genera- tion," they said. "is neither de- pendence nor independence but in- t.erde'pendencc." Wbll Bible lays ' They back their stand with Christian doctrine. which can be summarised as follows: 1. God is the supreme sovereign of all nations. and has set forth universal lsrws applicable to all. 2. Among tziiese iaiivs is the equal worth of all men under God. He plays no favorites. . 3. A nation, to abide by this un- lVi-'l'SEl law, must give considera- tion to the wefare of all lands and peoples. Otherwise, it "falls dhort of the ethical demands of the Christian faith." These factors, as church leaders see it, mean a nation's policies should be "broad enough to include l-lie rights, needs and interests of .other nations and peoples. includ- ling those we now count as hostile.” Foreign aid Endorsed The ch-urc-hman. using biblical doctrine. also make is case for generous foreign aid programs. The reasoning went. like this: i. A nation's power. technolog- ical skills and spiritual resources 'are a trust from God." , 2. Since these gifts come from iGod. they should be used in His interests. which includes all man- kind. 3. Firrthermnre, ”plcnty for the ,lF"W and want for the many cannot be l'9COl'lCll(ld with the law of love . . . the moral obligation to feed the hungry and heal the sick is not rrndernri inoperative by geograph- ical distance." J Burgess Bedtime 1 Cniitinued from page if) d..:...m.m.m.mA... There was a light snow several inches deep. ”I'll catch that fellow this time," thought the young fox as he started after Jumper. But. he soon found that he could come no nearer to catching Jum- per when he was chasing him on the crust. It was hard work run-, mug in that snow. It was tire- ,some. That is, it was for him. It, 'didn't. seem to be tiring Jumper at all. It wasnt. Jumper was run-: hung on it lllstmad of in it. and this made nil ihe difference in the ,u'o:'ld. Too-Smart. soon gave up. iT'ni':l'e was no sense in firing him- sell out for nothing, and running very tiring.i llll that snow was very. But Too-Smart wanted more than Icailed him. He dreamed about it. E.Britain Permits llmport Di More Canadian Goods (By HAROLD MORRISON) icaniidian Press Staff Writeri O'I'rAWA-iOPi-Britain's token 'ur.poi't scheme, under which many Cnnudiziii niiiiiufacturers have re- tained a foothold in the restricted British market, has been widened islightiy for 19-34. I Swino niaiiufacturers. unable to chmiii :i shipping quota since the list was frozen in 1951. will be able to get an import pemiit this year, made officials any clothing maniifactliiri-rs, pre- viously forbidden to ship more than one-third of their quotas in fully- lixflhlnilfd nylon hose, now will be perniiitcri to send tiheir full quotas in thiit stock. Similar restrictions are lifted on liice-trimmed garments! and the list, of 60-odd manufactured goods which the scheme covers has been oxtcnded to include another item- h.ithi'oom scales. The import. token scheme Vls sf.-irteti in 1946 when Britain's im- port curbs virtually eliminated lmsiny C a ii ad I s n imanufsctiirem ltuh a big and long-astoiblldhed inarkct overseas, i To help these producers and sliipprvrs retain a foothold, Britain isct. annual import quotas on cer- tain preferred items, based on lin- 5 ports during the yours i996-m. The quotas were 40 per cent in I951, I induced to .10 per cent the following . year-and there they remained. Canadian manufacturers who ,dldn't apply for I quota by Jim. iiuiry. 1951, were excluded from tho illiit Rut with Britain's economic position improved, the country has agreed to allow other manufactur- ers to apply now. Several Canadian Going Since 1046 mmisw I 'ever to catch that big rabbit. as he? Tells Of Visli V To Home With , Two-Headed Baby (Editors Notes: Carolyn Work- man, a reporter for the Cincinnati Times-Star, visited the Paters- burg. lnd., home of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hartley. parents of the twin boys with beads and shoulders joined to the same torso. She tells a story of life in the Hartley home. their problems and how they are meeting them.) (By Carolyn Workmlnl PETERSBURJG. lnd.. iAP) - What would you do if you had a two-headed baby? Quietly answering this question Wednesday were the parents of such s child-Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hartley of Petershurgh, Ind. "We'll keep him at home as long as possible." said the par- ents, whose feelings have been especially deep in the fact that this baby is their first son. The baby is five weeks old. Because of the two heads and two sets of arms, the parents have given the baby two names, Donald Ray and Daniel Kaye. And Mrs. Hartley calls the in- lent” the boys." "I consider it two,” she said, although when speaking of the baby she often uses "it" or "him". "To the Hartley! three little girls, the baby that entered their household just three days ago has been nicknamed "Baby Bub- by." No new baby brother was ever more loved than ”Baby Hubby" by his sisters. Shirley 2. Connie, 4, and Mnry Lou. 5, are perfectly at hnmc with the strangeness of the child and simply pat two little heads of hlonde fuzzy hair in- stead of one. "Daddy" Hartley feelings towards his son by the way he came home from work. With hlni were two of his work- ing buddies. They had been told to come on in and see his new boys. "I sang all the way home." the proiid father related. ''I feel so good now that the baby is finally home." The l-lai-ileyii are happy that their baby is to live with them. May Never Bit "We feel 100 per cent better about it. now, than we did when the baby first came," confided Mrs. Hartley. There is much the I-Iartleys have accepted in determining to rear their son. They have been told that the baby can never be expected to walk. It is not even certain that it will be able to sit. The baby cannot rnll from side to side not slip to its tummy or lie on his back to sleep. Instead, it must be turned per- iodically and is necessarily lim- lied to lying on one side or the other. The little blond heads with deep blue eyes face one another and the tiny fingers of the four arms often cling to each other. ”Dnnn,v" is the weaker of the two. He takes less nourishment and cries very faintly. showed his One liny head sometimes cries as the other sleeps. Sometimes Danny is,bungry when Donald is content. so the in- fants are occasionally fed at dif- fcreiit. limes. This, too. involves a problem for their mother-how to get ii nursing bottle into one hoy's mouih without bavingnt annoy the other. She has master- ed ibis by feeding them cross- handcd with the heads resting on her knees. Parents in various parts of the II. S. sent advice to the Hartley: on what. they should do about their unusual son. "I received lots of criticism in letters mailed to me at the hos. manufacturers already have mode application. The total value of all these quotas was only about 35,600,000 in 1953. But even so. shipments totalled only about 93,000,000. 'PictJured above is Sgt. E. H. Andrew of Hunter River. P. E. I.. who has successfully passed the first course of the School of Si-rvlce Training, Camp Borden, Ont. in; Command. -(Department of National Dcfence Photo). Presenting the graduating certificate is Air "Vice Marshal Kerr. C.B.. AFC, Air Officer Commanding, Train- The aim of the Training School is to develop in the non-commissioned officer. the qualities of leadership required to al- taln a maximum standard of morale in the Royal Canadian Air Force. Year 'Se'es Toughening Attitude By Eisenhower i"”"7”"”'" General Motors Open 1951 Show W -(AP) - when Prosldont ml anhower housed out NEW YORK. (AP) - Automo- biles that cost millions of dollars of bed one morning this weak and looked in the mirror, he may lwire ought: "now dd 1 over some to to build went on public display 'Iliurai-lay at the opening of Gen- eral Motors' 1054 "Motoramsf tti 1 let. myseu in for life!" He had moved into the White ll-louse.-ofneyetr ago. Andithsd In the ballroom of the Waldorf- Astoria and in the hotnls lobbies. the automakers put on s showing been 5 tough” grinding 1067- TM face which used had: at him in at 1054 production models that cost. ssso,ooo.ooo to engineer and pro- d the mirror looked a little older. Not much. Just a little, But if he wondered why he had been willing to carry on his back that mountain called the iclenoy. it was probably a thought that lasted only an instant. He was still as jsunby as over. working-harder Ind longer hours. psmsps, than any he had since those days on the eve of the invasion of Normandy nine years uce. Although still years from the pro- duction line. one of the cars is s gas-turbine single-psuenger sports model that looks like a Jet: plsne. The car is called the "l"irebird' and has been reported driven at s. peed in excess of 150 miles an hour. GM president Harlow H. our-tics has been emphatic in aa- ssrting that if. is not intended for highway use but rather as a lab- oratory on wheels to establish the V possibilities of gas-turbine engines in the future. I00- Ee seemed. had-sing from the quick gr-in he could produce. to be enjoying his job. He wu-still enor- morunly popular. And he was still amazingly free from personal abuse Toughenlllg Altlimll He was wiser. no doubft. than he had been that day a year ago. In his first year, he frankly con- cedes. he was a political novice. He doem't clslfm political mastery HOW. His handling of congress this your will illustrate his political de- velopmant. or lack of it. usf. year he was mild and gentle with tho lawmakers. some of his critics said he was more anxious to be liked than to lead. His friends gave another ex- planation: He was using loss to get his program ready for 1954. so there was no reason in 1950 to antagonize legislators whose help This campaign enables,the merce, Charlottetown. Commellls .00 Will Ask Probe COIIIIIIIOIIS Ill Of Communism Soviet Union In Canada Ilidl0iN'!'R.EAI.. (CPI - Gerald li(I;I1::;r:sixT:af Ealtlv rmelilledfrijgsdxzsek-Till? it member of Russian people appear "just, . terrified by the prospect on war as we are." Recently returned If0fi1'l4I months visit to Russia. Mr. Clark ad- , dressed a luncheon meeting of the l5m- -1000 BlN3km0l'0 Advertising and Sales Executives brldizel lub. CBi.ggest news out of Russia since UID 10 ESSISL the RCMP and the death of Stalin, said Ml". Clark, is the "new deal" now being pro- moted there. It's 3. double-barrell'ed deal. he said. It was 8. drive to increase consumer goods and a program that gave the farmer ll greater share of the profits. "In other words there's .a return to the incentive motive, based on the realimtlon that people are people and ihcylll work best if they see the rewards tl1emselve.s...l ”There's no communism in Rus- sia today. 'I1hcre's only a 101- 01 oonls'odiiction." I In talks with the Russian peo- ple. Mr. Clark said he gathered they are afraid war may be caused by a slip on somelbodyb part. I ”Right now they say. and I think. .-.::m-mmm-:.:.. Parliament in Canada. and in dealing adequately Communists in Ca"nada." they really mean it. they want pltal," the new mother said. I "Some told me they thought I shniild leave the baby in s hos- pital. Otlt-rs said it. should be placcd in a home." The sleepy llttte town of Peters- burg has just. welcomed the Hart- leys. Until a week ago. they lived outside the city limits. but moved into town to be closer to things , because of the baby. I. Home for this baby boy com- prises three rooms and a kitchen. The living room also serves as the masler bedroom and there the baby rt-sis. The floors are bare of rugs snrli the windows are draped with SALE modest plastic curtains. JAM Once again is share lirtlio MEN'S 3103!: 144 Crest Gain-ge,8t. TO THE WALLS! goes soaring "over the top!" Values that no one could ro 'st , liepi the Grcondol staff travel- ling of top speed! You. too. can GREATEST VALUES EVER! The CREENDALI Co. Ltd. Regular s4-15.00 Kroehler Frieze Chesterfield SUITE SALE 5369.50 OTTAWA, (CP)-A Social Cred- said Tuesday he will ask the govern- ment to esiablisli a special coni- mittee to investigate Communism An outspoken foe of Commun- iS”-Leth- said in 8. statement that lhe feels an iiszeiicy should be set the justice department in "identifying, with, He said a resolution suggesting appointment of a committee will chance to build up their personal lives, to get better homes. to reach what they call ideal communism." Regular 5339.75 FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC RANGE he might otherwise get for his program this year. Toward the end of his first year, Eisenhower gave signs of a tough- rnlniz attitude. which may be an indication of the mood "he'll use in 1954. m appear on the Commons order pa- per later this week. He said the committee should be empowered to investigate: 1. Possible Communist espionage developing in Canadian industrial and other activities. 2. Conceivabie Communist l.l'llll- tration into the Canadian admin- istration "even to the extent of planting in sensitive positions in certain departments. agents dosh- ous of influencing policy or of im- pairing executive effectiveness." VISITOR IMPRESSED LONDON - (OP) -- Tufton Beamish. Conservative member of Parliament for Lewes. Sussex. re- E turned from a visit to Canada and the United States to say he is greatly impressed by the industrial Grafton St. sou ma. ' HIIY-IAII mum; Did nah uJ;s"w'.l:J:g3Lp:y.”E B uclabs. nil tb:'lals-tteny:rs,i!u- "I I! your nvinca In Is down if heal .5 systanatia rs? . ”"'.:i'"" -i"'- ii" . a e owmen ' of thee gnu: Life 1 Company of Canada. Blnrtuvhgihlasma-virtiij H. BENNETT CARR Dial sass - CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. Chapter to continue its as- sistance to indigent victims of polio during their post treatment and rehabilitation phase. dimes to the P. E. 1. March of Dimes, Bank of Com- Please send your SALE is STILL ROLLING Aioiio Join the many happy people who have saved money on first class Footwear. SPECIALS FOR ALL THE FAMILY LePage Shoe co. Ltd. Phone 4748 148 lllchmtmd St . PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND I MARCH OF DIMES The fourth March of Dimes campaign of the P. E. 1. Chapter of the Polio Foundation is now under way. i 1 potential of British F ' in Midwinter ' S A L E See What You SAVE At simpsons-Sears Regular 271.95 SALE s2ss.oo , LADA SEWING MACHINE 199.00 ' I A large selection of sparkling new merchandise on sale at 1W2 DISCOUNT MEDI Regular S179.00 5-Piece Rod Iron DINETTE SUITE SALE 5149.50 207:: ON Greendal Sole Congoleisin Rugs GREAT MID-WINTER SALE Included craz- Kroolilor Chesterfield Suites Bedroom Suites Chrome Suites Occasional Furniture R. C. A. Victor Radios Plus many other new items all available with T070 OFF As a feature attraction in this - Regular S259.00 Gurney Combination Coal and Gas RANGE SALE 5229.00 Regular 085.00 Adjustable Arm Tapestry DIVAN SALE 559.50 209A: OFF Axminstor Rugs & Mots R All Sizes LADlu' STORE 150 Great George St. I All Merchandise Avanaiiio On lllestrlo WASHERS sis.oo to 345.90 coax. naive 320.00 to 395.00 Vduos Gdors In - SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICESDN ALL USED FURNITURE I Olssstsn-field surms 345.00 to 375.00 Electric Refrigerators I sss.oo ioisisooo lush Payment Plan .. hi eiinniorrziowii sioiis no QNENT sriisit ,, I IIIAL 3100 re .- I i VI