T H E D I A N! tion of the problem to offer, but finds that i three things in particular defeat-and will Plmllxtled every weekday mo nin; ll I36 Pr!!! 5! I. on ' O i WWW PJLL. by mrmmm com.:; um” -- continue to defeat present civil 'CoverI Prlnco Edword llllud Lilo tho Don" Editor and Manager. Inn A Burnofl. Auoclnto Editor. Fran: Walker Brunch offireI It Summeraide. Montague Ina Atbertun, Auuio; lzed as Second Clou Mail by the Post Office Depnrtmenl. ; ou.w.. will start falling upon him. I3! Carrier: Charlottetown, Summerliuo ll5.0o per anoum cue Irhero In P. E. I 09.00. other Provmcu Ind U. S. A. ltzon per Innum. "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest Ink.” : fence plans. TUESDAY, oor. ill, 1954 A Sober Warning In.a recent thought-provoking address 01'It.V- to an American Legion Convention, His Eminence Cardinal Spellnian warned that there is nothing at the moment to indicaiz: that the l'nitcd States will retain for ever its picsciit dominant, position in world at- fairs. In commenting on Soviet Russia's long-term plans for world conquest-so far there is nothing to prove that they have been tli)'zlflf'IOl1Pd-I10 quoted a prophecy made by Lenin early in the Revolution: "First, we will take Eastern Europe; then the masses of Asia, then we will encircle; the L'nited States of America which will be the last bastion of Capitalism. We will not have to attack it; it will fall like an ovcrripc fruit in our hands." It is evident tiiat the first part of the plan has been put into effect and that the second phase is well under way. As Soc the third part of the sclicine Cardinal Spellman had this to say: ltlihere are today signs in American life of an alarming deterioration in the things of the spirit. When we flunk of lioiv home life has disintegrated, how par- ental responsibility is being shamelessly' shirked, how shockingly juvenile delin- qucncy has increased with all of the dread- ful social consequences, we can look into our hearts and ask ourselves if the fruit of hard American planting and the sacri-3 fice that went into so much toil have not already become overripe and ready for plucking by an enemy who is ivilling to make liiiiitless efforts and use dastardly methods to gain his goal.” This is a sober warning, indeed, and it miglit well be taken to heart by all the peoples of the free nations. Preponder- ance in military strength is, of course. a. useful weapon in the hands of free men. The free nations must do everything in their power to possess it and to retain it as long as the totalitarian threat to human freedom exists. But it will not, of itself, ensure the.continuance of a free and un- lettered civilization anywhere in the world. The disintegrating influences which the Cardinal mentioned, and others like them. will not and cannot be arrested as long as things of the spirit are thought of as being secondary in importance to material pro- gress. Confidence in a strong economi:' system and in well tried and proven politi- cal institutions is a worth-while asset. It can. moreover, exercise I good moral in- fluencn; but it is I poor siihstitiite for vigorous and intelligent attack on the many evils which afflict society at this time. everybody within an even larger area. tically that there is nothing they can do, that half-measures are futile. Obviously there is need for leadership in the matter, and it is far too important to shelve responsibility for this leadership upon municipalities or even provincial gov- ernments. . Budworm War Continues . New Brunswick's spruce budworm bat- tle will he fought again next year. An- other one million acres of infested timber- land are expected to receive the aerial spraying treatment, which will boost the cumulative four-year total to some 4.2 mil- lion acres. A feature of the 1955 operation will be lower cost, expected to run less than 351 per acre. This compares with over :51 for the initial 1952 effort. Originally, the budworm-i fested New Brunswick forests were dousexd with DDT solution at the rate of one gallon per acre. But officials subsequently decided it was not necessary to aim at a complete 1007.; : ”kill,” particularly since the sprayed lands would probably be reinfested to some ex- tent from adjoinirrE' areas. Thus they cut the dose to half a gallon per acre, slashing costs substantially. The job next year will .be financed, as usually, by Forest Protec- tion Ltd. and the Federal Government. Forest Protection is the co-operative com- pany formcd by four pulp and paper pro- ducts and the New Brunswick Govern- ment. EDITORIAL NOTES One hundred and twenty-six judges will officiate this year at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto. The Fair is ex- pccterl to attract recoi'd-breaking exhibit.-', including 1,300 horses, 2,800 cattle, 700 swine, 1,000 sheep, 7,500 poultry and pet stock, and large displays of grain, vege- tables. dairy products, fruits and flowers. 0 O I . The Hebrides off the west coast of Scot- land supply seaweed producing salts and dcrivatives-alginatcs-tliat go into soups land sauces, toothpastes and lotions, absor- bent medical dressings, and anti-burn oint- ments. Experiments are under way to use metallic alginales in commercially useful flanieproof fabrics. For ages Hebrides croft- crs spread seaweed for fertilizer, says the National Gcorgraphic Society. 0 O 0 Butler stocks Increase According to a statement issued by the Dairy Farmers of Canada. stocks of "reamnrv lwiilter on June I totalled 32,285. ltltl puimris as compared with .'iT,GOT,00() pounds a year earlier. in a recent sub- mission to the Minister of Agriculture, Mr.,' liardincr. they pointed out that "The iii- rrcnsc in butter stocks built, since May. 10.31 (32 million pounds) represents 3.1. per ccnt of the total production during tli: lhrcc-,x'car period," and that "since 1949- iintil Niarch 1, 1954, the whole of the cost to the (Tiiiadizin taxpayer has been fill.- lti2,0l)tl. which represents an expenditure if 0lll.V :1 fraction of a cent per pound per Cesare Lpnihroso. Italian criminologist this date 1909. His name is generally as.- sociated with theories relative to the re- sponsibility or irresponsibility of criminals, and with theories as to the physical and psychical cliaractcristics which go to form the criminal type. His views have by no means found general favour but he stim- vapimn , p , iilatcd study of the whole subject of crim- The Oi"-1Flllll.F-lllflll feels that a continua- ma; ,.G,sp0nsn,”m,' firm of the BR-rciit floor price of butter 1171- a o . til at least May. I036. is advisable. prim- nrily because ta) economic stability in the dairy industry rcquirc. a moderate an- nual cxpciirlitiirc to meet the needs of an iritrcasiiig population, (bl because the daily farmer must plan his pi'ndLicti0n well in ndvaiice if he is to secure maximum ef- ficiency: and (c) hccaiise. xi reasonable sup- port price under butter lends n n1eaSul'i? of strength to the marlict for all dairy products. The new Maritime Hospital Service As- sociation headquarters building at Moncton was officially opened recently. Speakers called it an expression of confidence by residents of the Atlantic Provinces in thi: principle of voluntary prepaid hospital and surgical-medical care. The ceremony also commemorated the 25th anniversary of the Blue Cross movement on the North Ameri- can continent, the 10th anniversary of its inception in the Atlantic Provinces and the sixth anniversary of Blue Shield. clvll Defense Lagging in Ontario the other day, Air Vic;--, Marshal T. I... Lawrence resigned as t"iVii defense co-orrlinator for 'l'oroiito and Yolk county, and in doing so made the follow- ing statement: "There is only one agency The work of compiling and editing the 6,000 pages of records of colonial and im- poi-ialconfcrcnces has been done at Ottawa by Dr. Maurice Ollivier, law clerk of the House of Commons. The volumes are fill- Which 93" 5"-it 3" 0VC'T-a” Policy and or- ed mostly with verbatim reporting of dis- rzanization Plath That 38 FCIIOFFII Civil 130- cussions held by statesmen from all over ("'09- 1" my opinion this is not beingithe British Empire. Dr. 0llivier's records, taken care of. Municipalities. large anrliwhlch stop at 1937, indicate that the first 5m3”- ""9 mt-”1i3”.V CIl31'39d With PT0dUClllf.' Colonial ronlerenre was IIEit'I in 1887, at "MIT "W" Plans and Organization. So long the time of Queen Victoria's Silver Jubilee. as these conditions exist, we will not have The second, in 1394, met in Ottawa, By the standardized and efficient civil defence 1909, the term "imperial conference" was we need and could havc." living Ih'.r'fI, to recnynizc the enir-rgencc of The -Ottawa Jouriizil sister: that Air at-.lf gnu-riiiiiv, iiiitions. 'I'lie term today is Vice-Marshal I.awrence's complaint is slim- l ”Cominonw.-al'.h conference," in recognition ed in other communities. It has no solu-lof independence. defense lefforts: (1) A complete public apathy; the -.average man just can't bring himself to be- Llieve that some day Russian atom bombs (2) Municipal- ities, hard pressed for a score of needs - schools, houses, drainage, paved streets- , are without money to finance adequate de- (3) Most people believe, per- ihaps rightly, that civil defence is an inte- gral part of national defence, is therefore the sole responsibility of the Federal auth- Finally, people have been told, on the highest authority, that there is little or no defence against the hydrogen bomb, that it would not only wreak devastation of all buildings within a wide area but poison Given this awful prospect. and not told of any practical solution or effective measure of safety, the public has concluded fatalis- per acre for the 1954 job, and some 553.25 and professor of forensic medicine, died- W.iI'h'iiS-yi”n'pathy."Fior . .. ...a ........-... Those Concerne PUBLIC FORUM I'M: oolninn ll opol Io III linen- Ilon by iiorrupondontn of quutlonu of lntnrut. Tho Gurdfon (on not Ieounrtly ondoru an opinion of eorruponazntn. POTATO BOARD'S ORIGIN Sir, - In the complexity of con- fusion brought about. by the advent of I Potato Marketing Board, there is none more baffling than that of its ancestry and circumstance of origin. The Premier in a recent pronouncement on behalf of the government refused to assume any responsibility beyiond providing the facilities under which it. was be- gotten. The Federation of Agricul- ture is on record as repudlatliig relationship, or having had any- thing to do with sirelng the waif; in fact. it. goes so far as to defin- itely assert, in its "Among the Farmers" issue Friday the 15th, addressed specifically to the ment- ally deiise, that the Provincial Government is the actual progen- itor. The Provincial Marketinz Board is standing aloof in all in- nocence, refusing to admit. having had any knowledge or association with this clandestine affair other than being present in the capacity lot wet nurse upon its arrival. Is there any wonder then that there is confusion among potato growers and dealers as to origin and own- ership? 'ii: is now three to four ye: is of age and already has become so fasscrtivc, ill-tenipered and domin- ,eering. demanding complete exclu- sivencss in her chosen playground. NOTES BY I' Some people seem to think Con- ada could sell lots of grain by simply cutting the price. It doesn't occur to them that other countries would immediately do likewise and then a fire sale would commence -Farmer's Advocate. An American Johnny "crooner" who weeps and moans rather than sings, will receive nearly 330,000 for seven days work in Australia. So it is reported from Melbourne. This tops Iny figure ever paid I foreign artist in Australia-in Aus- tralia the country that gave to the world the great soprano Nellie Melba. It seems symptomatic of something or other of these times of the views to which it. is op- posed. While I am 8 farmer. I am not in the potato -bustiies at. present, and the outcome of the November 10th plebiscite will be I niatter of little personal concern. However, I am interested in fair play, and I would respectfully ask you. Str..t0 ignore Mr. Sinimons' suggestion and continue to publish the letters of all who wish to express their views and ideas on this contentious issue, whether the writers consider it. prudent to have their names published or not. Such free dis- cussion will do A fine job of help- ing our potato growers decide how. they should vote on November 10th. I am, Sir. etc.. DOUGLAS MacFARI..ANE Bedeque. P-E-L lthat she has become the outstand- lirig problem child of the govern- imeiit. The Executive Council is 'now preparing adoption papers (that will be presented, for accep- tance or refusal, to the potato growers on November 10th. The Import. of the questions pro- liposed for the "X" mark appears to be as follows: . Do you wish to have me about? and - 2. Will you let me run the show my own way single handedly? An important question has been omitted with regard to "Pooling" of sales, which should be included as No. 3. , This plebiscite of November 10th ,ls important as it undoubtedly will be conclusive, and farmers should do some profound thinking. pro land can. as the conclusions ar- rived at and recorded may be for 5 long time. In the meantime. and amid all the confusion, it. would be interesting: to know the parent- lzige of this little ”Edna" that has caused such it commotion. j I am, Sir, etc.. l J. A. GILLIES l 4 I l , Cliarlottctown. l I FORUM CONTRIBUTIONS i Sir.-There is some merit in the suggestion made by Mr. Leslie fllmmons, President of the Potato and Turnip Dealei-5' Association, in the Public Forum of October 15th. that your paper should insist that all contributions to the Forum concerning the present. po- tato marketing cont.i'ovei-sy be pub- llsheu only over the ..,..at.ure of the author. The reading public at- wnys prefer to see such letter: signed, and such a measure would prevent people who are concerned over the lune from expressing supposedly disinterested views. However. there's it little more to it than that. Free speech Ind free- dom of expression are supposed to be Iccompliilhed realities. but. so far we've fallen just. a little short of this worthy objective. Many farmers find themselves beholden to dealers with whom they dig- agree over the potato luue and. in t.hlI do-or-die struggle, the only way they feel they cm safely ex- press their views is over In I!- sumed name. This was the reason A farmer who had a letter on the matter In the Publl- Forum last spring. gave for withholding :.'.I name. In the present controversy. the aide favoring ii compulsory, on.--desk Ielllrig agency has Id- vanced I higher proportion of its but Ii-gumontu in letters using Iuumed nImu than hII the other. I fear that. while Mr. alm- nimis' siirozcstlcn tools good on the surfnce. it is ncliiallv an attempt bv the Potato and Turnip Dealerr Public ' THE TRUTH ABOUT MAN Sir,-It. has been said that man face: two grave dangers. one is that he treats himself as an ani- mal whose horizon is bounded by this world, and whose motto is "Eat. drink and be merry for to- morrow you will die and that will be the end of you". That. is the Communist idea and that. is why they have given up the Christian religion. They say "It is BUD?” fluous. It. serves no good purpose." and in fact. are there not. mom who take the same view? They be- lieve in what they can see and handle. dollars. crops and goods. They believe in religion so long as it can be turned to good account. Please do not. make it. too practical they say. Do not apply it in detail.” For example. in politics dont be too particular. Give people what they wont to hear. You may know that is not. what. they ought to near, but. what they ought. to hear won't. get. votes. Ind that is what they are after. In sport and in gambling allow some latitude, per- haps I good deal in some cases. especially when it. to for a good cause. If the minister wishes to speak about judgment. and the fut- life life tell him he had better keep that. for funerals. Do not bring those ideas into every-day life. Man is thus in grave danger of treating hliriself as I more ani- mal, whose life is bounded by this world. The other danger is that man considers himself his own god. That he can find in himself all that he has been taught to believe man, he claims.-is the only well- made man. In thin system there is no need of God. Man can get along very well on his own resources for they are Ill wrapped up within him. These ideas do not IIt.lIfy the hungry human soul. Jesus has giv- en man I new Ilgnlflconce, greater than all material things. "What," he Iold, "Shall I man give in ex- change for his soul" That. tic claimed is man's essential part. To Jesus so significant is mm that he gave his life to enable him to rise to what: God wants him to bo. Nothing in all the world can com- pare to mun in value. How then can Iny one imagine that mIn'I highest good oonolxto In material pooaoulo , or -t.hIt. ne can Ittoln his highest. good Ipart from God? , The whole trend of modern fits- tory llluuntea Ind omphulzs mIn'I Ilgnlfleonce. All his revo- lutions Ind Itruulu Ira for i-ecoznltlon no I pei-Ion of worth. Man in: becunin thuo lut yours to Ippreclolo hII own worth. Wu ll. Jesiu Who put. t.hII lntohlt head? he can find in God. The self-made . THE WAY thIt so many people one: for gloom make it possible to pay so much money to a man coming like a little cloud that cries and cries Maybe it hasn't. rained enough in Australia, but the tears that on! sheds won't grow any grass to feed the sheep. -Sydney Post Record. A one-year experiment It the Cold Spring Iiistltute, fifty miles north of New York on the Hudson River, has quietly mattered many notions about the capacity of old- or people to learn. accept new ideas, change and grow intellectually.- Salnt. John Telegraph-Journal. When : favor is naked there may be an lncllnatii-in to grant it at once. at, is a grave error. For 'if a favor is granted immediately it will appear easy to get. The risk- ing of more favors will be encour- aged. The favor will not be ap- preciated. -Gait Reporter. There is no monotony Ibout. Chu- nda'5 climate and this may be why each successive season brings its own feelings of satisfaction. What. we want. to point out. today is that. we are entering what can be the most. productive period of the year. It is worth I little planning to take full advantage of the situa- tion. -Port Colburne Tribune. There Is I legend that people who live together for many years tend to become similar in Ippear- once. And if people. why not peo- ple and their dogs? in humorist asked. But until the town of Wal- lascy, England, broke into the world news the other day, no one so far as we know had ever set up either of these developments as necessarily desirable goals. At. Walluey, however, dog owners have been invited to enter I con- test. in which the winner will be the owner who looks most. like his dog, or the dog who looks most. like his ovmer. or maybe both.- Chrtstian science Monitor. we .3” ?oe6' Gaza" Glittering. silent, needles of the snow Sew the smooth winter cover foi- .. the land: The bright stool moon, where ing- zng fencepostl so Trims linen field with cross-stitch band. Glintlng rains print deeply, as the winter wanes , Designs from which Ieoimtreos sun will soon evolve Embroidery of wheat. Vines, 'i-ound fresh-shone pnnea, Stitch A spring sampler as the days revolve. shadow The woman see: from the window, Is she seams, Fields worked with gold thread I: the season bends; Trees feIt.hei-stitched with bronte She sewn. and dreams Of the new me, new Joy, to com: Io Iutumn ends. Her nngei-I dance ,the needle Ilnga belo w On the little gown, wlntei-'I snow. -Anno Marriott in country Guide. i REFRIGERATION Eouohold. lilo oIi WIIIII-Uri. wllli-II ooolou. (Ila ouoI,,oIo. WI Iorvloo Ind npolt III! Inolo of electrical ro- frlgoi-Iclon equipment. ' VIIRIIIG CONTRACTORS Motown. Wubon Ind Ap :lIlI.IIooIg- we repair than count up for In: wll-Ia: Job from liutollliin I nuts to wiring your homo. ' storey Electric white :5 mix: Perlmpii It won. - I Iin, sir. ct:-.. ' W. I. GRIIN Msoclztlon to cizk' the Publlq Forum curry I lml..el' proportion Et.Inl':y bridge mun: ma t in - oi-man Strool (age 4 The Guardian 1 The Passing Scone . 3: Observe! OCUIDENTAL-ORIENTAL DIFFERENCES Now flint the time liI.I come when the Boot and Wu: must. meet face to face Ind peIceful oo- exlstence seem: to be the only alternative to global war which might, Ind probably would, engulf both civilization: in dIi-kneu for: uiouund years-even if I roinnuit in ooch managed to mrvlve. which is by no meInI certain-on im- portant question II: How and in what ways do Occidentala. and Oriental; differ from one another? Are those differences minor in character, Incl therefore capable of being resolved, or are they funda- mental, and therefore destined to remain, regardless of what dip- lomats on both sides may or may not do in their attempts to bring about some measure of mut- ual goodwill? Lately I have been reading a thesis on this genei-II subject; it was written just fifty years ago by a Japanese scholar by the name of lyenagii, who at. the time was lecturing on International Affairs at the Urilvei-Ilty of Chicago. 13:- cause I found it intensely intox- estlng and timely. despite the cat. changes that hove taken p cc meanwhile in the Asian situation, I should like this week to share some of its contents with readers of this column. 0 O I Dr. Iyenau stnrta out by saying. "It. is an every day Insertion among Western people: that everything Oriental is topsy-turvy: that they read backward, write backward. speak backward, Ind that this is only the 'obc of their cont.rarlet.y'; that. they place I. horse in the stable with his head where his tail ought; to be: that they use whito instead of black as a symboll of mourning, carrying babies on their back: instead of in their Irma: thot their men-the Chin- ese, that lo-wear sklru Ind their women trousers." (All of which is plain craziness to Westerners.) Dr. Iyenags then goes on to speak of differences in temperament. "The temperament of the western- er ls nervous, whereas that of the Easterner is phlegmntlc. The habit of the former is active (always in a. hurry) that of the latter is slow (always leisurely). Eastei-ners are thrifty; Westerners (excluding me Scotch) Ire wiuteful, even ex- trnvsgant. The mlnnora of west- emera are blunt and course: their expreaslons direct and terse. The Easterners are polite in their manners. genial in their inter- course, and round-about in their speech." (It will be kept in mind that these lines were written long be- fore Communism had become a prominent political doctrine: the Asiatic: themselves probably had not. heard much about it. Russia was being held in contempt. pi-lnclpnlly becnuiio of her recent defeat and humiliation in she war with Japan.) 0 I 0 Even more pi-oiiounced. in Dr. lyena.ga'I opinion, were the differ- ences in mental Ittltude. "The Western mind", he wrote, "is secu- lar and empiric, whereas the East- ci-ii mind is spiritual and religious. This must. ultimately have some relation to the grand fact. that every creed accepted by the great races of mankind has had its origin in Asia. The white man in- vented the steam engine. but no religion which has endured. "The truth is. the Western is essentially secular. that is, lntert on securing the objects he can see; and the Asiatic ementlolly .rellg- lous, that is. intent. on obedience to powers which he cannot. see but can imagine." He then proceeds to bci-ate the West. for "not practising whatthey prooch," in this manner: "Europe. having agcepted with hearty confid- ence the voices of Peter and Paul about the meaning of what. I-i'IPIIi nlvlne Master said. regards all other systems of religious thought with contemptuous distaste and sums them up in its heart. as 'heathen rubbloh'. But. even to Christianity itself Europe has not paid due respect; or. in other words, has not. been loyal to its teachings. For Europe can hardly be said to have sat. down for any length of time to lead the Ipfi-ltunl llfo en- joined by the religion it professes. In fact. Ill the glories and Achievements of the West lie in IL! discovery and subjugation: to man's service of nature's laws Incl forces. in the invention of mechanical arts. in the attainment of all that contributes to material comfort, and In the cultivation of secular literature Ind art. '1?! laying I-M8. I do not blind myself to centuries of theological disputes in the West, to mount- Ilns of sacred literature. and to a host of theologians Ind saints Eur- 0De Ind America have produced. influence of Chrlatianity upon the Woof. Indeed. the most cnnobling, the most humane phagd of modem civilization to the gift of Christ- lanlty. Were the Western civilisa- tion stripped of the high ethical ldeu taught. by the Founder of ohrlatlnnlty, how buren, how vul- KIl'., how moi-cllou would the com- mercliil chi-fulonlty bel And yet, with due respect to the Wutem civilization lt. la certain t.hIt.whllo You proton Ohrlstlonlty. youri civ- llfutlon ll not Ind never ha been Ictunlly Chi-tst.lIn." O O I Euterneii. on the other hmd. YWWWHS 9-0 Dr. iyemgn. pract- AIIO 00. Since Offloooi Nor do I try to belittle the mighty , ice their religion It Ill times. "The Asiatic peoples," he wrote. "with a few exceptions have been reuglous through. and through. The history of India is the history of one ion,- effort to solve the problem of how; to emit in the conduct. of life to the Ichlnu of its religion The Moaloim stick to their tenets Ind creeds with tenacity. Even the Chinese, the most practical of all Aslatlcs, have no faithfully followed the teachings of their Master, Coii- fucius, that Chinese civilization can with perfect Justice be declar- ed to be crystallised Confucianism. All for Japan. her history il really the history of her religion." All this. or a great. part of it, 5 very hard for us to believe; bill. that is how the religiosity of Asia. seemed to a Japanese Icbolor fifty years ago. Old Charlottetown In! P. I. X. OSCAR WILDE'S VISIT "The Apostle of the Beautiful has been among-us preaching in the Market Hall tat 50 cents DC! head) the need of a greater low- of the artistic in the decoration of our homes. He was greeted by a mic id audience. an Iudlencu that se dom extends the same on couragcment to local efforts which endeavour to elevate the taste of the community. Many present felt disappointed at. the lectui-or's al- most monotonous manner of de- livery; others. who can enjoy the mu s l c, softness, strength and beauty of the English language, will rcniembcr with pleasure Iilr chastcness and melody of the ICC turer'I effort . . . . ”On appearing before his nudi- ence Mi-. Wilde was received with applause. He apologized for not be- ing in evening dress. He had just arrived by the boat, and ought it. well to begin his lecture his travelling costume, I light suit with knee bi-eechea, looking both graceful and comfortable. In tones conversational and with an occas ional 'posc,' he proceeded to give his ideas of Decorative Art. He said we could get along very well without philosophy if we surround- ed ourselves with beautiful things. . . . "Coming last evening wh e I? night had thrown her sabie man tie over our aesthetic town, Oscai saw little of our architectural beauty . . . We saw him mIke his appearance from the back stair case of the hall; we saw hil in tense look of pro-Raphaelistic won der as be viewed the walls. gazed on the beauty of the platform, Ind sniffed the redolent smell of stall butter, eggs and cabbage. tom that platform. It was too! tool Whatever will Oscar say about us when he is away? Surely nothing showed so much the need of 'dec- orative art' as the building In which he held forth. We saw I cloud gather on his face II he feasted on thelview . . . "Oscar": hair needed the barber's art. His face was peculiarly fem mine at times. but it was heavy and fleshy. Those who heard the l e ii d e r of England's aesthetic party will find consolation in the thought that they may be able to talk about it in their old age." -The Examiner, Oct. 12, 1882 The Age Old Story I ,wIII stand upon my wntcli imd not me upon the tower, Inc will watch to Ice what: he will say unto me, Ind what I Ihnll Inuwer when I Im reprovod. MANY PATIENTS VANCOUVER (CP) - Essondale mental hospital near here has a population exceeding that of lome cities. The annual report Ihowed 10,700 patients. exceeding the pop- ulation: of Penticton. Prince Rup- ert. Kelowna and Kamlonps. Ct.IDMORE'S DRY CLEANERS I20 Kent 50. Phone 492': SHIRTS munnannn mo PERFECTION RITE - WAY CLEANERS .DIIl 1387 HYNDMAN INSURANCE CIIAIIJOTTITOWN - UIIMEBBIDI - IIONTAGUK LIMITED mt.