PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN llnrnllll Dally (Founded In IIINT) Antiorlled ll Second (‘Inn Mull. root Olflro Dopnrtmi-nt, Ollnwn. ‘Ibo IIIIIIII Guardian fluhllnhlng Co. Idltnr and Managing Ulrrcliir, .l. ll. lliirnett. o stimulate the demand of Canadians for goods, since that demand is, assured so long as the country is prosperous. His problem is to stimulate exports which alone are cap- able of keeping the country prosperous end THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN A lead Beln: Met \\'h5'fff-%%\ ' NOVEMBER 22. 1949 sex-row" —,Notes By The Way .. Alnorlnle Editor, FPIIIII ivhiim. A firm" 111 NBIWIW h" dill- l c - . d‘ ' Ir! tie d mand fol Cana ian goods high coveted an ‘my way w keep “,5 avoid this dclibcr ntc \v.i;|_ tural resourccs- I e o: m S!.'I‘holnn51~,m"' _"Tho Strongest Memory is Weaker Than DITOR AL NOTE fiotato pbggllegflif: ffilomflzvkeledgzhlle JournaL .. . r i eeps rel e s . ese ‘"° "°°*°" '"* E L- S ia:.:::l."'5;t; aft’: I" r ~ - ra o _ I; -. _ CHARLOTTETOWN’ TUESDA"NOV' 22' 1°11” Britain had only 3,300 unemployed at don't like the poms P187135 19d accessible to the l,;l.§§1,h“h°"°'"' October 1O leavet lmemt 5310“? toil)“, ‘£1153; b“? be see“ by VMWS Clfhcan Lib" ' n aus c- . ‘ ' t‘ llalda Helps To Even The Score . . . 33...? Z1’. eytldfisiitzet. and the ,"’,‘§,{§‘.,‘.“;“'§§.,.“P°"fd ‘he rid- . . Quebec City merchants have petitioned GEOR6ET¢WIU5 “he” ‘ms christms‘ T m" w“ in the Calhtldlillldxllllrtlfil‘ethibitiol Canada is frequently indebted to the . . llllm ‘rimes-Jvumel- history of thc lidllt) Jam“ l!" U . V. f _ the City COllflCll to allow all stores to open “aw Much ha‘, / u. church" nlted States Coast Guard service oi .. . V I e SIILL mitt; 0.. - . . . . . . . briday night as preferable to Saturday mm‘ wad 1h Lake Michigan nylon hots this historic site. hi b‘ “PM bnngmg 31d- to Canadlan Ships 1n d15u955 night "fiendishly efficient" are being being shown in t'i>o'l 31,1141“ a" on both coasts. In the nature of things it " ' . . _ RECREATMQIAL used that catch i2 tinH-‘s as [Tlllfly digs lhicli llllflllfii iv...- Vllll lit-Lag:- . . . fish as other nets. ’ cy consist si cred !>.ll‘l tit tli- 1, ' lxewso.Eigdeigiiilgscditlvstflgliiifymlioql: It is sobering to realize that there are CENTRE o, mrcads 5° mi." fill‘ ‘If’ lle- file hcxhl“: is "Wlrifllililaii . ' . 39 blind citizens in Charlottetown. The Yo 58mm’ a womflns mm '- d" O t c in“ b“"‘“r.‘" “mic” tabllsh a coast guard of our own it would . _ _ _ y 5 they are stronger than Order-ivy the “jwlfl ~11 <'1=i~<si<wilcx..ml““ _ . . their way without clamourilig for aid alid nets. They do not hood to be dried, Wrens ingt-iiiiitv. l‘. l\‘ p“! not be practical to have vessels within raiiiz" qflention but deserve both don't mildew. are not affected by spiral sttiii- built lll i... s1 ‘tmlqu’ . . h b . . .‘ ( . _ _ u _ u ‘ _ ii ltwm 0f any P05511316 disaster. T at eing S0 11. ls . . . marine organisms, gas; be tindo . tower of the Cathedral and make, . . . . w, .‘ 1 . . .. ,,_ pecuhé-lrlly gratlfyu-lg- that fllree Ldnadldn Ilardly conceivable The British Food gflttrdtlselxohllieayllclrab s: ti: tlileo glzlrllllljilftllillfbvlgillhlillmllilirglye“ ‘Varshlpsi the Magnlflcenti Haida and Swan‘ . . ' . that 30 per cent is waste. If things It ranks zimiinq m.» nut-t llfdllrilfl. sea should have been able to assist in thc “Immn-V has accuselI a l“e“l}"5lX_'YeaT‘°1d so on like their a tcmllmtlllllmxgvlll ‘"1 flmlllflfl" i. on... Search for Survivors of the B429 which Cftlllt’ dealer Of having 501d ll Illlle COWS have ‘a be called O o“ aw. esc cvei COITLCHCII. it-maticri to Off nets and make regulations ice. with false teeth. The Ministry claims that .|.' crashed last week off Bermuda, and that H. M. C. S. Haida should bring the 18 sur- vivors to port after they had been Qottecl ‘ by an American search plane. Surely Not A Moses! We are told from London that million- aire Lord Woolton has been chosen to be ii Moses to revive the Conservative Part y. Surely this is an inapposite comparison. The Conservative Party is not in Egypt nor can the Labour Government be considered slave drivers. Besides, the Israelites had to livc forty years in the wilderness after being lctl out of Egypt, and surely the Conservatives do not contemplate such a pilgrimage before they get back into office. llre We Becoming Tropical? Are our seasons changing to the tropi- cal? Professor G. H. T. Kimble and Pro- fessor F. K. Hare, both of McGill Univers- ity's department of geography, says the Telegraph-Journal, have , been studying meteorological reports kept through the years at various Canadian centres, in an effort .to find out what's happening to our climate. After long and exhaustive re- search, tliey’ve ‘come up with the verdict that summers are getting longer and hotter, and winters are getting milder. They say that this trend has prevailed for at least three-quarters of a century and has rc- cently been growing more marked. Of course, they qualify their findings with the statement that the available data does not go back far enough to be conclusive, since it only covers seconds on the clock of the earth's progress. But they seem to think we are at last at the tail-end of an ice age which was at its depth 1,500,000 years ago. They note that glaciers are receding and that the permanently frozen subsoil of northern Canada is slowly melting. All this is unlikely to make very much differ- ence to this generation, or the next, or the next, or the next. The change in climate won't be‘ that rapid. Mr. Rowe's Problem In a revealing speech to the Canadian Exporters Association recently, Mr. C. D. Howe, Minister of Trade and Commerce, in- dicated the Government's thinking about the prospective drop in Canada's overseas ex- ports. He feels, in brief, that an abundant domestic market in Canada will go farito absorb products formerly shipped abroad. “The maintenance of a generally high levcl of domestic prosperity," he said, “is a mat- ter of prime importance to exporters, as well as to everyone else. It has meant in many cases that a profitable domestic mar- ket has been able to fill the gap created by restrictions in our export markets." Ilc cited figures in this connection in the case of automobiles, farm implements, and office and electrical equipment. ' "It has to be realized, however," says the Winnipeg Free Press, “that the abundant domestic market which is absorbing more and more of our Canadian production is abundant mainly because our export trade is high. When Canadian farmers, lumbermen. miners, fishermen and factory workers can sell their products outside Canada they have , ‘money in their pockets to buy Canadian goods. _ “ s proved again and again throughout Canadian history a serious drop ln foreign exports instantly lmpoverlshes a large part of the Canadian population, reduces its, con- sumptlon of Canadian as well as foreign goods and thus slows down the whole na- tional economy. “The same effects must follow any large reduction In export trade now. The mos-t obvious fact of the Canadian economy is that It has been built to fit export trade, that large amounts of its products can not be sold in Canada (wheat being the most notable example) and that the domestic . ma)“; cannot possibly replace any large ' segment of the foreign market. "Mr. Howe’: problem as Minister of ‘Irate Ind in not primarily to thc front teeth of all nine liad been pulled and replaced with heifer teeth. O i O Thc chartered M. C. A. aircraft which took a full load of Islanders to and from the Royal Winter Fair should be the pre- cursor of many such flights. The farmer cannot afford to be long away from his fzirm (hiring busy seasons but he has much to gain by attending such fairs. O I O The Senate is taking notice of the farci- cal Daylight Saving Time situation in this (‘Ollllll‘_\'. Generations ago we achieved thc benefits of standard time zones but these are largely lost by the practise of individual municipalities going their own way altering the clock. "In time we hope to have a new naval reserve division in Charlottetown," De» fence Minister Claxton has told the Coni- nions. Naval minded Islanders have had that hope for some time and had further hoped that the Government had got as far as intentions. O O O In London the Archbishop of Cantor- bury, Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, delayed making a speech at the Authors’ Club because he had left his pipe at home in Lambeth Place. “I cannot make a good speech without my pipe," he explained. A hurried call to his home brought the pipe—by taxi. O The Communist Party in Britain had a registered membership of 40,161 at the end of March, 1949, the party executive report- ed recently. The report, covering the period from February, 1948, to July, 1949, said that so far 70 prospective parliamentary candidates have been selected. O O O A story with a moral. “Woodrow Wil- son," says The Public Speaker's Treasure Chest, “was once asked ho\v long he took to prepare a ten-minute speech." “Two weeks," he said. “How long for an hour speech?" “One week". “How long for a two-hour speech?" “I am ready now." o o o‘ Thanks to the many Government com- missions giving employment to highly paid counsel at the public expense, in 1947 lawyers earned the highest income, with an average of $7,822 per annum; the doctors coming next with $7,666; engineers and architects third with $7,452. Then there was a drop to $2,156 to employees in busi- ness enterprises. The continued arrival of unauthorized immigrants from Baltic countries provides u headache for immigration authorities. Their courage and determination in crossing the Atlantic in inadequate vessels augurs well for their prospects as citizens, but to permit them to do so would mean that others would be encouraged to follow, perhaps to meet with disaster. O O O Fluorescent lighting, like Minerva from the head of Jupiter, seems to have arrived fully developed into the modern world. Most of us, however, are hardly yet accustomed to this means of illumination which is seen everywhere. What is urgently required is some means of being properly introduced to this phenomenon so that we will neither ex- pect the impossible nor be imposed upon "oe- cause of ignorance. Another Jenny Geddes but with an um- brella instead of a stool. A rumpus oc- curred in the French network station of Canadian Broadcasting Corporation ln Montreal when a middle-aged woman entered the fourth-floor office of the radio station, demande to be shown a producer, an announcer and a program in production, berated the station for the guality of its program, and brought her umbrella down on the head of a young French-Canadian actor. CBC officials kept mum about de- tails of the incident apart from admitting the visit was a bit more unusual than most of their visits from the public. The lady was ushered out quietly. I TIIE LONG HILL I must have passed the crest a while ago And now I am going down- sirange to have crossed the crest and not to know,- All the morning I thought: how proud I should be To stand there straight as a queen. Wrapped in the wind and the sun It was nearly level along thebeaten track And the brambles caught in my gown- But its no use now to thlrilk of turning back. The rest of the way will be only going down. —-Sara Teadale. The’ Ovlldlesflfehurch In France (By Daniel Reps) Returning frommy holidays I was much tempted to turn aside to visit the charming church, the dainty masterpiece on the ban-ks of the Loire, which seventeen centuries have failed to destroy. the Garolingien chapel of Ger- migny dcs Pres. Tourists go flocks lo visit St. Benoit sur Loire, thc wonderful Aibbcy church of Fleury. Hut too few visitors re- member that three miles away, there stands a monument of beauty and mystetiy, whose tower reminds us of the minaret towers of Aratblc Spain and whose mosaics can well stand comparison with those of Ravenna and Byzantium. You arrive on a small empty village square. Behind the light foliage curtain of tamarlsks the church stands in its brown and pink structure with I7WO antique columns in front of it and topped by its unadol-ned tower. straightaway its impression strikes us: sn-iall though it ls, the size of a mere roadway shrine. the building radiates strength, poise, majesty. The combination and balance of the masses lu-e perfect. It ls history itself, it lll the past, which here upholds the building and makes ll. indestruct- ible. Quietly slttlng in its rustle garden this miniature chapel chal- lenges time. 1t was some time near 800 A.D. perhaps about 806-811 that Theo- dulf, an illustrious scholar, a re- fugee from Spain (whence he had fled to escape the terrors of Islam) came to the court of the Emperor Charles. who adopted hlm as one of his favorites. Hav- ing taken holy orders Theodu-lf had been invested with high dlgnltlu: "mussus domlnlcus", abbot of St. Benoit sur Lolre. blslh- . op of Orleans. a witness to Char- lemagne! will. He was a person of importance. Germlgny wu his country seat. and the church we are vlsltlng his oratory. which Odo of Metz. one of the builders of Alx-La-Cliapelle. helped to let , un- ' . O I O v Let us enter the building. The Greek cross of the orlglml de- sign was clumsily altered In 1809. but the other 8 arms remain. as well as the cupola. Almolt at onec our attention ls caught by the half euipole behind the altar. standing on rows of perfect arches. and tn which a soft light mflfulea n splendid decoration. _ _ How tit-sh. how vivid iii iiml mosaic, after having no long been l ivlth the world under me_ feet. Ne ith er at Ravenna. But the alr was dull. there was little nor a! St- Sophia in Corr I could have seen. stantino-ple. n o r at Palermo omausu | i l d O l r -t Q The Age-Old Story 3; lii ctooaaocto? , . l Lord, who lhflll BhIIIB In Thy,‘ tabernacle? Who shull divell In; Thy holy hill? He that SWTBBPPIIIt m lilo own hurt and chimgeth not..‘ covered with a coating of plaster and whitewash: a real picture of glass, u maze of delightful details. Gold. azure, sinople, argcnt; piir- ple, green are the outstandine But Zlgfcmlzlrgtlmlzglt: ‘Si: 3W2’; colours. Two great angels whose; gown bodies follow the shape of thei ' vaulting, incline towards a sort ! of mysterious casket held up byl two smaller cnerubins: it is the Ark of the Covenant. The teohnl- cal treatment of the subject is per- can anything better he found. The ‘ only place whose splendour and‘ gracefulness can be compared to this jewel is the delightful chapel in Ravenna which was the mau- soleum of Galla Placidia And while we meditate all length in the quiet and beauty o! the old shrine. we are moved to render thanks to the man who has devoted his life and energy to re- store maintain and magnify this masterpiece: the Abbe Totti. vicar 0f Gemilzny. whose zeal ls mak- ing known the little marvel ls equalled only by his archeologi- cal lcarnln-g. It is to him that w- ‘owe the possibility of viewing thr- mosaic in its admirable light. to see in the windows the exquisite ‘transparent sheets of alabasten to Ibreathe the atmosphere of fidelity, of mystery which so entirely de- llights those of us who possess the sense of the 17011113137100 of tho past. AUSSIE PENISTONERS GIVEN FREE ADVICE CANBERRA. Nov. 21 -— (C?) __. The goverment. under a new scheme. is giving freo legal advlcr- 0n DBHSIO" Droblems to Australia's 600.000 old age. invalid. unem- ployment. sickness and other pen. sinners. To do this it. ‘s using the legal service bureau. which for seven years has been giving free legal advice to all ex-servlcomen. The bureau, with branches In on big towns throughout the Domin. lon, is believed to be the only thing of its kind 1n tl-e world. Its service ls free to all war veteran-i, about 200.000 o1 whom use it each year. Lust your, for example, legal service bureau advocates ln Syd-toy made nearly 1.800 court appear- ances helping veterans ln boils. in; arguments. Old Charlottetown (Am! P. l. [J $'§O IN RICHMOND BAY ‘In the capricious Bay of Rich- mond are a great numtbov of is- lands, two of the principal of which are called. in the untpoetic verbiage of thc country, ‘Hog’ and ‘Fish’ Islands. These islands are noted for the profusion and variety of berries which gro'w on them. In the month of September they - MucPhee 8i Trainer PROFESSIONAL ifXiiE Palmer 8i Hoslum A. J. IIASLAM. its. LL11 Barrister. Em, Bank nl Nova Scolln ihamber‘ Charlottetown. IKEJ. MONEY TO LOAN Joseph R. McTIET LL.B. BARRISTER, SOLICYTOII, Ito. 75 Queen Street PHONE 77B Chas. R. McQuuid B.A. BAIIRISTER. SOLIUITOB, NOTARY, Eta, Eastern Trust iulldlng UIIARLUTTETGWI Phone “Ill H. F. MncPIIEE, J.A.. 5.0. s SOMERLEI) ‘IRAINOR. an Mun" m Ln“ ""'"°°"°"' Barristers, Etc. Toombs Bldg. 165 Queen St. A' Guude’: Bell 8i Morhieson BARRISTEIKS. SOLICITORS. the. II. R. BELL, M.L. . D. L MATIIIESON. LIL. B-O. Attorneys at Law LOANS ON CITY AND FAR]! PROPERTIES I60 Richmond Sf. Charlottetown, P.E.l BARRISTEII. SOLICITUII, Etc. Phllllpii Building lll Grafton fiireoi Money to Loan Collection; M. Albun Farmer MONEY TO LOAN B.A., LL.B. BARRISTER, SOLICITOII. In; Charlottetown, P. IL I, ' MdIheSOn s. Paulie Dr. J. c. GGIIIGIII, A. w. MATIIESON, no. B. Sg, n. n. wanna, B.A., nus DENTIST Barristers, etc. Collections - Monw to Loln 00 Great George Street Charlottetown Plcliilrd Building 151 Great George 5Q DENTAL X-RAY Phone 2007 are visited by persons from set- tlements to the distance of fif- teen or twenty miles, either for pleasure. or for a supply otf the fruits of the place; so that at times twenty or thirty boat-loads of people, chiefly young persons. may be seen on one of thcse in- sular situations; and it is said that many a curious and laughable tale might be furnished from scones and transactions connected with Dr. A. L. Muclsuuc ‘I’ s’ TAYLOR Optometrist DENTIST Eycl examintczdd. glasses fli- Dental x3" Corner Kent 8t‘ Queen.‘ It. GLORIA BUILDING Office Phone NEG-House 1013 170 Grafton St. Phone 291 J. A. McGuigan these expeditions. "However. thcsc places are not so much resorted to now, as for- Dr. W. R. Carson NOTARY, ETC. BAIIRISTER, SOLICITOII, merely; for some grave and im- ra?:‘::'g::£'.m CURB": BUILDING portant personagcs. who discount- ' ma,“ an pleasure or recreafion H’ CIIARLOTTETOWN FICCIGIIC A. Largo. ILC. — innocent though it be -— have to rm“ S‘ "m", mu 55331575“ soucnanl ventured so far as to describe these trips as irregular, because, as they say. some of the parties indulge in conduct reprehensible. But it may not be unnecessary to say, that these are calumnies ori- Goudel 8t Hazard NOTARY Royal Bank of Canada (Jhombell Charlottetown, I’..E.I. Successor ’ ' George J. Tweedy, l0. Barristers. Solicitors, Notaries, Em Canadian Bank of Com ion- Bldg. MONEY T0 LOAN GILBERT A. GAUDET. 8.11., LL.B. I ginning from a meddlesmne cam Cnnldlnn Bank of Common» Bldg. sorious disposition . . . . "From Hog Island there ‘is l we commanding prospect of the aur- _ rounding country. A century ago, AND GRAB-Imam here might be heard the war- whoop and the savage yell of the ACCOUNTANT wild Indian; where now are erect- ed numerous places- of public worship, from which ascend of- Currie llulldlig terings of grateful adoration. .___________i___._ Where then might be seen the Euharn Trust Bulldln w“ ferocious beasts of prey, prowling I GRAB“) 0W‘ and ranging. now may be seen OMPWMW" droves of lowing herds and bleat- "'95-" H" 5°! 344 fol. 1630 l'.0. Ho! (B! in-g sheep. And wlherc then the untamed abcriginail inhabitants erected their ready huts. circum- vested by the dense forest, now are seen neat and elegant build- ings, surrounded by extensive and cultivated fields, giving an idea of comfort and competence. And even ln this bay, where then the rudely constructed canoes wet-E plied by untutored and un- clvlllzed savages, now may be seen entering stately barquefl. loaded with the produce and lux- uries of foreign and distant climel. guided by intelligence. and the finger of science pointing them to their destined ports." —\I'he Islander, Sept. 2'7. 1344- Durlng the ten your period ciiunciirs ARE BURNING from 1080 on 1M1, there were 20,000 church flreo In the United Shun nnd Canada; according t° "I515" "' ' ' b! 1110'“ " Fin i‘. Alloolo- lion, International non-prom educational organlntlon devoted to n" Mflml- 0"!" proportion. luoh u nehoolu, Institutions, shores. W-"Wml". foetal-loo 0nd homo: IIQ also burning by the thou- Illldl- Dllrlnir the your 1948 the Iurenio fire. Iollcl were up- wordo o! a Bllllon Dollars In United Staten and Clllldl, beside: the tragic Ion of life. ‘ Many ouch Ioueo were duo In common IIIIIHIII and human error, Including delayed lIlflfll. c“ n. ,, , l"?! " do Iile ‘ tn ‘or at lent groltly reduce this terrific waste and also ufogunrd their Iln- lnohl Inoorolh by carrying adequate Insurance In strong reliable Companion. IIYIIIIMAII 8i 00. LIMITED I Iiiburonoo Since 187$ ' Ollrloltotiown -- lummoroldo — Montana: Agents throughout tho Province. Offlooo: H. R. DOANE and COMPANY CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS omens- m CBABLOTTETOWN 2:111? 08 oi-nrmii F‘. 4 II‘ ‘Rh Tongs‘, w‘ Phone I080 5°‘ m mm“,,,°t"'°' nwnoum w. MANNING- ncntviuo “I 0 A- ._ i . AND SURGICAL BELTS suoutozn BRA¢E5 ELASTIC HOSIERY ARCH suPPORTS , A Support . u For Every Purpose . WE CARRY A COMPLETE EXPERT FITTING saflsfoctloli Guaranteed “E iiuoiies itiiuo co. iiniiill TOCK CIIAIILOHETOWN ___________.~-~ mo" - tvlw