, , IE1 g I it ,u til at ' a i. liflletfihvarrsihirar "Lei s.-us Ma-re Insane one as net hhliaad van Ices day nutmeg as In Pruica buses. ...:uu-.u.-u r IL. Dr M Dunn 50-19-11 U0 a mu st. w.. Tturuanu guuui Dtfice. I38 AIICEIIU Towel slag. in A. Burns-II. Ptsbllalls-I an Geeual Iaasnl Hank Ilhar. Idler lunoei n.aa..ii.....uuty 3:.-rlvavd Iembar of lietleaauiea Pres. sssuxaev Audit Buruu at Otlculaueae Irsnrh omcu .. iummereae. sleausn and Album- Authorued as Second Clan Hall I! '5' hi" om” Depuussul. Ottawa gy Lame: Phsrlnuetowa, Summeraide IIII Elsewhere In PI-I Cl" 3.3 U.l ll2.tIo pee nau- snunnav. N0V- 17. I955 Then And Now l'rnnc ftiinisler St. Laurentis plat- lludinous statements on the "AlliIl0- p Ameiican rift" over the Egyptian pi-N. lime added nothing to all)" hnd)"s iindcrstaiirlitig of the situa- I tion. That it is a "sad spectacle" we all know. and feel, though apparently for diffr-tent reasoiis. What u iiilticrciicc lll t'anada's i-llii-i.il allinulc when President Tru- man ordered ITS. land and naval forces to interxcne in Korea! At that time, as Flytnrnal Affairs Minister Lester Pnais-mi informed the Cana- dian House of commons, it was im- possible for the United Nations to Initiate the action to provide mili- ltark assislaiice lti Ill? Korean RP- pnhljt-. ”lt" help were to be given," said Mr Pearson, l'the responsibility would have to be shouldered by in- dlvidual membeis of the Security Council acting within the terms of the charter, but on their own in- ltlative. In this ease the United States recognized a special respon- sibility which it discharged with admirable dispatch and decisiveness." There is no evidence that either Canada or the United Kingdom was consulted by President Truman be- fore he ordered General McArthur's forces into action. United Nations lndorsation came later. But Mr. Pearson didn't seem to think that regrettable. Quite the contrary! "I ; Ieel sure," he declaied, ”that all members of the House will applaud and support this act of high courage and firm statesmanship on the part of the government of the United States." (llansard, June 28, 19.30.) Our Canadian spokesmen couldn't spare any commendation for Brit- ain's action in Egypt, though the erisis there was surely as grave and there uas the same incapacity shown by the U.N. On both occasions it Oisuo yes no Provinces sac" PAGE 4 situation that the ganadian Fabrics Foundation was established I few. years ago. In Mr. Gaut.hier's words. "the job we've cut out is a full scale . and full time promotion of Canadian fabrics to Canadians. There's no question that such an organization is badly needed." The emphasis of this course, quite properly, is'on quality rather than on prices contpetitive with those of Japan. If by a systematic plan oi promotion, Canadian manufacturers of clothing can show that made-ln- Canada fabrics are, in fact. superior in quality to the imported articles. the fact that they may cost a bit more should not seriously interfere with their sales. There is no doubt that in the past Canadian industry in many of its branches has been slow about promoting the domestic market. Consequently, there has been far too niucli readiness to believe that an impoited article is neces- saril) better than the locally pro- duced one. 2 Mr. Churchill it is reported that Sir Winston ('hurchill is considering retiring from the llouse of Commons on Nov. 30, his Rind birthday anniversIfY- Tht' do ug h t y statesman himself has neither confirmed nor denied the report, and its reliability cannot by any nicans be taken for granted. It will be recalled that a year or two before he actually handed over the reins of government the press was regarding his retirement as immin- ent. However, his attendance in the Commons these days is not much more than a formality, and it is probable that he feels the time has come to put the finishing touches on a career which has yielded all he. has to give in service to his country. And what a service it was! For a thousand years to come the histor- ians will hold it up as I shining example of what brilliance combined with courage and patriotism can do for a nation. and, indeed, for hu- manity. I It is expcctctl that if the great man does leave the Commons this fall be will be offered a dukedom by Her Majesty the Queen. To most men this would be a coveted honor, btit it. is doubtful that it will carry much appeal to Sir Winston. His had to be triggered into action by "individual members of the Security ('nIln('il acting within the terms of the charter, but on their own in- itiative." Those were Mr. Pearson's words in M50. What. would have happened if Truman's western allies had gone back on him then or the Soviet representative had been pres- ent to veto the move in the Security Council? It would be just as "sad" a spectacle of disunity as we have today; and we wonder what the Prime Minister of Canada would have said about it. Domestic Markets Tlwre seems to be no question that the Canadian textile industry is facinfz heavy and increasing com- petition from abroad, particularly from Japan where wages and other production costs are much lower than they are in this country. This has resulted over a five year period in it gradual falling off in sales, Nmrdlns to Mr. .1. P. C. Gauthier, manager of the Canadian Fabric; Foundation, the Canadian producers' share of the home market in textiles last year amounted to only 56"; of the total, compared with more than 70'.: in l950. In that year, the best In its history, the industry sold about St billion worth of gbods and paid out 3180 million In wages to some 90,000 workers. The sales, wages and number of workers employed are much lower at the present time, , There does not appear to be much hope of the Industry's being pro- tected to any great extent by high i protective mm: against imports Iran Japan. At the present time the ' ederal Government is. engaged in tobulklupe much strorpr acceptance would signify deference to the wishes of his sovereign. but it would not add anything to his stature. After a lifetime in the ('.om- mons, a great part of it in the place of leadership and power, a seat in the l.ords would be a mild and unin- spiring anti-climax to incomparable achievement. It was as plain Mr. Churchill that he rose to the heights of fame and made the whole world his debtor. It will be as Mr. Churchill that he will be praised and honoured in the history books and 'by genera- tions yet unborn. EDITORIAL NOTES Trade Minister Howe says he finds the strength of the Canadian dollar. in relation to its American counterpart, "embarrassing." What most of us find embarrassing is the little it will buy at. today's prices. 0 I I A new corn post has hit agri- culture in the Southern States. Call- ed ”witchweed" it destroys corn and some other crops by attacking the roots. Agricultural officials are very much concerned about it. They say that. if ifnchccked, it could be a worse destroyer than the corn-borer which costs American farmers more than -W0 million annually. I O I It remains to be seen whether resolutions of the various Provincial Boards of Trade relative to the po- tato tariff qucstion will have any immediate effect on the Federal Government. Probably not. But the unanimity with which the organiza- tions see the need of some protection for the Island's potato industry should in the long run bring bene- ficial results. , I O O A Spanish philosopher has ex- preued the opinion that since thq Russians have threatened the West with volunteers for Egypt, the West, at&It to reciprocate by offering 0, smnvw: ONE OF THE WORLD'S SORROWS The Suez Crisis l J. B. Mcceacby in The Financial Post The llniird Nations doesn't and can't make laws because it has no police force. Unless the door- men at New York headquarters carry pistols or other concealed weapons. UN has yet to hire an armed man. UN has not yet paid the wages of a single private sold- ler for one hour or supplied one bullet, rifle or uniform. The only troops who ever dir I ectly served the UN were. In furl , - when ynii looked at the sources of their pay and their instructions - American soldiers British sold- lerit. Canada soldiers and other. men belonging to national armies. navies and air forces. But the units that fought in Kor- ea were so overwhelmingly Amer- lcan that Mar-Arthur could make his historic speech to Congress on the campaign without once men- tioning the UN and could say. when later examined by a Con- A S(l(Yl'SMAN'S AMERICAN LOG Halless ln Ry Wilfred Taylor of the Edinburgh Scotsman NEW YORK--New York loafed in the sun as we walked from 54th street. down Eighth Avenue. to that cathedral of mmmunlc tiunn. the New York Post. Office. At 33rd Street negrncs slouched in doorways. and occnsl9fIIllY WE passed a withered old man sitting motionless ln s shabby chair. The sunshine glean-led on the toplell towers. and the cross streets were clear-cut shady canyons. Eighth Avenue is not a fsshlnn-- able boulevard. There is e listless. down-at-beelsslr about it. Ind ill! people you meet in It are care- lessly attired. Half-way towards the Post Office we went into the Port Authority bus terminal. a vast cavern in which the bulb! themselves are as carefully con- cealed as are the trains in Grand Central. We arrived hnllcss at ldlewlld yesterday afternoon. We cluitltt our first sight of Manhattan from 10.00!) feet up. and then banked and slithered through a fog bank until we touched down on the run- way after a glorious night from Gander. . Now we are sitting in a rharm- lng mid-Manhattan apartment. Our host and his wife are up in New England for the weekend, and we have the place to ourself. It is the time to try to sort out e new first impressions. TAXI JOCKEY The first New Yorker to make a lively Impression on our mind was the Negro taxi driver who drove us along the Parkway from the airport at 70 miles an hour In his bright red cab. He more than lived up to our preconception of a New York taxi driver. With his radio blarlng away he overtook other cars on the inur- lane highway without ever stop- plng to talk. wanted to drive us to Chicago. he failed to sell us on the idea be suggested Washington. Ultimately. he oner- ed to sell us New York fer 25 doi- hrs. "For keeps," he said. offering us a Chesterfield in return for s Players. We asked the ddver who would win the election. Ihow ml erand Mr eos eeemmoreremetethaa did hllla . the deetweaqea D G the&ei-sight gresslonal committee: "My con- nection with UN was purely nom- inal." Of course it was. He was conducting an American war, ral- ified by UN and helped by auxil- iary allles. but still an American WIP. It's necessary to belabor this fact to make the point that UN is not a sovereign with the ap- paratus of sovereignty. There can be no law, according to the best authorities. without a sovereign. There can be no law without san- ctions. meaning the power of pun- labment or coercion of offenders. - UN can pass resolutions about san- ctions. It has yet to Impose sanc- tions on anybody: though in Kor- ea they were imposed by an al- liance consisttn, of about one third of UN'a membership. FOLLOWED PRECEDENT Britain and France, then. when they intervened in Egypt. acted as Manhattan BALL GAME We asked one of them why then were so many in town. He told us that the Army had bsatdi Col- umbia by 60 points to nil in a ball game. and that about 1400 West Pointers had come to town to cele- brate. We saw dozens of these erect and cheerful young men be- ing greeted by pretty girls in par- ty frocks la the foyer of the Sher- aton Hotel. That prodigious mon- ument of journalism. the Sunday edition of the "New York Times." confirmed the victory. along with the news that the Hearts had beat- en Falkirk by two goals to none. SERMON Already we have samped the Joys of a drug store. rldde on an express subway from the Central station to uni: street. and been in Church. where we heard our host. the Rev. Dr. David Reed. preach a stirring sermon to a congress- tinn, utterly different from the one with which we wursbippd last Sun- day In Mornlngaide. This afternoon. after completing our business In Eight Avenue, we took a cab to Central Park and walked along Its winding paths to the entrance opposite East 90th Street. We can understand why New Yorkers are so fond of their vast park. The sun was shining bright- ly on the surrounding sky-scrap- era and hot though it was by our standards. the skating rink was crammed with a cheerful throng of brightly clad young people ctr- cllng the frozen surface In an enm- mous same of ring-around-the-rot es. PARK DIVEISION Little grey squirrels ran across the paths xtIvPl'0llln nations l'l their own in- ti-n-st as all otim sovereign na- tions hate acted innnnuously since UK was founded lll 1945. It ls irrelevant to ask if what they dirt was "legal" since there is no law on the subject. The nearest approach to a law is a consensus against ”aggrcssivii" but nobody has ever been able to define that word acceptably. There are occas' -l clearcul examples. like Hitlerls attack on Poland tlhough even that was disguised by Hitler as a rcprisal for border incidentsr: but there are many more doubtful or borderline cases like Israel's move In Sinai. It has been suggested that Wildels defin- ltlon of vulgarity as "other peo- pleis manners." will do for ag- gression too. What has In be asked about Franco - British intervention is not whether it was legal but wha- ther is was wise To go further back than that. let us ask: Why did it seem wise to Eden and Mol- let? An answer requires a capsule history of the Middle East since about 1948 when Israel came in- to being. CREATED BY CONOUEST , Israel was created by invasion- and conquest against the will of the inhabitants of Palestine. Its establisliment was a grievous in- jury to the Arabs who regarded Palestine as their homeland and to their Arab neighbors. It would not have been necessary if the spacious countries. especially the U.S. had been willing to receive the persecuted Jews of Europe. as refugees; but they were not. Against all the best advice ob- tainable. but under extremely heavy American and Zionlst pres- sure, the UN assembly by malar- ity vote in 1947 decided that Pales- tine should be partitioned and that one of the halves should be a Jew- lsb state. But it was not the UN's will that prevailed. First, UN never had the ghost of a plan for enforcing its decision. UN wanted the Arab and Jcwis Palestine: to be feder- ated In an economic union; this has not been done. UN said that s neu- trel. dlsarmed Juusalcm should be put under a UN trustceshlp: instead Jerusalem is the armed capital of Israel. UN drew boun- daries; but its line is not the line on current political maps. It was the will of the Jews that prevailed - and by military force. EGYPTS AMBITION As soon as Israel was born. the Arab states moved to destroy it. They failed lgnomlnously. They should have accepted the conse- quences of defeat. After all. they have lived for centuries with a Jewish minority in their midst. They could live with a Jewish state. They decided that they did not want in Mainspring of the Cairo revolution of 153 that put Nasser in power was the ardent desire of Egyptian military men to build armed forces that could challenge Israel to a second round and this time will. Israel has lived under Ihll threat ever since the 194! ll'lI'IIl- : threat too. with normal growth of population Israel will have expand to uve. lsreell leader iiiiia. trig? 3 ii finite Edit! . ggs. a it5,' t i; Eff Ilfsf . -.5 ' farm 5 ""'-......--."'-"'..'..:9'""' louedperiodls ”H"”;: a exam glow unexpected things on ;:uudoa'tiabele mineral oil; youslmply nvellowlt. Ieyeu weuldberdlyeapeettefindtllis eillnthelungs.YettI3:ux&h;t somatuaesaappaaaw r asrtousruults. ' .AB(?neod'I:0DlOtl AT etlkto . the beckaftbetbmlaltmlutlcteoilis trachea. Greduell . this all may eceusn. e air spaces of the and cause a condition which -0 call llpold pneumonia. Mineral oil is not absorbed by the body. but remains as a foreign substance in the lungs. - ' Generally. scar tissue begins forming around the oil. weaken. lag the lung tissue and making it infection Since mineral all is a bland sub. Itlnce. it doesn't cause coughing. You might u even be aware of ts presence the lungs. Eden X-ray studies are likely to be con- fusing. , About the only sure way to en. agnose the trouble accurately is by an operatloa- By cutting away the affected lunl tissue doctors can usually Provide relief. But as in most other ailments, Prevention is much easier than cure. its best to avoid tprolonged use of mineral oil. QUESTION AND ANSWER G.H: I have been giving cod liver oil to my children. Recently. .....am.iggggg. OUR YESTERDAYS from The Guardian Files TWENTY-FVE YEAM Aao ' (November 17. um) Mr. Percy B. Jenkln of the Her- lld and Associated Publlcatlo in Melbourne, Australia. stated that conditions were not as bad in Aus- tralia as they were painted by the American Press. Mr. Jenkins arrived in Canada about three weeks ago and intends to write a sgecial series of articles on Can- a a. The S. 3. Ida. Captain Johann- sen. docked at the Railway Wharf yesterday afternoon from Maine. U.S.A. She is loading a cargo of some 30.tXl0 sacks of potatoes for the Potato Growers Association. On her way to New Jersey she will call gt Georgetown to com- plete her cargo. TEN YEARS AGO (November 17. 1043) The death occurred at the P.E. f. Hospital Saturday night of Dr. Houston. well-known Char- lottetown physician. He was 71 years of age. The late Dr. Hous- ton was born at New Glasgow and received his education at Prince of Wales College. He then enter- ed McGlll University as s medl- csl student and graduated from that institution in INC. A lianfzer at Mount Pleasant is being made available for potato storage and according to Mr. sen- fard Philips. ()'Loisry. it should be lluaaible to commence making use of it early next week. Mr. Philip! said that it would hold between 75 and 100 csrloads of tstoea and would be of lnestlmabe bene- fit to the farmers in the vicinity. been going on for eight years. What could the responsible aa- tlons have done? To begin with. "193! could have supplied a force to patrol the Arab-Israeli borders. ldon't speak from hind-sight be- cause I wrote. in June. ms. in the Canadian International Journ- al: "The establishment of Israel. as was at all times certain. bed to be a military undertaking. Its sur- vival will require guarantees by Ilmnser Powers . . . The alterna- tives for the rest of the world en la) tottlns the Jews and Arabs light to a knockout or (b) creat- I i-crmeaent guardianship for newest addition to the inter- national family." Instead of doing this. the West- tern powers made a pane of sup- vlns the two sides I have been lafonned that cod liver oil causes an enlargement of the liver and is injurious to eee's health. Is this true? Answer: Cod liver oil, la us nor- mal dosage. is not at all den- and is extremely helpful in supplying the vitamins neces- sary to children and in prevent- lu disease. The information you beve is false. ?j I v t. ,It- si-siu has altered” A in am. The value carried mail: and one didn't have to squirm am Wild!-Clllnf Albuten Dtdlfl b ID Illlel an 7&3" Wofk cu Ina complain when they ask for an of fine vial! Instead of a home call We can all h lp our doctors by doing everything possible to em Itbealr load.-St. Catharine: Stand FISI-IERMiEN'S AREA MEETINGS Sturgeon, Monday. Nov. 19--8 p.m. Morell. Tuesday. Nov. 20 Flat River, Wednesday. Nov. 21 North Rustico, Thursday, Nov. 22 Comm Ban, Friday, Nov. 23 Guest speaker Reid Sangster, New I-Iarbor,lN.S. Films-Everybody welcome. Sect. P.E.I. Fisherman's Association. 0. 1". RICHARDS, Subscription Representative- MAGAZINES "Reduccd prices now available on all Christmas Gift Magazine Subscriptions through your local para- plegic magazine subscription representative. ' A wonderful gift at big savings for both new and fgngwgl gub. sci-iptions at no extra charge to you. Your Paraplegic Mlgnine MARJORIE E. GILL. L! Ambrose st.. Charlottetown. P. E. I. 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