-77:9 Gual-diam l "kmua Prinuo Edwin! Island MI! tho DIV" punn....,4 gnu) work-day niunun; ll ln3VPnnn street Charlottetown. Pl-..l.. by tho Thomson Company Lit. ta lung Bi. W.. 'luIWl0- ,u..nin4i uince. 2-LS tnnenii) lull" lldlw laa A. Bulllrll. Pnblulu Ind (ienual Maul" Fflllk Walker. Editor Ilrmber Cdlildllll bail) snupilltt Pullllllwn Auoviallull xlemner of line tlanaudiilln Pill”: Simmer Auult Bureau iicu I will hurt: uiucel at Siuumeisule. Mluntagig d;l:nAl3l9"I"c? Auuiurued II second (in: Mai by e Department. Uuaua g Dv Farrier Charlottetown. Summerside slum P" I5 win I-Llacvihene II P i-:.i. s9.uu. tlllicr rmu-cu no U. S. ll'.'.tJIl per Innum. T-i'1'l.':;i-gTi;ug:si- memory is we:l:cT-th.a;- the weakest ink." FRIDAY. JAN. 511157 .E....?:.... I;-ATE 4 New Munroe Doctrine it would seem that the L'ililt'd States is preparing to cxlcnd the Munroe Doctrine to coicr the M1013 Middle East from Iran to 'llurk0,V. When the plan has lrcvll 1ll)l'1'”V9d by ('ongrcss the Ru.-sians will be told to "keep out" and a new Pl'0' gram of political. ccononiic and mil- itary assistance will he begun in the area. An important basic difference between this plan and the famous doctrine which was proclaimed 133 yea,-5 ago is noted by the Montreal Gazette. President Munroe warned all foreigners that interference or expansion of their holdings in this hemisphere would not be tolerated by the United States. Today the United States is prepared to say that interference in the Middle East will be resisted, too, by force if neces- sary. This area is not adjacent to the United States but the reasons for the policy are the same-the feel- ing that any expansion of Russian influence in the Middle East would be a threat to American safety. The Gazette suggests that this announcement will be warmly wel- comed by Britain and Fiance. as a measure of approval of their own actions in the area. But there is an- other question involved. As the Globe and Mail points out, it was. and still is. not necessary for the U.S. to act unilaterally in the Middle East. There was all along, there still is, an agency through which she can act collectively-the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, formed in con- lvsequence of the United Nations' in- effectuality. Why has it, too, been rejected by Washington? Why. just days after I top level meeting aimed at increasing NATO'S effectiveness and enlarging its field of action, do Messrs. Eisenhower and Dulles be- have as though NATO didn't exist? "The only conclusion one can draw from the whole chain of events,” says our Toronto contem- norary. "is that the U.S. doesn't want collective action in the Middle East. True. she demanded such action from the l'..V'.: but she was also a major party to the retreats and compro- mises which turned the l'.N.”s Middle East intervention into a fiasco. True, she reviled Britain and France for going it alone in the Middle East; flit this. it seems, was merely :1 pm. lude to doing the same thing herself. With uhat ends? For what motives? Many answers will be given and some of them will be most unkind." 50 Years Ago An interesting article entitled "Yuletide in lflllti" appcliictl in a re- cent issue of the St. John's Daily News. Those who think that green Christmases came into fashion these last few years should pnll(l('l' this item which was publi.-'licd in a new s- paper of that day: "in the disap- pointment of all, old l-'.'ithcr (Thrist- mas save us all a surprise box". King Frost was summarily deposed. llis mantle of white disappeared from the hills and plains, the fielrls be- Qme sodddn, the rivulets swelled in torrents. the ice on the ponds melted and tropical rains gave a most un- seasonable aspect." At that time St. John's had the rcputation of having, per head of population, more liquor saloons and bars than any other town or city on the North American continent. But, according to this article. only a few '7W9"-known local characters" gave the Police any trouble on Christmas Eve. These were duly placed in the "lockup" Where. the writer observes, I although, doubtless, the passing Of the years has surrounded them with a glory they did not in fact possess): Tea, 25 cents a pound; coffee. 20 cents; men's suits and overcoats, 553; children's suits. 90 cents; a 5 piece parlor suite, S36. The average wage was similarly low;-S1 I day. Many of our own citizens will re- call what the Christmases of the early part of the century were like here and wonder whet be r the changes which the years have wrought are all. for the good. But, it licther for good or ill-or for both good and ill-they were inevitable: and the future will bring even more startling ones. A Sad Case The case of Christian George llanna is plain testimony to, the fool- ish extremes to which the laws of nations can go when they are in- terpreted in a strictly legalistic sense. This young man stowed away on a Norucigian freighter in Beirut, Le- lianon, fifteen months ago. Since then he has been kept aboard the ship and forbidden to set foot on land at any port of call, simply be- cause he has no citizenship papers from any country and is not sure where he was born. This has been going on, on one ship or another, since he first stowed away at the age of 13. lie is now, for the third time, in Vancouver aboard the Nor- wegian freighter, and he must stay aboard "until the ship sinks," ac- cording to the ship's officers. A wanderer over the seas, a man with- out a country: that must be his por- tion as long as he lives. lie has no criminal record. he is healthy and intelligent; yet no country will take him in because he cannot produce a slip of paper. If there is anything more ridicu- lous than this, we've never heard of it. Could not Canada. which is open- ing lts doors. and rightly so. to thou- sands of refugees, find some way of releasing this young man from red- tape entanglement? It could not pos- sibly do any harm, nor would it cause the slightest friction in Call- ada's relations with other countries. There is always a valid reason for an act of charity: and surely this would come under that heading. EDITORIAL NOTES The New Year's highway toll in both Canada and the United states was lower than that of the Christ- mas holiday. but only because there were fewer cars on the roads. There's not much satisfaction to be gained from that. O O I "People look to mathematics only as a useful tool and not as it science out of which great concepts have been developed," laments I profes. sor. That is unfortunate. but isn't almost everything prized chiefly for its utilitarian value these days? 0 I I Two special trains, one from the Atlantic Provinces and one from On- tario. will carry over 500 Canadian Scouts and leaders to the fourth American national jamborec at Val- ley Forge. Pennsylvania. ncxt July. It will be the largest contingent ever sent to an American jamboree. The Canadians will present typically Can- adian camp fire programs during the gathering of 50,000 Scouts. O O O A joint brief by the Agriculture Department of the Atlantic Prov- inccs and the Maritime Federation of Agriculture has been sent to the Fcrieral Minister of Agriculture. urg- ing a readjustment of the freight assislallce payments on Western feed grain in line with the recent rail rate increases. It is hoped that this request will receive the prompt at- tention it deserves, not as I govem- meni handout but as a matter of equity and justice. 0 O D If all of Premier &nIIlIVood'I predictions and hopes come true Newfoundland is in for" I good year industrially. Iron production and shipping at Wabash Lake and hydro- electiic development It Hamilton Falls, both in Labrador; constmctlon 'or. newpulpand paper mill at Bay D'l'1Ipoir;copper;I'odlIc6lIl It Tilt CoveIndBIlVertOIlIduverI.lflIl procesalngpiantslnvarlouspartnof thepmvtnce.Alllmttheg,.D'EI- polrpmjecureeithex-Ilreailyimaer On Growing Olii Elizabeth Henderson in the Winnipeg Free PreII "l still remember that emphy- teii.-is is not a disease, nor stilli- cide is a crime." wrule Stevenson, admitting that he would not wil- lingly part with such scraps of S('IPllllll(' knowledge. but though he was all his life exposed to doc- tors I doubt if he would recognize geriatrics. Starting harmlessly e- noii':h as a useful word to cover the medical study of the aulng. it has now rcaclicd the layman and the DBl('Ili medicine adiertiser. You. if you live long enough. uill become a geriatric, so shall I: and. such is the genius of English for improving on the meaning of (lreek words. alrcady the impres- sion grows that old age is both a crime and a disease. "project- ing" its aches and pains. its loneli- ness and its frustrations, and mak- ing itself and all around it thor- oughly miserable. "Some do and some don't." as a raiilious-spoken Scotch garden- er used to say about the life ex- pectancy of transplanted trees. Even the poets in their general- izations on human life are not I- greed on old age. Stevenson him- sell wrote of the Highlands where the old plain men have rosy faces. and in the title be borrowed from Shakespeare he was careful to keep the adjective: "Crabberl age Ind yniith, Cannot live together." N0 MATCH FOR l.l'-EAR But Shakespeare seems tu have come down rather heavily on the side of youth. Adam. in As You Like it, whose age was Is a lustv winter, frosty but kindly, is no match for the monies of Lcar. The spacious days of the first Elin- belh called for young men, not many of whom could hope to be old. and even the young seem to have been haunted by Time": wins- ed chariot: Time . . . . which takes in trust. ()ur hope, our joys. and all we have. And pays us but with age and dust. It uas. however. George Pecle I contemporary of both Shakes- peare and Raleigh. who left us that most charming farewell to arms, "His golden locks Time bath to silver turned": His helmet now shall make I hive for bees, And. lover's sonnets turned to holy psalms. A man-It-arms must now serve on his knees . . . . . . . . . allow this aged man his right. To be your headsman now that was your knight. Surely an old age bright. BEAVER NOWADAYS Even Peele the Elizabethan lack- ed the courage to hint that his lady too might grow old. but we are braver nowadays and few wom- en can remain untouched by Ycats' "When you are old and gray. and full of sleep": How many loved your moment! of glad grace. And loved your beauty with false love or true. But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you. And loved the Iorrown of your changlnlz face. it was another lrishman who went the step farther: "As I white can- serene and die in I holy place. So is the beauty A SCOTSMAN'S AMERICANAIDG TlEHilmEEthlalion By Wilfred Taylor of The Edinburgh Scotsman This morning we felt strong to pay our respects to the United Nation: in their airy bothy down by the East River. The part of the bothy which houses the Score- tariat looks exactly as we suppol- ed it would look - ll areal rec- tangular glass box stretching up to the skies in I frightening num- ber of lain. Why. in New York. of all cities. they should construct buildings designed to (."llt'll every last ray of the sun we don't know. It is half past nine ill the evening as we write. the date ix Decem- ber 7. and the temperature is in the middle sixties. We have no doubt. however. that the big glass box is sufficiently alrv-nndilloneli to resists the sun's steamy caress in the months of July anti Augult. The part 0 the building in which the General Assembly and the So- curity Council meet: I-' dramatic- ally imposing. You uandcr through vast areas of h,vglr-nrially impreg- nated space and go up and down in spotless ('s('alalor-'. The whole place is so beautifully structured in I symbolicul wav that you feel it Is I shock when delegates make boring. and unlldv speeches The contrast between the archItecturIl paradise and the i-Hernrical wilder- ncss if startling if we had de- signed a building in which repre- sentatives of the nations were to meet we should hate stocked it richly with symbols of human fal- liblllty and frailty, such as escala- tors which broke down and gnudy panels illustrating the gulllblllly of mankind. The only things which look disorderly. unpredictable. and I little unsightly in this great .onglom....:lnn of steel and glass are the delegates themselves who put the building to shame. LESSON IN I'R0.Vl'NCIA'l'l0N When we told the young lady It the information desk that we came from Edinburgh. Scotland. she asked us very seriously how you pronounced Edinhurgli and you spelled it. She pronwnmd ft. II most Americans do " lllflll". and we were inclined to let it go at that. But .-he.wu I conscientious and diligent Informa- tion Mflcer. We gave her I llttlc lesson in pronunciation and NI her that later on. when Scotlll was In independent nation Id In were the Scottish rcpresenlattvc It the UN. she would have no trouble. This stmck the non lady II I very humorous 5 i delivered in French. Immediately belnw us were the delegations from Costa Rica and Albania. Since the speech we heard was as boring as most speeches delivered to peo- ple gathered together from widely assorted backgrounds for dimly specified purposes. we soon lost. in terest. took off the um,” and looked around. The delegates were constantly coming and going, occasionally pausing to greet one Inolher with hearty handshakes, pening somewhere else- From times to time I vote was taken and we noted that the delegate from Hyelorussia was 9. SOPHISTICATED SCHOOLGIRLS After an hour or so of edificI- tion and instruction we started to After dodging past various restric- ted zones we found ourlelf out on the street and meetings hordes of lightenment. American schoolgirls, in their Iloppy Joe sweaters and more sophisticated and worldly wise than the U.N.0. delegates. You catch yourself thinking that they are far too clever to learn anything from observing the dc- bales of the assembled nations. We must have chosen I dull day concord among the peoples of the world The fact iii that we found I much more stimulating tribute to the Iplrlt of human inquiry than the U.N.0. buildings. We had I quick look round' the New York Thus In it impressed us im- mense . The "Times" is not In much I newspaper as I unique American lIItitutlon..Js it the paper of the arm . Lhgiigi and giving the general impression , that anything important was hap- l eagerly ; Ind constantly voting against the - tld find our way out of the building. i schoolgirls heading towards en-1 bobby socks. tend to look muchl to fill ourself in an the subi-:ct of , 'the office of the New York Times 3 of an aged face." and on to the hushed loveliness of the last " "' "Her thoughts as still, as the wall.- ers under I ruined mill." This is not the place to discuss Browning": philosophy in ”Grow old along with me'i. nor to ques- tion the implications in lines t.liIt will be rtmcmbercd while the lan- guage lasts: ”From the contagion of the world's slow stain he is sc- cure," and. growing more poig- nant from November to November. They shall grow not old as we that are left grow old. Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. Shelley wrote as one. in KeIts' own words. to whom the miseries of the vrorld were miseries that would not let him rest: in Laur- ence Binynn it is Grief that speaks, and one does not argue with grief. Elder statesmen, senior citizens. geriatrics. Rationalizcd. classified, and pigeon-llolcd. And all the while only individual men and women like the rest of us. Willi I back- ward glance at the gardener. let Chesterton sum up for the defence: The pale leaf falls in pnllor. but the green leaf turns to gold. And those who have fniind it good to be young. Will find it good to be old. have them reproduced while they wait. But even the great and mighty "Times" of New York has its prob- lems. All the editorial corridors were stacked with rolls of news- print. We asked our clcernone why the rolls were dumped in the cor- ridors. lie explained that I news- paper strike might break out at any moment and that the "Times"' would not he caught napping. We should have felt I little more com- fortable lf we had seen some aimi- Iar symbol of emergency stacked in the shining corridors of the UN. 0. building. It is I crazy world and you must be ready to face the worst. The Age Old Story But the word til the Lord endur- efh forever. And this is the word which by the gospel is pi-cached unto you. PUBLIC FORUM This column in upon to the discus- Man by corrupnmtt-nlu of qursimn of Interest. 'I'llI Guaidlnn does not peren- Iarlly Indona tho opinion of curren- pondenla. RECALLED AS Tl-IACHICR ,. 1 Sir. -Canadians are mourning the death of Mr. Lionel Avard llorsyth, President of Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation. lie was the underslgned's school teacher when he entered for his first term It the Collegiate School, subsidiary of KIngs'g College then at wlndnor. N.S. in September, ism. l may say 1 found him I kind and interested teacher in the class room and on the field of sports. )lr. Forsyth'I memory will long be cherished by all who knew him. I am. Sir, etc.. KENNETH BRUCE STEWART liedcque. P.E.I- musv ran mniifvm . NEW YORK lAP) -- Marilyn Monroe and her husband. play- wright Arthur Mlller. lell Thurs- day for I two-week vacation in Jamaica but would make "no cnmmel'lt"' on whether they expect I child. 158.15! REFUGEE! VIENNA (AP)-A intll of I58.- E itliiilill Medically Speaking ly Harman N. Inndeul. lll. D. WAH'l' ARE THE CHANCES FOR A MULTIPLE BIRTH? What are your chances of giv- ing birth to twins or triplets? Statistics say that twins occur once in every 87 births. Triplet! are born one in every 10.000. But that docsnlt tell the whole story. Age. race and parity ap- parently play an important part in determining your particular chances of having more than one child It I time. Older women seem to have I better chance for giving birth to twins than do younger girls. In the 35 to 39 age bracket the twin- ning lncldence is about 17 for ev- ery 1.000 births. For women under 20 it in only 6 per 1,000 births. A few years back, I l2-year-old Kentucky girl gave birth to twins. Multiple births occur more of- ten among negroes than any other race. BETTER CHANCE Women who already have had children seem to have I better chance of giving birth to twins, triplets or four of I kind than does I woman who has been previous- ly childless. Once I set of twin: has been born. it sometimes sets I pattern for that mother's future births. At least two women each had two sets of twins last year. t In February, A Rochester, New York. mother gave birth to her second pair of twins in ten months. The following May. I Jefferson- vllle. Indiana. womIn' had her second Iet in eleven months. While taking I little more time. I Quebec mother llll really let I mark to shoot If. She has had Iix sets of twins in eight years! There have been Ievcral cases in which twins have been born sev- eral weeks and even months Ipart. ICOMBINED WEIGHT The heaviest set of twins born in this country. as far as l know. is I combined weight of 22 pounds. These twins were born in Louis- ville. Illinois. in 1941. The world's record was set by English twins whose birth weight totaled 35V: pounds. One weighed 17”: pounds. the other 10 pounds. The greatest number of babies ever delivered at one time is six. Although there have been several cases of Iextuplets. none has lived more than 24 hours. Mrs. W. S. : I am developlniz I patchy bIldneII on my head. Will my hair ever re-grow? Answer: It is possible that you are suffering from I type of bald- ncss knows Is-Ilopecal IreItI. Many times the hair grows back by itself in this type of disease. You should consult I Ikin specialist for treatment. MAXIMS ' To ileIl effectively with evil II In! realm. pllylical, nm-II. pen- onal. social or political. the In must be laid go the not of the Inc. K NOTES BY THE way Annnollluaullnlculle d to cigarettes. BI cut then: out! - '1'.D.!'. in Ottawa China. at Gennu In lured II of I car It Bonn and In ea, without. however, net- the old arguments to why I II In fen-Ibly but It teachers mark: on our l0Il'l homework. go wrote it for him.-Brandon ua. Policeman to driver of I long. long new car: "Look. lady. if you can't park it Ill, park In much of it II you can."-Stratford Beacon- Herald. 3 A lluulan soldier asked I swed- lsh newspapermau beside I Hun- garian river: "is this the Suez Canal?” Perhaps I hint of where he thought he was going.-Ottawa Journal And. noIv- we. are told. that, jurors fail to convict people of manslaughter charges in traffic deaths because of the jurors look It the prisoner and think. "There but for the grace of God go I." But shouldn't the evidence count? -St. Catherine: Standard. RTORM M0008 The city meets the Iuddenneu of storm with the impervious boast of stone and steel. Thunder and tempest powerless to transform. A million light: from mercantile Blaze in defiance. Through thI darkened hours. ramparts The busy world roars on its usual WIY Protected by I camouflage of low- OPS, Unhearing that the elements hold sway- But one awakens to I storm It nig To find the city part of nature's being; The towers are mountainl. fired by shafts of light, Reverberant with echoes, overloo- ing The full cascadea of rain. Ono climbs the steep. The well-remembered path to quiet sleep. -Catherine Haydon Jacobs. in the Christian Science Monitor. OUR YESTERDAY'S From no Guardian rllu TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (January 4, III!) The splendid quality of l'.E.I. potatoes and the high reputation which Island tubers have Olllbg llshed in the Cuban market. were referred to by Dr. Manuel Pledra de la Conchas. I leading lawyer of Havana. and Mr. Antonio Bac- Irdl. also of Cuba. while on I to- cent visit to I'.E.l. Fire destroyed the residence of .Mr. J. Garfield Rosa. Roseberly. Saturday morning about low I. in. when names were seen com- ing from the ceiling of the alt.- tlng room. Mrs. Rosii and one of the children were the only occu- pants of the house. Through the aid of the neighbors most of tho furniture was saved. TEN YEARS AGO (January 4. I941) Lt.-Col. D. A. MIcl(lnnon and Mr. J. W. Boulicr. president and of the Charlottetown Driving Park Ind Provincial Exhibition Associ- ation, have sold lheir shares in tho Compa , to I group of twelve business men. horse and caltlo breeders. harness horsemen and professional men. The well-known island packing and processing plant of Davis and Fraser has been purchased by Can- ada Packers Ltd., it was official- ly learned yesterday. Plans of the new owners are not definitely known It prelent but it is under- stood construction of further addi- tions to the existing plant will be- gin in the spring. It III. been said that IIIIIQ motorilfl than days curt tell, wlntlur I at in the dllnnce is coming or unlit M15 7917 Often it: drive: couldn't xiv! Touch of I clue either.-Hamilton Spectator. Than In virtull! IO Inhe- rlatc public hospital facllltiea in CIIIdI for the treatment of emotionally disturbed children. The Ontario government deserves credit for taking the first step toward remedylnl this lIck- it intends to establish In instltutc of child psychiatry which will be the first of in kind in the Dom. lnlou.-Toronto Star. WI will have to Iympathiu with the "old sweats.” who will sigh, "Here we go again." at the news that the new German army is going back into iackboois Ind Nazi-styled uniforms. Clothes may or may not make the man. But there In I lot of uncomfortable memories associated with lack- boots. Hitler tunics. goose-stepping and high-peaked caps.-London Free Press A convention which. in many respects. put the GOP and Dem- ocrats to shame was held down in Britt. Iowa. It was the annual get-together of the lloboes of Am- erica the happy-go-lucky boys of both the U.S. and Canada w bu ride the rails But they are getting fussy - they want cushions for box cars. if you please, and bigger and better hand-outs of mulligan stews. Delegates pmmlscd "not to sail at any time with more than three sheets in the wiud."-Leth- bridgo Herald. ..L....L...j...Z.L NOTED SCIENTIST Sir James Ross in 1831 was the first to compute the position of the magnetic pole in Canada's Arctic. How You Can Think Faster Ever forget. I friand'I mine just II you introduce him? Freeze up in I diactmion, even though you know the (Iota? Take minutes. Ivan hourn. making I Iilnple do- cilion? January Reader's Digest belh you what. pnycholodata have learn- Id about these strange "mental Ihort circuits" that Iolnotimg panlyna younnindubown you how toovsreomo t.bein- how to im- prove your memory and think fauna. Get your January Randal”: Di! today: 83 Irticla of lasting intald including the but horn an-not bookn Ind magazii-III, con- ” d to Iave your timo. . cllDMOltE'Si DRY CLEANERS I20 IOIII It PIC! C23 llefrigeratliiil Repairs To All Makes APPLIANCES SALES & SERVICE MOTORS Rewinding and Repnh-I ELEC'I'RlCAL Repairs Paliiir Electric Pnomsua-ISM FIUICI A. Attic. Oisalili AN. 1 GMR D OF WALES (XHJEE t"' GrIduI ..' I0 WAYS THIS COUIII IINIHTI YD”! ' 1 Develop tdf-eaaflincc. I, . , - ;..”c.'::.':'..r:.'.r'"'- , :3".-."'i'...7"'."':iL.,-........'...g . I: vaanryau-Ifpdunaulltla. ' spdnsored by the Kinsmen Club . Forfurtherlnforntatfononl-eghtratlon pupa .' , r YOU Too CAN FIND THE SUCCESS ANSWER THROUGH THE DALE , CARNEGIE: COURSE-1 In 15 weeks thetDIle Carnegie coune CIR (UB0 0 I'lC'Kl' buslnen social life. caaamn: 4 cents. nu-ninth . uoaoluf. on A? 750 ml. , rewards in Just ask I