PAGE roux THE GUARDIAN Authorised In Second Clan Mail Poll. olflu Dcvlrtnnent. Ottawa. The Island Guardian ulbllnhlng Be. President. and Associate Editor. Auociate Ellitur. Frank fun A Huruellv. Walker. specially reserved for the pur se; the former left July 29 from Casab anca and the Corsica will leave soon after. Special planes and buses are likewise reserved. The role of the administration is not confined to organizing transportation. Med- ical examinations and vaccinations began CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward island like the dew” :'Tlle Stlongest Memory is Weaker Man the Weakest Ink". T:naln.o1"rl-:'rovvlv, ruasmu. AU(Tl2, More Than A Myth In his first interview after thirty-four years of open and Llndergroulld anti-Com- munist activity in Canada, Superintendent John Leopold of the Royal Mounted Police said Canadian people should be alert to the dangers they face. Communists are reported to have -lost 10.- 000 of the 18,000 members they had ill Canada in 1949, but the movement is now "stripped down to a hard core of men and women whose loyalty to Russia lakes prece- dence over everything else." After thirty-four years of investigation. Supt. Leopold can hardly be accused of Red-baiting, the favorite expression of Communists and their sympathizers. His knowledge, which is also the knowledge of the national police force, reveals that Tim Buck is not the real leader of tile Com- munists in Canada. The real leaders arr known to the RCMP, but for obvious rea- sons they just aren't talking. They also know the ”underlings" ill the movement. Supt. Leopold points out that the danger from Communists in Canada tics in their fifth column activities ill the event of war. Their numbers are not large cnougil to pre- sent any physical threat to Canada in either peace or war, but their existence in the country, alld their potential menace to our democracy should by no nmans be ta- ken as a myth. Avoidable Hlghvay crashes There is, says the Ottawa .lournal.' a de- pressing and friglltcnillg similarity ill the news accounts of many highway accidents. All too often when a head-on crash is re- ported, and there are deaths and heavy property damage, it is told that one of the drivers attcnlpted to pass another vehicle only to meet an oncoming car. or that the passing was attempted on a curve, at the brow of a hill, or in some situation where it was apparent a clear view ahead was im- possible. All too often neither driver lives to make the exact facts clear. These avoidable crashes (they can hard- ly be called accidents) are mostly the re- sult of a combination of circumstances which highway experts have seen coming for years. Yet, despite their frequency, and the gruesome details which usually ac- company the news reports, it is apparent that many drivers will not pause to ab- sorb the obvious lesson. It is simply: never pass another vehicle unless there is a clear and unobstructed view ahead. "The modern motor car," concludes the Journal, "has become a precision machine, capable of high speeds alld quick acceler- ation. The average highway remains an old-fashioned horse-and-buggy road, often narrow and with blind curves and sudden dips and hills. it was never planned to carry the dense traffic of today, nor veh- icles capable of the speed of the modern car. On the human side drivers have changed little and a great many seem in- competent, or refuse to accept the fact that they cannot drive today as they did years ago. They have not adjusted themselves to the'split-second decisions alld reactions now a necessary part of driving. Many persons who have studied the problem have come to the conclusion that the modern car has outstripped both the efficiency of the roads and the human capacity to react quickly to the emergency." Pilgrimage To, Mecca This month it is that. the annual Pil- grimage to Mecca, one of the fundamental rites of the Muslim religion, will take place, reports 'the Morocco News Bulletin. The Pilgrimage is not rigorously required of -every Muslim, but every Muslim is sup- posed to accomplish it once in his lifetime gprovided he has the means to do so and llh health permits. , In Morocco, due to the constant im- provement in transportation facilities and to the aid given by the administration in or- g the voyage, the number of Moroc- ,cghg.participating is yearly greater; this ' 9, it is expected that some 1500 pilgrims leave the country. They will leave thil month, some by boat, some by some by bus . . . and, to be sure, as year, a certain number of hardy souls 1 .- on their way by foot: these will surely be in trouble before they I-lijaj frontier (last year, Egypt the tax for them and the French Jpelped them to get back). Two If and the Corsica. are Canadian 1 9.1..- official of the Sharifian administration will accompany the group throughout the trip. as also a doctor (Dr. Yusof ben Abbes) charged with assuring proper medical care during the voyage. In addition to those enrolled individually, there is a special del- egation sent, this year as each year, by the Sultan to effectuate the pilgrimage and to carry royal gifts to the Holy Cities and to King Ibn Saud; the delegation will be pre- sided by the pasha of Fes, Hadj Fatmi ben Sliman. EDIIURIAL NOTES Provincial Exhibition. 0 0 Youth Day at the 0 Tomorrow the schools taking two weeks' vacation in the autumn require to open in order to get in their 200 school days before ,l.lune 30, 1953. l Today Dr. J. A. Clark, nrst superin- tendent of the Charlottetown Experimental Farm, will plant a Norway Maple tree there ill the prescllcc of ministers and deputy ministers of agriculture for the various Provinces. C O O It's an ill wind that blows no good. The fire in the Library of Parliament impressed on Prime Minister St. Laurent the need for fire-proof protection for national records. "The Government", he declared, "will coll- sidcr the question of establishing a na- tional library as soon as possible." 9 O O A good cause is the Y Youth Camp, Hol- is employing a unique method of raising funds to aid this project. They invite ”Old .Home Week" patrons to visit a domesti- cated cow and her calf at the Exhibition i Grounds. C I O From early days of flying, Canadians lhave taken a strong interest in aircraft lchanges and development. Both civil and iselvice Canadians are due to attend the an- lnual flying display and exhibition of the IBritish Society of Aircraft Constructors at Farnborough, Hampshire, in the first weel-: iof September, when the latest British and iaero-engines will be on display. i William Blake, English poet and en- ,'graver, died this date 1827. As a boy he ,had mystical tendencies and saw visions. iile was apprenticed to all engraver. In 1787 he experimented in printing with etch- ed copper plates and subsequently, with the aid of his wife, designed and produced his ”Songs of Innocence". He wrote many prophetic books and'engraved the illustra- tions for many others. 0 I I There is a job coming up for some in- formation expert. When Sir Harry Lind- say. director of both the Imperial Insti- tute and its London museum and centre of Commonwealth and Colonial Information. retires early next year, his job will be open to suitable candidates from all parts of the British Commonwealth and Empire. The post is being advertised at a salary of l'.1,850 a year. First-hand knowledge of conditions in the Commonwealth is an es- sential qualification. Applications have to reach London by September 1. O I D From Australia comes news of an air- port that has been built on the tiny Cocos Islands in the Indian Ocean in four months. The island is to be a stepping place for planes on new air services between Aus- tralia and South Africa. Building the air- field was a tremendous achievement for the Royal Australian Air Force. Thousands of tons of equipment and supplies were got ashore within 20 days, although there was no wharf to receive them. A runway ten thousand feet long was built of the coral which surrounds the island shore, and later 600 feet of dispersal space, ten miles of road, a jetty and buildings for the Austral- ian Department of Civil Aviation. 0 O I Before the Gold Rush of 1898, Alaska was populated largely by Indians and Aleuts. Visitors from the outside were fur trappers, hunters and fishermen. When Secretary of State William H. .Sewal'd bought the territory from. ltussla in 1867 for s7,200,000, many Americans thought the price too high and called the new pos- session "Seward's Folly". or 590,000 square miles "of icebergs and polar bears". Since thoae days, the value of the gold, silver, tin, copper, platinum, timber, furs, and sat- mon taken out of Alaska has amounted to many times the purchase price. Today. l'9' ports the National Geographiesoclety. "0 travel permit is required, and a motor trip to Alaska is at safe, simpler possibility for anyone with A good car and a respectable vacation budget. - several weeks ago for the pilgrims. An , iland Cove. The Centennial Yis Men's Club. i5 Mi "-937 W Pmmm W”"”"i "me Tl-IF. GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN ' Today At The Fair - IT'S Yotm-1'8 DA ALRIGHT... .5 bi Q15 The .2... How often does one near: '"l.'nel'e'! homing to be seen on the island!" it. simply isn't true. From Tlgnisn to East Point. this lsiand has plenty to show anyone who has the faculty of perceiving interesting things. Tlke the little trip I made yea- terday for instance. All together it covered .a little more than forty miles and there was a favourite trout. stream at the end (no trout, though, 1 am sorry to say). Noth- ing to see enroute? why, it would take a dozen such articles as this to describe all the sights 1 saw through the windshield. in spite ol the clouds of dust which, incident- Illy, seem to get worse and worse INTERESTING MEETINGS .;T” A LwESTooct 953 A was i ' P A;-we '4.' lit blessem Lors OF Excmrlo -(terse:-9 UPS AND Downs The kiddies -- -Fiirnbiing With- The 092? (Montreal Gazette) Now that people are looking for- ward to another Coronation. there is much interest in looking back at the last. one. Such a long and complex and infrequent ceremony error or hesitation. It may be recalled that in the Coronation of George VI the Arch- bishop of Canterbury, Moat Rev. Cosmo Gordon Lang, was said to have fumbled with the Crown be- fore he placed it upon the King's hcnd. Indeed. some observers and conlmentators even said that it seemed for a moment that he might. drop it. There is an inside story to this "fumbling". It has now been told in the new biography of Archbishop Lang by J.G. Lockhart (published by I-fodder and Stoughtonl. The ceremony of placing the, Crown upon the King's head had been very carefully rehearsed. was noticed that the Crown had a jfl-ont and a back, though the dif- yfercnce was so slight as to be ' scarcely visible. The King. however. being anxious that everything should be done with strict accur- acy, had a very small piece of red thread placed across the front side of the Crown. Nobody in the vast gathering would ever notice this small piece of thread. but when the Archbishop picked up the Crown to place it on the King's head. he would be able to tell at a glance which was the front and which the hack. Unfortunately, however. some of- ficial person, in making a hurried last-minute examination, happen- ed to come upon this bit of thread and at once picked it up and threw it away. When the great moment of the ceremony arrived. the Arch-, bishop picked up the Crown. He turned it one way and then the other. To observers. it seemed as though the Archblsh was fumbling with the great,Cro in his nervous and uncertain fingers. and was even on the point of dropping it. Actually. he was only looking for the bit of thread, and when he did not find the thread on one side. he very naturally turned the Crown around the other way, looking for it on that side. 'I'here is always more to any his- torical event that the onlooker imi- l agines. 7; 6mm" ?oedi BEAUTEOUB THINGS I love all beauteoua things. I seek and adore them: God hath no better praise. And man In his hasty days In honoured for them. I too wlu something make And joy in the making: Althoi tomorrow it seem Like the empty word: of ii dream Remembered at. waking. -Robert Bridges. A Water Peril (Toronto sum Two Toronto boys. one four. the other five, were drowned at spring- hurlt. Beach near WIBIII when the inner tube: which they were using in the water were carried away by an offshore wind. A warning new: article in the our only a week ago nld: "Llfeuven on. many beaches wul not allow rubber tubes or toys. A child could be blown out beyond hil depth on one of these. they lay. and not realise it until he trial to stand up. 'We have A lot. of accid- ents with inner tubes. The first thing you know the wind nu blown the child out over the head. 'nm'a why we condemn t.hom'. sud one official." ' children who cannot win: and who III inner tube: In 611; water. or the more elaborate float: which rormer King nrouk or Egypt says he wants to live a quiet, sim- ple life of 9. family man. If he had lived that way in Cairo before. in- stead of seeking the bright lights and patronizing the gambling tables. he would still have been kink. -Windsor Star. Up to the and of June. almost 20000 more emigrants had arriv-l cd in Canada as compared withi the same period last year. In spitc' of the increase. Canada seems to have more work and more wealth than ever, which removes some of the starch out of the argument that immigrants take jobs away from natives.- Ottawa ' Citizen, A junior posimnn at Ely post. of- fice who recently took out for de- llvery a telegram addresed to a workman employed on the renova- tion of Ely Cathedral found that the workman was at the top of- the scaffolding in the Lantern! Tower. After all efforts to attract the man's attention from the ground had failed the postman de- llvercd the telegram by mount- ing the ladders and climbing 170 feet of scaffolding.--London Times. Any man who trust: a Commun- ist, who demands for him the same rights and.t.he same toler- ance as we are prepared to give to ordinary, decent Canadians who believe in those freedoms and rights is a deluded fool. He is as much a fool as the farmer of the legend who placed a snake in ills bosom to warm it. But the farmer only jeopardized his own life. The nourlsher of communism jeopard- izes all of us.--Vancouver Sun. We will Ilwlyu have taxes to pay. but it can well be that if we escape war and its drain on the public purse. the taxes we now pay will be drastically reduced. This is the hope which urges the slatenleniui the world to keep plodding along with such plans as a unity of na- tions to outlaw wars of aggression, relieve distress and promulgate world brothel-hood. it. is a tough rocky road, but we think we are making program, in the meantime. high taxes are inevitable. and as long as every one pays his share on '0'-1&Q0s&COmrG0Q-C0sfOO' The Age-Old Story . Rejoice in the Lord, yo right-, cone: and give thanks at the re- membnnee of his holineu. be kept constantly under observa- tion and be permitted to rely on these inflated supports only in wa- Bx The, :VVa::x. what he owns or receives and all wnte is eliminated, there is little we can do about ll.-Fort Williams Times-Journal. Perhaps ordinary people should pray that scientists never do learn to control the elements as they are new learning to control the atom. Just the other day the pap- ers carried items about the weath- cr war being staged in Washing- ton state. The wheat growers of central Washington wanted rain in the worst way. They hired a rain- maher. But the cherry growers in the same area wanted it. dry so their fruit could ripen safely. What did they do? They hired a rain- maker to make rain somewhere else.-Vancouver Bun. 9-co-moo-ma Old Charlottetown (Ana r. ll. 1. l TREES NEC-l.ECTED ---r "Some eighteen months ago, scvcrnl hundred pounds were ex- pended in planting trees along our sidewalks. Although the trees were not planted in a very scientific manner. yet they were protected by proper stands. A fair proportion of them escaped death. and the mischievous hands of boys and men. and last summer gave promise of one day contri- buting to the beauty and comfort of our metropolis. ”They were, however, wholly neglected-we believe not one in a hundred was secured on as to protect the bark from being in- jured. hy rubbing against the stands ln which the trees were ronfined, and the consequence ha: been nearly every tree has had the bark removed from it in such it manner all almost totally to destroy it. We would recommend the persons whose duty it was to look after the trees, it-ither to get some straw wisps. and bind them round the few trees that may not yet be beyond redemption. or M Frederic A. Large. 0.6. every I can here only two or three of the outstanding ones. . . . There were first of all the cat- tle, sheep, and horses, grazing quiet- ly and apparently contelltculy in the pastures and meadows. The al- most endless rows of potatoes. fields "standing so thick with corn that they laugh and sing”. To- gether, these commonplace things (commonplace to us. that is) make up a picture which seems to sym- bolize the largeese with which a benevolent Nature has endowed this little piece of land set down in the sea. It does something else, too. It brings to mind the hunger which even in this scientifically enlight- ened age stalks menaclngly across wide areas of the world. bringing all sorts of evil in its wake. As one looks at our rich fields it seems incredible that. It mil very moment millions of young children are literally dying for want of breed. And yet it is so. The science which the modern world has made into a god has indeed done many worthy things as well as many un- worthy ones. But. somehow it has not yet been able to do the one thing heedful. It has not been able to assure each child its daily bread. It is u long way from an is- land farm to the United Nations Headquarters. Nevertheless there is a connection them, for UN. food experts say that famine in still man's worst enemy. It. is even more devastating than war itself. Will the time ever come when every human being on this earth will have opportunity to share in God's plenty for no other reason than that. he is A member of the hilmbll family and a child of God? a o . such were some of the thoughts that came to me yesterday as I looked out on the fields already almost white unto harvest. To be sure I see it almost every day but it is always a new picture. Each time I see in it something I had not noticed before. That pleases me. for when it man fails to see something new in familiar things it is a sign that his spirit is aging, whatever the umber of his bll'i7h- days may be. But when he does see a new tint in an old picture it means that. his spirit is still young and growing and he need not bother overmuch about the years that. have come and gone. An entirely different sight but, in its own way, just as productive of thought. was that: of the young lad with his home-made rod and his can of worms. Almost always he makes his appearance when I am on my way to a fishing stream or after I get there. I am glad to gg-;'A'UGUST 12, 1952 T ing Scene By Observer NOTHING TO I! lllNf see him for he contributes some- thlnl 7-0 my 0WD Pleasure of anti. clpation. In addltlo to that he takes my mind back to the time when 1 was as he is now. master of the world. If he tells me, as yesterday: ho, did. all about his pole, where 113 got it, how strong and durable 1., is, and so on. I listen intently and seriously. for that is one of im- great human stories of the ..g.,' But. unless he make specific ,,,',' qulrles about it. i do not tell mm about my own rod. for that Would be too much like col-ldesccnsiol, it son wound in the heart of a twelve year old boy. Wars and rumours of wars mgv shake the world; poiltlcgl mi, lodeologtcal t may numb immeasurable disarray '1n human relations; racial nau-eds may no lncalcullbie harm to the ideal nl universal peace. However, I no no; believe that civilisation will tiller. ly perish so long as boys even- where are drawn irresistibly to the nearest fishing stream. For a mall, fishing is good pig. time. He can take it or leave ll, alone. For a boy who has been in. ttlatedi into in myml-lea it is on. of the indispensable gifts from m. treasure chest of fortune. And 1; doesn't matter much who the any is or where he happens to be ln7. ing. The young lad in Upton, P. E. I. ma the young negro mm", for suckers from the muddy, not banks of the Mississippi are broth. ers at least in this. I wonder ll young Russians ever get permission from their lords and masters in see if there are any big ones in the pool. If so, there is still hope for that unhappy people. - . . It was high tide when I calm in full view of St. Peter's Bay. Ir 1 had seen nothing else. the gran. deur of this scene would have made the short joumey well worth while. Here was loveliness unspoiled by me meddling hand of science. Here was proof that the divine lu-list is always at work, conveying beau- ty to the eye and heart of man. 0 B I Surely, only I thoughtless, un- dfsceming person, or someone un- reoeptlve to beauty in any form, would say there is nothing much to be seen on this Island. It 1: noteworthy that first time visitor-v are lavish in their praises of the quiet scenery. adorned only by me colour that God gave it. I myself have been in fortv at the forty-eight States of the Us A. Each has its own peculiar av- tzrultlons. But 1 would any rm this Province can hold its own with the best of them. Moreover. it has one characteristic whlil most. of the States do not have. - insularlly. This can sometimes he A disadvantage. but. it. can also he a blessing. It is my belief that this Provlnm has not yet even begun to take its rightful place as a holiday rp- sort. its potentialities in this re- spect nre immense. Tile ofllclnlq T65lD0n5lble for making known our unique attractions are doing I good work with vhe tacllmes they have. Unfortunately. and X believe unwlsely, these facilities are H- tremely limited. and they are back- ed by most inadequate llllahclal resources. Perhaps another generation will see to it that their Island is really marked on the 'rourlsts' maps. Di2OFESSIONAL CARDS! Gander & Huszard GILBEIIT A. oaona-r, mi; LLB. Barrister: and Solicitors Money ,4: Loan ' Canadian Bank of Commerce Bldg. LAUNDERED ' ro raaruorlolv RITE - WAY CLEANERS Phone 2387 ters where there in no offshore drift. Insurance eunnee Underwrlten. in at your IT'S GOOD TO BE ADEQUATILY INSUIED ALI. LINELOF INSURANCE IIIIICTED HYNDMAN & CO. LTD. Our experience of river um. quarter: of A century. II In- POLICY ”. n e - 3;, .. re ' (Opposite lever: Etiellff, Phone 800 ' "TTT'T”'1'"T""T Mae sea: J. A. Carl-uriiers. li.O. ”'- A- '-- Ilnu 187! or-rousnls-r nun" nentni X-111! 138 Kent Street Phone ll?) GLORIA BUILDING 3., (Next to slmpunru Agency) in Grafton at. l''"'''" diepoul. ask for permission to sell the nlnllur. soucuor, Not", stands. which are no longer re- 30", Bum of Child. numun: qulred. and thus save a few Ohrlothmwnl P. E. L DOUM3-" i Loam on City and Farm ---The Islander. Nov. 7. 1957- 1-ml-,"g1,. smms Mutheson. Penile 8: Nicholson Ii. w. uanursox. do A. I. PBAKB. B.A.. LLB. JOHN P. NICHOLSON, LLB. Bu-riders. Etc. Collection: - Money To Loan M Great George street I” rlotletown Chas. R. MeQudid rm. BARBISTEB, omclron. NOTARY. Etc. Eutern Trust Building CHAIILOTTETOWN Phone 1 'll 1 Bell, Mutilieson 8:7-- Foster Bun-intern. solicitors. Etc. 3. R. BELL. Q4". - n. 1. MA'rnlEsoN. Ll..n.. M'- G. ll. FOSTER, LLB. Loam on City and Farm Properties 150 Elchmond sum Charlottetown. P.E.l. . J. S. Taylor OPTOMETBIST Eyes Examined. Ginsu Fitted Corner Kent and Queen Eil- Offiee Phone 1056-Hour 1013 (4.. M. Alban Farmer. 0.6. V B.A.. u..n. Barrister and Solicitor Bank of commerce Building Charlottetown Mandy to Loan Allison M. Gillis. I.l..l.i unis-ran. souclron. Ito. Dr. W. ll. Carson CIIIIOPIACTOR Palmer Graduate CHABIUITETOWN u Phone ion 201 Prlllfgg-A. Byron J. Grant. 0-9- OPTOMITHIST 110 Kent Street Phone Ill am being sold for child use. should g . Olllooll CI-IAI-D0'.l'l'E'l'0W'N - SUMMIISIDE - MONTAGUE ALLISON P. Mol.EAN-District Manager at Sununereide. (lvl.Ill.A. L BIMW-Dietrlet Manager at Montague. ms uolivnvn-special Representative. It I. MAeNll'l"l'-Bepruenteuve at ltcnplngton B. l'.- Mg! presentatln at lllmndnle. 'IAI'l.l Y-Representative I (Yuan. J. IIAN STRING-Bepnoenhuvo :0 leuril. l!0NAI.l) J. MaoDONAl.n--Representative It Augustine con, i. i I ' .(.;..... throughout trio rmim H R DOANI I COMPANY O C CIIABTIIID AOCOUN'l'AN'l'l' 150 Great. George 91.. Charlottetown Phone: nu - 1441 -- In 141 'A. BANDOLPII W. MANNING. C.A. - IIMA P. IlnePHISl!SON- ch. other office: at Halifax. bloheton, BL John's. Amherst. Dnrtmou - nentvule, Liverpool. New nlulw and 'lrILrmi24 McDONAl.D. CIIRRII I: O0. CIIAITIIIB aoooulrrlurra Montnol. Quebec. Klrlxlnml talus lmmeien llunllton. Edmonton. (Turtle l3lclr.. Charlottetown. '. lhento. lulu! John. am not-. Vent-our" IrInItoIou'v'- 'l'r-leplinnr I