PACE FOUR THE GUARDIAN Morning Dally tFiunded l|\ HM) Authorized u: Sci-om! linol- Mull. Poll. Ulllcl Uelllrlmrnl. Ottawa. ‘llie laluull (luardian Publishing Co. Editor lllil| llanuglng lllrn-tur, J. ll. lluruell. Quinn-lute Editor, l-‘rnnk Walker. “"171: btrongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest ink" ._______._____- TUNN. MONDAY, J.\.\'. fl. 1.'l. for constitu- lu lillllill il'lli‘lltlill‘.‘lll il must always lic borne in lllllill thzll not till zlspccts of tlulutllrs ‘iltlr-ililllllllllll laws arc of ciiuzil lt'i'lllllllt‘ilt‘t‘ ‘fhus both Lllluw .1 liud thc providing iillichincry" n" iui|i.n't.ir.cc. l‘l\w|uc.:il it; lnturcs can vary thcu‘ own ‘.li"_'.'l‘li','lllilll nilrl |llti_li'(‘(llll‘(‘ Hiltl .'l|i(‘l' lllll‘ llilliilllllltlll of thcil" tlwn courts of lzuv. Wlir-llioi‘ 1111-‘ ("v\l‘."f‘i‘lll11’.‘lli n1 i,l1Z.f\\ u or ul t'li;:.-liit|cli~v n iins nu ziddititvulil iuiuistcl" is i‘lilll‘l‘l_\ up lo thc legislative liiody CUIlCCFll- 'I'h~i'cnr~ l_‘lllt‘l'f.{t‘i1f‘l'[ll rights and pow- cl ~ o; i111“ l‘r'.~\ inc-cs, cs for iusiiiticc. coiltrol of the business of lllSLll‘t-.l.iit,'€, which it might he (loomed arlvisahlc to transit-i‘ from =--. -=.l.--'.iu:i in the other. Provision for ’ nlviut \llt'll changcs should llc relu- ‘-li!l[Il\‘, ilcrlil-ips by nu llbsoliltt- nui- iirclt; of both lltiuscs ill Uttawii illlfl thc 'illl\‘t“lll oi suy lwci-lliirtls of the Provincial l1',\\l‘i‘l1|1l"|lis. 'l'ii--iw- i\ .i third class. however. which t‘Ollt'L“'.'ll.\‘ not n zcucrzil right of zill thc l'|‘U\‘- inf-cs or thc l-‘cdcral tlovcrixmciit. but which is llie particular right and privilege of our Province Oi‘ group within the coun- try. Such is the status of the two official luiqilzigcs, the school question. the island's right of continuous steamship service. grants in lieu of revenue from Crown lands and our ‘1lillli1llll7l number of members to be return- ed to the Colnnioiis. 'l‘hesr~ are iu the na~ hire of Pilfilclllfii‘ rights and should only be taken away with the consent of the Prov- ince or minority group for whose benefit they were originally DFOVhYlPd. l"l'|. l|\ vii; oi Alaska For llatenca A change appears to be taking place in the LY S. government attitude to Alaska. In- stead of relegatiiig Alaskan problems to the background indefinitely, 20 co-operating ag- encies have now pooled their information and ideas and come up with facts and sug- gestions that indicate an important world role for Alaska in the future. Alaskzfs strategic position across narrow Bering Strait. from Soviet Siberia makes an evaluation of its economic potential an im- portant consicieration for every Canadian and American. Gen. If. H. Arnold. wartime head of the 1.‘. Army Air Force. expressed the thoughts of many Canadians wherl he said: “in this world of tomorrow Alaska is as- sured a position of great importance. Upon (Uaska the future of North America may well rest." And it was Gen. Biilj/‘lliitchell. early’ zidvocate of strong air power for thc llnitcd States, who termed Alaska thc “most strategic place on earth.“ Much has been written about Alaska's impoi-talicv: in thc defence of North Am- erica. its potentialities as an economic bul~ work on thc north-western corner of this contiiivut, howcvcr, are less widely known. Sir Stanford's Appreciation in a recent speech in London, Sir Stab Terri tfrlpps, United Kingdom LThancclioi' of the lixchcciilei", strongly repudiatcd any stig- gcwtion that Canada has been flying to un- load hcr economic difficulties onto Britain. "or that we have unloaded our (iiffictiltics onto her buck." Britain, Sh‘ Stafford dc- rlarcrl, hrid no better friends than thc pco~ pic of Unnadzi. howcvcr great. tho economic difficulties of both countries (luring and slncc thc war. “We do thank our (‘ann- riizin friends for the part they have played," he said, “and we utterly repudiate those who Il1‘(’~-—\\'f1(‘1l1(‘.l‘ they mean it or not- creating had blood between the two peo- ples." l-lv added: " "The truth is thzit. the war has dost roy- ed the pre-wnr pattern of trade which en- abled iis to earn from third countries the dollars needed to buy all we wanted from Canada and the United States. Canada's difficulties have thereby been increased be- cause her trade has developed on the basis of importing a great deal from the United States while selling a large part of her pro- ducts to us for sterling. That was all right as long as the sterling could be freely con- ' verted into dollars as it could be before the war, and as we want it again to be as soon as ever that is possible. But until we have been able to proceed further in building up the exchanges between the dollar and thc- non-dollar world, the dollars we used to col- lect from the rest: of the Sterling Area are no longer there to collect-so we cannot buy . either in the United States of America or in '; Canada all the dollar goods we would like .,tobuyortheywoilldllketooell. I P. "that fa very trying for us all and that ‘i wamverygoodreaoonwhywehadlhe difficult triangular question. We all agreed it was a triangular qucstioiw-that we were all concerned in it and with it and that it was only by working together that we could overcome our difficulties. “\\'c also agreed that it was neither a temporary’ nor a superficial problem that could bc lightly’ regarded, but that it was deeply scaitcrl in economic historv and that it would uccd bold and forceful action in all thrcc couutrics to sci it to rights. “Nothing is more ridiculous iu stich cir- culustaiuccs thziu for anyone of us to zittaclv t‘lll1t‘l' of thc others ais rcgtirtls lzicts which have bccn beyond .'i|l our controls. "'l‘lic l‘i‘llltll‘lvtll_llt‘ thing is illtli lly liclp- mg. nud Czuiutln has hclptifi us nulcli its any- one, w c hnvc muuzigctl scimchoiv" to get along so flu", ztud if wc co on working; lilirliioui- LlilNl_\' I<1'.‘_t‘ll‘li“l‘, 11s \\l‘ ililt‘lltl to do. wr‘ slilfll c\culu;ili_\ llli.\ ilollnl"-st~::"liu.<: pro- lilcni." .\(ll\f‘ l l LLlllUlilAL NUIkS (Tlvlc election hikes plaoo on Wednes- dny. Fchrilnljv l. a o a Christmas \‘l(‘il.\ lnwc finally litltl their first workout. a u It 'l‘hc Provincial tlovcruilicut hli.. its hands full with its negotiations zit tlttawil, and pre- pliriur.‘ lul‘ thc l.t‘i_'i.\'lliilll't‘ uc.\1 mouth. <- w a lt. will be interesting to learn the effect on the S. S. ilforniacrcetis cargo of dried corli of first a fire and then a dicncliiug by thc hose of llnlifllx firemen. ll is easy to imagine the unfortunate ship behaving like a full saucepan of rice. spouting the swelling grain from every opening. I I O President, ‘fruenianls tlllllillllblli‘ picture of futiue prosperity is undoubtedly technically possible. On a more modest scale it has been possible for a long time, but operations on a nation-wide or world-wide scale have not yet attained the pcrfcctiolt which is theoretically possible. O it was actress Faye Emerson, wife of Elliott Roosevelt. who is reported as saying, “I'm going down to Mexico City for hiy divorce. I know very little about legal mat- ters and l tinderstand that ltfexiczm divorces don't take ver_v long." Mrs. Roosevelt, and many‘ like hcl". are in iiccd of legal advice. it would be unfortunate to discovicr at a later date that some divorces not merely “don't take very long" but “don't take." O Wilkie Collins. English novelist, born this date 1824', he achieved popular success with two best sellers, “The Woman In White" and “'l‘he Moonstone" iii which he showed much aptness in framing mel0-dra~ inatic stories oii the basis of a secret witli- held tili the denoticmcnt. lie was a friend of Charles Dickens and a contributor to Household Words. llc wrote a (lrama, "The Frozen Deep" lll which Dickens nnd other celebrities appeared. Universities in thc Old Country‘ arc bc- coming more practical (lll(l less illCOFQilCcil. Bcclittsc British industry ilrcfcrs “sloggcrs" to "flicrs“, Aberdeen llnii'ei'sity is doing .‘l\\'.'l_\' with its l,lfit’ll(‘l(ll' of commclce degree. Prilicip.'il ‘fliolnas 'l‘u_vloi' told tni: Univers- it_v's (icncrnl Council that l£ll‘_U,<‘ business concerns tion't. Willii thc "fliers", thc men with comuicrcizil ilegrccs and (iiplomas. “'l‘hcy want lucn with a broad general cdu» cation who are ill'C|.)ill‘(‘(l to pill. their backs into it." he said. "We, in thc north, have not. begun to realize thc openings that cx- ist. in thc business world, p.'irticulzirly' iii Eng- land for thc good puck horses llltll ciin slog ;llt)1l'1 zmd tlikc the hurrlcn of thc dllv." i 0 o Willie transactions on thc Toronto Stock Exchange for the full yicar of 1949 were ap- proximately thc szime as those of the pre- viotis _ve.'ir, thc values of transactions rc- cordcd a smurf gain. Figures issued by the statistical department of thc Exchange showed the years sales as $19,226,534 shares against. 250,701,216 in the previous year, while values were up to $452,652,332 compared with 1948's $438,815,573. Nuln- ber of transactions on the floor ivcre slight- ly higher at 651,904 contract items while of the 861 issues traded during thc year, 270 recorded gains against 538 losses, the re- mainder being unchanged. Trend during the year as recorded by the Exchanges in- dices shoyvcd that the industrials finished at their high of 207.36 after touching a low in June of 157.28 and opening 1949 at 180.70 for a gain of 26.66; gold stocks reached their peak in September at 114.63, saw their low in May at 87.96 and finished at. 105.30 ‘for a gain of 14.21 ; base metals closed slight- ly below their high in November at 113.19 after a low for the year of 77.42 in June and finished the year with a. net gain of 7.44; while The western oils closed at ap- proximately thelr top of 64.13 with a low -...-V-_--.-_.. P"! 'l‘l-lE GUARDlAN._ (f w»? ‘$115,’! 1' whirl w e: 0/ ,/' 7 O tAnd P. l. L) I \'l1t'E;S5l'l‘UL'S you scorilwsi t l "the ccnius of 17.33 places thc illiliiiillltlfl o.’ 111.5 island a‘. 11.6613 , souls. thc grcatci‘ iiuriibci" of whom i were sctiicd nczii- the centre. and not far from Port la Jove. Along the banks of the East Rlver up- wards of 700 lTSKiCCl. immigrants were Uulliillllali)’ arriving from Nova ‘ct-till, w licrr thc tyranny of ilie E ghsh GLHPHIUI‘ rendered the lives of the French inhabitants al- most. tmbearabie. This increase of population had its disadvan- rages, for it seriously embarrassed the aillhor-tirs, who were often :.u great :~1‘.'3ll.S to silpply the ne- CCSSlUFS of life to so many dCSll- tule persons. "The immigrant: from Nov: Scotia were, in almost every iri- stzincc, reduced to the most pitiaiblc norrssiiy. 'l'lic_v arrived without loud and with only‘ St‘.'4ili_\'k‘.lU\l1l1i'1. for their departure was s0 hurried- ly effected. that they did not have time to make provision for the journey. much loss for their so- iouz-n in their new homo. "l".ithci' Glrard. writing from Point Prim, Oct. 24, i763, draws a rather gruesome picture of the poverty of these new-coolers. He says: ‘Our refugees in general keep up good coilragr, and hope to bc ablc to support themselves by lllFli‘ labor; but the want of cloth- ing, ivliich is almost. general. is a great (iraw-bzlck, ‘and will prevent many from working for the win- ter. Tliry have no implements to work \\'ith, nor silfficicni clothing to prolcct themselves by day or night, hfaiiy of thc children are so scantily clad. that when l cuter the house they flee. for very shame. All are not reduced to this PXiFPIllii)‘; but almost all arc in nerd.‘ ctC. The Government. how- cvcr. came to their assistance, by distributing clothing and provisions amongst them: hut. still much des- titutiou and suffering prevailed." ----l'"roni "'l‘iu- l-Lirly History of thc Catholic Church in Prince Ed- ward Island,“ lag." Rev. John C. Mac- hiillzin, 1905. The hliiioly And Nine tWlllllipCg Free Press) For n _voun;.; country. Canada is rich iii historical associations. The other dziy. m three columns. ll‘- was llOi.l‘(l that thc little town of Drcscicn, Ontario, is the burial plzlct‘ cf "U.t'l(‘ 'l‘oni." who, as portriiirrl b_v Airs. Bccchci‘ Stowe in the famous novel. hccnni» n \’\"l‘_\ treat. lllillcllfl‘ iii frcciug thc .'\l.'\\'i".~ Another interns-ling fact appears in :1 little booklet. jilSi. i=sucd by llcntty Bros. Ltd. of Fergus". Out~ iirio, ‘thc t.\vi of Fcrcrs. in Weil- inuton county‘. is ill thc hcnrt of \\'(‘.'.Lf‘l‘i1 tmtzuio. Hero in 1842 cziiuc u \’()\|1‘l'.{ Scot of good family but bud lribits (icorgc Clephzulc. Hts fzilhrr, Ai1fll'(".\‘ Clcplinnc was the sheriff of Fifcslilrr. (l- orgc hail n wculrrss for (irink and hriri been sent to (Jziuadn. n "remit- tance" mun, in thc hope that hc would l)\'f‘l‘(‘0f1ll‘ ll. 11c failed lit everything he attempted and died a rli-iinknru. ll\ I831. ngcd 32 years. lie W115 hurled in Si. Andrew's Churchyard n1. firm-s. There would HD1705? to be noth- luz rilstliizulshed or memorable iibout. George (Jlrnhanc, thc black- sheep of thc family. But Gem-m- had a sister. Eliza- beth, who dcnilv luveil him and who. \\‘ll(‘ll ivord of his death reached her, expressed hcr grief in the lines: There were nlunty and nine that that safely lny In the shelter of the fold; But. one was out, on the hills awn y For ,oii' from the gates of gold. Away 0n the mountains wild and bare. Avvav fron the tender Shep- herd's care. ' There are four more verse: and many, many milll nu of people in this world today k ow all five of them _h,v heart. The verses speak of "the mountains wild and bare." of "how deep were the waters crossed." ‘ the "track," so “rough and firs)" nid o! the lost. sheep-the black sheep-sick and helpless and ready to die. Years later. Moody and Slnkuy came to Fergus ln the course of their lifelong mission. Smkcy heard the aim-y of George Ole- phane. want to the graveside and read Elizabeth's verses. The music which came to him gave immor- tality to both. met-y you hundreds 0f 900x110 coma to Fergus to can George in June 0f 38.78, finishing the year, with a Illlllfiiliu i; Olephane‘: grove. “rho will ll! if. K51? MY €Y€ swii-cn.’ $7 w» ‘QQUOOPQQ l l Old Charlottetown CilARLOT'l‘E'l‘OvvN Waiting At The Station 0M THAT lho Use oi Aluliiit; l ‘world. even ivhcn Stalin l lining-y lii llidlnliv lly llcnc tlullrc M. Jciiu ‘llubauil lh uiie of i. foremost French atomic s-slcntki Upon lciiiin; tlw laboratory’ o Duke Maurice dc Bright». he im- mediately gained distinction with hUCCCSSlYC pieces of research thzit have been presented to the Acuil-~ only or science and constitute most ; important. theoretical progress. Thus he lnvciitcd as early as 19113 ll magnetic method for creating clust- ers of pusitiic elections riblc in concentrate onugivcn spot, liiui he provided the first. rxpeixliicutlii proof for the coniersloii of elect- ricity to immaterial light. of inat- ter to light as one might. say in less exact. but. more colourful terms. After directing tho Paris s hrul nf physics and chemistry during the. war, this young scientist, was zip- pointed professor at the university of Lyons ivhere he is teaching at. present. He has founded there. a model institute of nlonlii- Pl\_\'l~ll"\ and despite thc limited means at his disposal for purchasing hcniy apparatus, he is trying to attract student; og physics and nuclear research. He is indeed ii true apost- le. Professor Jean Tliibatid has al- ready published two books that have had great success: “Vie ct 'I‘l‘?\i'lSI1l\.ll.(\ilOll dcs atomcs" rd Euergie ritomlque at uiiivers" in which he made a S1ll‘\'t‘_\' of the state of the new science after thc war. He has now just. written a third book which will probably’ arouse his suggestions regarding the cou- trol of aiouic cncrgyi. This work. entitled "Pulssniit-e dc Tulouie" deserves international considerat- ioii on thc same zround as that. given to l’. M. S. BliackctUs book “Les Consequences militaires ct. polltiques dc Pencrglc atomique." In hla first chapter, he deals with the principle of a "nuclcai" redctor", the typical example bciiii: the uranium pile. This problem is of supreme importance to the engineer desiring to construct. an industrial engine. According to nuclear theory substances nhlc to supply energy are either heavy or very light. An intermediate sub- stance such as silver ls indestruct- able. Restricting ourselves for the mon- cnt. to heavy substances, uranium and thorium, the production iuid rapture of neutrons must be re:- ulntcd so as to Ollifllll n regular "chziin reaction" that. will supply the maxlmim of heat. illlliZtllllC without. ilanzci- of explosion. A wnv of ilsliig thc by-profluct. formrri by the flsioii of urziniizni m5 must. ni- so he found. namely’ plutonium, which in turn is at valuiibic gru- crutoi" of atomic c icrgy‘. While thc Fermi pllc scents to bc thc 71il5\\[‘l' to the first, i7l'0l7l(‘l'|1. the second has not. been ioiiipieicly solved rind Mi". Jenn ‘Phlliiitid gives a <'l(‘l1l' account. of the facts. As the plut- onium formed is able to attack uranium ‘$.33, uicrt flliliifi‘ in thc Fermi pile. nvd to lircratc zitovii‘ energy while at. thc same time l'l'.‘l!(‘i1\"l'{lii11': itself. the conditions of this phenomenon must be deter- mincd. What thr i\illl\01' calls "thc raising of plutonium atoms ‘can diminish from 26 to 30 times thc amount. of riiw material needed for any oiio generation of energy‘. 150 tons of flssihlc matter would suffice to cover n11 the thermic energy that thc world needs. ' Alter the technical prc-bloms which will certainly bc solved, cone the economic ones. The cost price of atomic energy must. not. exceed that. of mower ohtnltied from coal and waterfalls. Accord- ing to calculations mndc in thc United States ns h "ic n ‘ "l n’ theexperlmenial pile at. Hanford @000 kllO'»\‘ilt1$'. thc ii .. .~ m li- ervby 23 per tent. But time will be on the side of atomic ener- gy and against. power from other sources, so that in the end the cost. of both will be equal with. even, a dlffermce ln favour of the first. By close revision of these calculations. taking into account world reserves of uranium: which total Bflmtl tons available, Profes- sor Thlbaud maintains that the cost. of nuclear energy will be plac- edJaetween um o! water orlileiim- power and that of coal-steam pow- er. But. hp agrees that. these esthn- ates are uncertain and in any case atomic energy cannot. entirely asp- plont the other. Coal in particular will nlwnya have priority in cer- tain fields or industry. and as fucl, because of its enormous reserves. O O O The tut halt of the books deals with the political aspect. of the problem. Mr. Jenn ‘Thtbaud lays great ma: on the anxiety in the world todny with regard to atomic boiler Iminlnilluihmfl f iblock sheep did not NWO till" boll-I \. '- 1c t -.~ < 1 - - " we; ;,»;»-;-;-,-,-,-;,eiig-gi; 1:. mil.“ afiitiiii. “e p0 m‘ n a ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ a fat-to for bolrbs uiid radio-ac- dustrinl npiicnrliiicc." There should Till») MAN l I’RIGHT\ "llic man upri: of lii! ivhosc guiltlcsx heart. i: free From all dlslio est. deeds. or thought of vanity; The, lilflll ivnoso silent days in, lmi-mlcss Juys are spent. Whom hopes cannot dcludr, mi- soi-row" discontent; That man lletdl neither towers nor armour for defence, Nor Sex-rel. vaults. to fly from tliuiidni-‘s violence: lie, Nib". can- behold with un- Bflrtghted eyes The horrors of illr deep, and ter- mrs of thc skits. 'i'lt\1.'~ srnruln; all the cares that. frlln or fortune brings. lie makes line heaven his book; his wisdom. heavenly things: Good thoughts. his only friends; his wraith, a. well-spent age; The rxrtlrhis sober inn. and quiet pilgrimage. -~-'l'lioiiia.i Camplon 11567-16120) wiirfiirc. "E\'(‘l‘_\' electricity works ut high |JO\\‘Cl' llHllg n large atoiii-' livc poisons, despite its purely iii- bc menus of controlling internat- ionally tho use of substances that. cziii directly or indirectly pmducc fission, mimciy uranium and theor- ium But after two years of dis- Cllhhltlll, the U. N. O. has not. been nblr to have one proiect. carried, owing to Russian opposition. Eln- steiii llltn invited all scientists Lo support. a plan for world control. ‘Fliis idea also was rejected by the Russian scientists. Yet Etirlstcin said in most. moving \vords“I am convinced that there is no other» way of eliminating the most. dread- l ful thinner that. man has ever had to flu-c. Our objective above all else must. be to escnpo total destruction." Professor Thlbuutl records these failures without becoming too pes- miiistlc. After making a detailed llflfllySlfi or the "difficult problem‘ of control", he reproduces with enthusiasm thc plan for a woridi republic. (lrawu up lit. the Univers- ', fly of‘ Chicago in 19-16, niid laid", iii particular lirforc iitomic research workers, But. he realizes very well tlizit, a llliiil of this kind can only succeed if support of‘ it. is not. suib- i ordluiitctl to any pi-irticuliir social. or rcligioirs ideology, considered, more inlporiniit to humanity than peace, freedom and tolerance. Pro- f(‘.‘¢t~‘()1' ‘flilbiiutl docs not. expect. help in conic from the scientists themselves. lie quotes a speech rlclivcred lrut year at. a meeting of chemists hi: the Archbishop of Boston‘. "It. would be suicide to' -carcfully refrains from JANUARY 9. 1951i fhfi\'c'ln'a'n'u'i'u'llfi'h'h'h'h"a'a'i'u'u'u'u'u'a In .- I g --- Notes By The Way - Lldy Astor lay: that modern life is made upllrgelypt "wretch- rd pictures of semi-nude women." Let's have reform, by all menus lvleaiiing better pictures. of course. -l"eterborough Examiner. We. diollke tlii optimist’; habit of selecting the most. favorable sub- jects for his prcachmeiits. llc likcs ‘to assure people that every cloud has l silver lining. but hi" poiniin: out that every rattlesnake has a harmless end, —— KiiiZSlQH W111i- Standard. Women. who are usually ox- tremely tasteful when it romrs in, i ~ ;.-~uiaiocf, ‘.11 a buying chcsterficld covers. diap- nries, linoleum. and wallpaper. forget that mrn are not fut-nit‘- M“. window's. floors or walls when 1h"; buy them iieckiics. The telflc Willi’! usuailv runs to flowery cirsigns intricate patterns, or vivid color.‘ in home furnishings docs not change when the time comes to buy ties. — Lethbridzo iicrald. \ Even when error and corruption have lost some bastion of thc fz-rc is able to parade hi5 massive conquests in hinscow, there is no cause for tirspair. The strongest oligarchv i cnilinpcci with all thc machinery of propragalida and Sllflbfflfflflll that is at the disposal of a modern tvranny’. has inherent weaknesses. _ Power corrupts in more than one sense: lt threaten! tliosc who _ wield it by raising up i-i\'.1l.<,decn~ I rnin: suspicions. ‘marlin: to rcvol‘ and cutting the leadership off from the confidence and the sup- port of the people. -- New York Herald Tribune. Tho lady who had her own null" on the BOAC aircraft lrlivln: for New York isnamcd Lcnlingcassi- opeia. She is : Siamese kitten. and she goes as a gift from Em:- lish breeder Ella hfartin. of Grca‘. Eaddow. PLsscx, to American star!" star Mary Martin. ’l‘he suite i! a two-storey affair in Wtlrlfl. bull especially for flying cats. it ‘has build-in fish and milk saucers. designed for minimum aerobatics when the. pilot turns or climbs. Cassiopeia must bring her own cushion. Though Cassiopeia goes as a gift. Siamcsr cat: are n re- gular export line from Britain. Most of them, like Cassiopeia. go by aha-The Herald (Londonl. Einstein has never act out in create an atomic bomb. or briii: about any other snecifiir material accomplishment. lie M) given his life to an attempt to rxplain the inexplicable! which have a1- ways resided at the end of ever-v telescope or microscope: tn formulate’ higher concepts wiliifii will overcome. the logical difficul- ties that present themselves \l'iiii every effort to grasp the realities of time and space and energy: in devise new wavs of thinking that will carry us another SlFp forth" into the iinknoivn flint hounds nil . our attempts to impose a rrltiorwl svstom of thought upon lii:- mu‘.- tlplrx incomproherisibles of the l l I -a-u-nil-l-r'a-n.a.qmw_\. _ 1|.LA_A_I_~_| universe. That. is what aociev, still dots not quite grasp u f, stzimls .11 the fcct of Tscicnce." f- .~.‘.ili thinks lucorrigilily in im-ms uf piuuiiilc mnhxul ZIClllCVOIIlCIIZ, But iL will linvc to understand n; sclriibsls, as it once well tinder. stood us plillosnphfirs, l1 ii l: t9 use the glint i:.f‘.s ihry bring ,__ New York llfuxllil 'l'l'li)lllle, (‘innit-Ian's Iinrilirrn ivlldlife 1| about tar: ytnrs ziivny froiu "tin rr ', when nil-lifts, ilpland gun-i, l\.l\i.\ null some iillirl‘ animals w-.‘,i d:c off l\_'-' tho tons [)1 ilunlsanch ' life u|j.~-1rr.oiis l|)-\'r"i] \\.lli:iin iiuivan, Cun- s cirftiinci- .ii'l Foirsi and . pith! ("linen o? the. nnadirin For» .,,i1 that ll M11. i-ion, financed ‘M ut and backed l-iv fitfli" live sportsriirn anti the fur trade, b. launched. lle consider: iflilt hi; approach of the low ebb in lnlmal life ntnkrs this n propltlotl l-l-mo tn CfillhliPllFlf investigations. Vai-i. oils allrvnpti‘. have been mm: 14 trricr- ‘dir- orilin 0f the riddle t4 ‘Wflihm crouvdrd conditiou hrnuzli‘. on by the 6W1: it“); "llllcdillfilc Condition: l; u‘; Nu lvi: to no avail. _ xii-y. l;in.l Lake Xoxvs llianllnha‘: ralihrliidiutrlal a... pausion is illustrated by the lin- prccxszve figure! given by 1 |_ . . director of thg gmvlndn linen’ of industry and Mm, lvi address at the con. . the Associated Chain-i. brrs of Commerce. It i: ailing-ml that this year value of producttoa will i-vaoh an ail-time high ,4 SlElTlOOODOO, lomo three ai-ig . hi" “m”! Renter than la 19w 'i"“,““fli“”l'fvnwlevcd in industrv "l" llVFVlfiCfi is 42,000, aima-i . v- as manv n: ten veers ago P-‘Wrcll-i for 1949 are estimated n “Qloonnm- “' ‘vifllllflfl ‘Yribunc _. G"f_‘|'£"' A. Martin, prulflong n the t ']t~'1/l -.., A.‘ w. aria“ hf Top W” “"4 Wild-Pill‘ Bureaus, and‘ n lilffif‘ ‘rcsort owner hlnuelf, ‘.111 gcsmd ‘n the Canadian (M. Irrrss of lbabor that Labor Dav ‘we moved forward to thc <‘inii'd 11.1.5 f\1,...,i.... In SPWPWINY 1 .<~.~-.-i pl n..- ti... 1.,“ h’ 5mm ivoifll rlziii ‘,.\'n _ weeks to the u. "Triivcd tourist 5pm,,“ would p,“ the summer resort business on i more economic basis. and might horny in» w, imp! paminz! M N“ "i! e ""1 ll.“ sionoomo . lirrnld. SQvmnEi. is coal-gn- Sllllfillfii’, Uni, Jan. 5 -(Pi" ' 5 -‘ virc the noise; and undcw‘ LIlIiYlZF~OI1 in the kite"- cn of Ali-s. clirsirr McGilllv-ray m fcTlljr-Idnin li"l‘iif‘l‘l‘\'-1lflill she lmt \. f\l.'"lillviri_v take (hi; “ply. "p.11! ll ild-"i .11 thr- hack of the "““'~'“ \‘ ‘ 9111*" and most at ‘no ti ‘Us Ynhlide nut suppli- . l xiowvi there by a srninirl Mm hfvflillivray in“: frirnils w".“i last sutiinwr. PROFESSIONAL CARDS ______.__.._. l Mcl-heson 8. Peuke A. W. MATHESON. K1). A. H. PEAKE, BA, LL.B- Blrrllierl, etc. Collection: - Mon-y to Loan l0 Great George Street Clllrlnttetow . M. Albun Farmer MONEY TO LOAN B.A., LL.B. BABBISTEB, SULIUITUR, Etc. Chnrlottiotoivn. I‘. F. I Dr. W. R. Curse: Chiropractor l':lmor Graduall- CHARLOTTETOWA I01 Prince SC- Phone 1M2 Eid 1 Solicitors, Notaries. Pita Bldg Barrinurl. Canadian Bank of Con: wu- MONEY T0 LOAN lr-avr the control of ill-Oink‘ 611072! GILBERT A. (lAUDET. H.A.. l.l..l\ iii. l!‘ of (lf“.'-i.i‘.li'ilrlll; tn thc scientists nlouc " Oll Yet. Mr. 'l‘h'ibaud maintains that.‘ the JilJlPIlHbLS ciumot. cviido thug moral problem. If the awnic bomb | were uz-‘ctl iignln, he would have to rrcousidcr lils values and perhaps, condemn science. He adds that. we liuvc nut. renclicil that. stage yet. hicniiwhilc he considers it. "neces- sary tu admit that. a distinguished scientist, lifter research in pure science, could rcfilsc to undertake work intended for purposes of war." To put, his conscience at. ease he suggests a compromise. By this. niitiomil defence would have a team of nicmlc engineers who would apply the results of nuclear phya~ ics. civilian research workers would thus not be obliged to undertake works ol destruction; but. they would he kept. to secrecy in re- spect. of work which could be used for military purposes. It ls obviou: that. sheeting clear of the issue with such eusuistry is bound to be ineffective mid that. the mum] problem would have to be faced Mr. Jean Thlbaud has not in fact. found n solution because one does not exist as things are today", it. ls thnt. which makes so tragic the age to which science has brought us willy-hilly, without. having l\ thought; for the good or ill that might sprlrg from her work. as rf"_'.'li‘(lf€ its possibilities Canadian 5n“, 0| (jommfir, . m"; Chas. R. McGucid BJl. IAl-BISTER. SOLIUITOI» NOTARY, 5w, Eulorn Trust. Building CBABLOTTETQWI‘. Phone “ill J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist Eye: examined, glam: lit- M. Corner Kent. a Queen. su Office Phone IBM-House i013 Joseph R. MccMiilun. LL.B. BAIIIBTEB. SOLIUITOB. Mo. ‘i5 Queen street PHONE 110 ____ i l l is.“ 8QHMEYEiTI" Palmer 8: Huslcm A. J. THSLAXVI, B.A., LL.B. Ilnrrlstrr, Etc. Blink (if Nova Sculls: Chlllnbfl‘. (‘harlutlclnwn. IHEJ. RIONEY T0 LOAN lMucPhee 8: Trainer . . lrPlIEE, 3.5.. KO. . LE1) ‘IRAINOR, BA. Barristers, Etc. 'l‘0oiiibs_ Illilc. 165 Queen 9o J. A. McGuigun T\tl'l'.\li\', liTl‘. ll.\lilii.\'l'll!i, SUIJCITUII. ( l RR BARRMIICRS SULILITOBS. M It. ll. I. ALL. . l). L. llvfllll-AON, I.'.B., 5.0. Attorneys at Law LOANS 0N CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES 15h Richmond St. (‘l-nrioltntiiivn, IEEJ Dr. A. L. Muclsauc DENTIST Dciitnl X-Rny lauliiiA iiuiLiilNG 171i (trillion Si. |'il'illt\ 201 A. Wulllien Gulldel. LL.B. BARRISTEII, SOLICITOI, IN Phillips Building lll Grafton fiireot. flluiicy to Loan Colllsclifll: Frederic A. Large. K-C- BARRISTEH. SOLICIT)‘ NOTARY Royal Ilzink of (lunmln (Ihlmbffl Churlntletmvn, IHEJ. Successor ’ Through thlii Mon l: preached w- III In Illduan A l IOI. III UHAILOTTETO\VN, l’. I. l \ Money to Loan collection: George J. Tweedy, 1L0. ll. R. ItllillE, and COMPANY CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS OFFICES: Charlottetown. llnlllnx, lllonclon, Amherst, N" _ (Hallow, Truro, Kcnlviilc. IN (JIIABLOTTETOWN: Randolph W. Alarming. CA. Ilrcnlrk M. Bean. 0A., borne ll. Ives, CA, ll‘. timni ‘Thompson, L-A- rlioau: mo . 1m Bo- 14" llElL W. HIGGINS OIIAITEIED ACCOUNTANI CUBRIE BUILDING In: l"