T H E G U A R D I A N lscems lamentable. The United States has allocated 220 pounds of fissionable mater- ial for use by other countries for experi- mental purposes. Britain has allocated 44 ,pounds. These contributions will accom- '5"',if;,c','.",',"1f,;2'.lff"..-i2':,,dw':i',3','i'f iplish something, but they will not save the Branch offices ll summrnius. Mnntsgno sun Altcrlofl Author ,'world from destruction lvhat we have to ized In Second Class Mull by the Poet Ofllcu Department. . , I . on-wt count on to do that is an enlightened spirit '.?.f...?'.a'.'.l"';-i Ci"1"":3i&.w"'uf:L')m5'.mZ.:?':il..."b "s""'x"' ;l3'.T.. of self-preservation in all countries. in-; Published every week-du uiurnin: It I30 Prince Intel. Unsi- lotteiown. P P: l.. by rm Thomson Company Limited. 'l.'nsen Prlueu Edward Island Lil: nu Don" M" p p”" ""'"""p ' he um eluding those behind the Iron Curtain." , B ' ' 3,, JJ3-ea ' ' l The attempt is well worth making for,i there is indeed - -.- ias The Times concludes, T""iSDf”' Nm' 25- is” hardly any middle ground. ”The choice is, Aiiplan worth Trying not between being comparatively well offl , , , and coniparatlvely badly off; the choice is A bmgilt iiwfie of news in the elcmenbibctweon hell and something that might in Zry sdgcahcoii held Cgmis hi10'ndt:eiictili10Ol the end faintly resemble heaven on earth." oar in a gary. las o ' problem which is shared by educators and school-officials evci"whcre: how to keep unusually bright pugils froln being kept Tile largest element in niaintainilig na-; back by slower members of the same ciass.'li0h3i DF0di-iCii0h is Cohsumef spending ahdi The plan is to start with the first gradeii has not only been maintained but hasj and continue throughcuit the entire school Fiseil Y0 3 D0si-Wa1'4PE3il- This is Creditedl period. This, briefly, is how it will work: h.'r' the President of the Imperial Bank Oil Feachcrs will watch for children who show Canada With 3V9i'iihEZ the threat Of Serious: 'Spending Maintained l signs of extraordinary ability. The select-ldcpression which hung over North America ed pupils will then be given certain pre-fl year 830- scrihed tcsli. lintl physical CXt"illiii"iallL)HS;i The great Po5i'W3T oxpahsioh ih this lllzsc ltiiit-r lii'l.' for the purpose of tisccr- Colihlio lids "(it Yet iillh its COUPSE. ill til? mining whether their physical strength islopihion of M13 i-- 5- Mackersyr and the abimvhifears that-an American recession would roninicnsuratc witii their mental Tliosc who pass the tests satisfactorily willibiihg disaster to the Euroliean econoniyi Jfc DU put on all ucccicrzitcd course; a litilf-year iiaVep P1'0V9d f3i59- : Q 1')! Private investment, govcrnmeiit spend-i IJN lll Grade 1, then on to Grade 2, and so on. fhis means that, if all goes well; three mg on goods Rho 5ei'ViCe5 and export d9' years of normal work will be Completed in mand had tended down, while investment two. The course will be speeded tip from i” imeniory had declined shdi'Diy- Ail 01': me year to another as Commuing tests may this, however, has been offset by the aver- ',.an.anL age mall and woman who kept on buying- The plan was brought fo,.wa,.d by edug and the factors that enabled them to do cators who feel that when bright pupils are?”- liot allowed to make the most of their men-E The bank” expiaiiis ihat ihcfeased tal ability they are likely to get into sloven- i eamings of factory Woi'k9i'5- 3 Vise ih ami- ly habits and lose interest in their work. ed'fo"-'95 Pay: Stability of interest and There is, of course, no guarantee that the dividend Pa-Vmenis and the higher Unem- proposcd plan will accomplish the purposelpioymenl insurance rates aii helped 10 for which it is intended. It is well knownimaimain Consume” Siiehdihgv 35 3is0 did 8 that precocious pupils in elementary schools reduction in income l3-V35- Oh the Other do not always turn out to be the best stu- hand Consumer Credit Played 3 much 1955 dents on the high school or college level,Iimpf"'ia"l- role lilo” iii Pi'eVi0Us years- and that the plodder often gets to the goal: For til” 'mm”o””'"- mlurov ii is h9C9ss311V post ahead of his more agile rival. These, lo lake ""0 Co"5iof”'alio'l the "'”C9hi de- indisputable facts need to be considered in, Cline i" oofeooe Spehoihg and exports: but any plan designed to help beginners. amt: fears of depression have been dissipated no doubt. members of the Calgary School: and the possibilities of renewed advance are board have considered them. But it does F-'ooo- The i”i9”i"liii0" iii lhe P0sl'WaF I'lS9 seem only fair that pupils who Show ext,.a.iin the volume of industrial production was ordinary promise should be given a chanceioot 5ob5i3-"tiai- . to Show what they can dop It might evml The whole tone of the report is encour- encourage pupils who are 3. bit slowmlaginrz. although warning notes are sounded though no less thorough, in their work Eillclihere mid lh9i'9- The gelleiiai Picture seems studies to try ,1 bit harder and thus 51.13”, to be that this country stands at the gate in the-accelerated program. Certai i the of greater opponuhiiyv but We must be- plan is worth trying. It will be in V pg ware of making mistakes along the way. l to see how it turns out after a goc.tj'po,riod, of testing. ' EDITORIAL NOTES Thanksgiving Day. U. S. A. O O A Hopeful Sign The unanimous approval of President The 0h.l9('iiV9 Which ille Canadian Red Eiscnlioucr's plan ' for the peaceful de- Cross Socioiy Wiii i1'.Y i0? next March is up vclopment of atomic energy by the United 1-31 Per Cent iF0m last Year and amounts? Nations may not have any immediate effect to 35v494v1oo- Theiprihce Edward Island on the atomic warfare menace, but it is in- w ob-l9CiiVe Wiii be 5527-400- dccd a hopeful sign and its psychologicall ' ' ' results may be of great importance. As the Cahadais NaV.V h0W shares Willi the New York Times points out, it extends, R- C M- P- the dislihctiml Of h3ViiiE Cil'- ”the frontiers of survival" and gives hope Cl-imh8Vigai9d the Continent. The North- gm. 3 new and more Secure age. west Passage may not yet be an accepted --when we consider the peaceful uses of trade route but Canadian ships have shown atomic enet'm'." says The Times, "the cure mat it is Po55ioi9 at any Yale- nr prevention of disease, increases in tlici ' ' ' Food supply, the provision of energy to take The 59”l9hCihg Oi 13 American airmen the crcat load of toll off men's back. fur-jio Prison b.V Communist China On Chai'gesl7'ipp"5 -hm. nddmons to knowledge H we are of espionage would seem to indicate that drawing back from that form of mutuahlhc reading of comic books is as shockingly sllicidc that is called war. As Presidentihrewliehi behind ihe iron Curtain as out- l-Zisenhowcr put it when he proposed his Side- plan for if. N. action in this field last De-, t-cmhcr. lll(' purpose is to help us move out' ll might be well for consumers 10 con- of the dark chamber of horrors into the sidcr that the price support of butter may light, to find a way by which the minds of ii? Savllli lllem hl0YlC.V- if the l')l'iC0,i men. the llupcs of mm, the souls of men dropped drastically, even for a compara-l everywhcrc. can move forward toward lively short time. production would also bci peace and liappiness and wcll-being. if the cut and in the long run the consumcri O C O scientists of different nations, includingwotild pay more. Communist nations, sit down togellier to, f ' ' , discuss t'V('ll 50 liillilhdil ihiiif! 35 NW The plan unanimously adopted by the. growth of plants or the use of aloniicppoliticai committee of the United Nations tracers in the treatment of cancer, it will for sharing in the peaceful development or be a little harder for their Governments to,-atomic energy ll; in origin Canadian. It has contemplate the use of the H-bomb t':lERlilSiJI)pen sponsored, 1,0”-eve,-V by the United illl'l0C9lll- P0Pl-iifili0lls- istates and arnelitliiients have been pro- "The F9S0iUil0il 15 did”-'i0Te 3" 8PP981,posed and accepted by various countries for common sense. a drive toward sanity including the U, 5, S, R, after the atomic madness. It does not. to be 0 c 0 sure, confer any priiI'ors on anybody if its, The Drama Festival got, off to 3 good provisions. are carried out, a scientific con-lctart at Park-dale last evening, It will be fcrenrfe Wllrlml: hsld llFXilb:linlE11;: 3' Wllifcl; llileteistifltf, to seed how other groups com- as many I! 65 85 D055 9. 0 e peace u 'pare n e pro uction of la 5 of their uses Of atomic energy hill be discussed. choice. While the entries are liotyas numer- Out of this conference will come some sort ous as last year, they are sumclent to pm. of international Oaiomlc agency . - . It may vlde three evenings of worthwhile enter- bf? thtai in 113255”?! 3: tire? "Eh 8” b98i;)l- talnment, well worthy of public support. mng o res in r c oice may :2 ' a - - between some sacrifice of sovereignty and& John Gibson Lockhart, Scottish author the complete sacrifice of civilization. wrl and editor, died this data 1354, He mar. have recently been told -that it would not ried the citlcsi (laulziiicr of Sir Walter Scott take many hydrogen bombs to destroy all and perhaps his greatest work was his life on earth. The theory cannot be proved "Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott." betgtsse liefnitt wgemlfaroxed there would be He wrote novels and a series of histories for 110 Y 0 Y - children and was an earl contributor to "When we compare this frightful nlght- ”l3iackwo0d's Magazine."y He moved to Inuit with the plan contemplated under the London and was long edllo, 0; the -iquapt. 'lllP price in soil tllcm? I wontlrrp if tiinse yx lin niinwrd their npl;l- inns in has swmerl for n pr-ti-. l l l ....................... iPoini'i of v...;.. C evergonew - card 5 -4- i entertainments"-a d'ecora,'tEc-MS -v PUBLIC FORUM This column is opus to Hi! disuum slun by correspondent: of questions If Interest. The Guardian don uol net-eusrlly endorse the opinion of correspondents. POTATO MARKETS Sir.-It was quite a surprise in; see a letter ovcr the signature of Mr. L. i". Silvimons stating that there is i-i nccd of a one selling agency to control tli:-i shipments of potatoes out of the, Province. lllr. Simmons may snyi he never said ll. What else I-mllrl he, mean ulicn he wrote: "Tiler!- were iii:-f too many lunrictl and sold (oi the mrtrlu-is in ahsnll) in 3 short period." He knrms full; well that the nnly way to renwcly I situation like that is to have an agency that has cmlfml of all the potatoes in the Province. We hnnul a lot almilt what illo- potato and turnip ticnlcrs wouiiii and could do for the potato pro- ducers. Wniild Mr. Simmons as president of that organization tell us what they are doing or going to do almui llm:t- drillers who are slut-ping rallnati after c.-irln.l.l nf putlitnrs to lIl'(il(”l's in Kltlnilfll and Toronto nlirl l"liltliZ llicm mil reason feel so good now flint they know that the Makers of Toronto and Aionlreal control the price nf our potntnt-s for the rest of the season. I suppose this is not compulsory. It could he rnlictl "free enterprise." The unfortun- ate part is that the I-rononiy of the whole Province has to suffcr for thc prcjuriirns of the few. I am. Sir, cli-., 'JOHN M. MULLIGAN I-Imerald, R. R. i "l'll.l.lNG" THE PUPILS Sir,-At. a recent meeting of it City Home & School Association. the attendants were given a glow- ing report of the smoothness and swiftness with which the chore of ”pllllm:" the pupils was execut- ed -- forty-sevcn seconds tint, ac- cording to the Print-lpiil's szop watch. It almost shutters Joe d..qk,task. if a mail is happy ill doing ;I NOTES BY In the end, the guiding principle jin choosing a profession is not whether one can become rich and famous ill it, but. whether one will be happy in it. The man who.hates his work, or is indifferent. to it. will never give of his best; he cheats -himself, he cheats society lll5 whole lilo ihl'l)uf;ll. Ilawcvcr humble the it. he has found 5l'IflSllll'llDil ill liv- ing. -Hamilton Specta- tor. A commanding physical feature of Montrenl is the l0WP"lf1K rlnmr of the 0ralm'y nl Si. Joscpll, visible from allllhsl all if not all points on the perimeter of the city. It .5 an expression of a commhiiding spiritual feature of the city's his- tory, the Me nf Brother Andre. Olii' ace is alien cniirlcliiiicd for its ninlciiallsiii. but. such wuxks us those associated with the ndme of Brother Andre prove that. great. faith still operates and thnt in a manner of speaking the day of miracles is not past. -Montreal Star. The white man has run into an Intlian anitiusii in lils efforts to open up the St. Lawrence Sca- way. The first. shots in this hattle for l'lV9l' rights were heard in the New York Stale t-curt of claims when cnllu.wI for three St. Rcgls Ilirlinii chiefs ill('(i a h33.ii00.000 stilt against the state. Til? Indians can- tend that title to Barnliart Island lni the St. Liiwrcixcr: River actuiiilyl rests with the St. Rcgls tribe of pMnimu'k5. The islnlid. ill American lvaters ncnr M.-lsscna, is the site of the prliicip-ti works of the St. Lawrence power project to be bum, jointly by the State of New York and the Province of Ontario. -Saint John Tclegrnph Journal. i Death of a Toronto mun under I loud of eight tons of coal highlights .i type of tragedy that occurs all too frequently. Sometimes other kinds of loads do the killing. but what, ever the variety, responsibility should be denmiidetl of those who dump thcni. Whatever burics or sub- O'Brien's hundred yard dfiEll rc- pcord at Montague, away back in the days before the prevalence of and the popularity of "Hollywood mufflers”. Evidently, on that O.'lCLl5lOll at inst, the pills went. down more easily with the children titan my letter did with the President of the Home and School Association. Even though the time element-i is irrelevant to the strike. there was a good denl left iinsuid about the rcrord-kecpiii. task involved. The tcnclier has to keep track of who pays and Mia doesn't pay: of who is pay- ing when he can't afford to part- of who isn't pr-yin: when he should be paying, ctc.. etc. A writer in an An:ci'lc:tn maz- sizlne and some time ago: "Th: msiti fault of parents has been their gullibllity". I would like in add: "and their iiirlrticillatt-ness". Thinking parents must he won- dering which nf their p.irrnt.il pi'eroizativcs they ulli he asked to surrender next. There are parents who will relinquish their respon- slbllitles ill. the drop of a theory Tlint is because their vision dnesift. project. beyond the shadow of the extra leisure their relief from it given task will allow them There are others again who accept the Utopian raving: of swivel-chair specialists as the ultimate in scientific living. To those who are asking ”WllFl9.5 It all about?" we say" The pres- ent day educational wnrld fr. be.- ing tricked on its fotindntions by it subversive tdeolouv which would mske of both home and school "happy" places for the child to live in - that is place: where everything is child-centered; where teacher and parent hop around with the fleetness of in Jack rub- blt removing obstacles from the psth of youth; where, in sham im- maturity. mothers plny ttddly- winkn with their daughters and fathers, leapfrog with their sons. The exponents of this messianic view of education any to the par- ents: "Do not impose your old- fnhioned standards and ideals on your child in this glorious new en of freedom and self expression. consult us. we shall tell you how you cut help bring up Johnny our way". The dispensing of cod liver all mrrgnt U. N. resolution the disproportion erly Reivew." cnpsulu finsianlllcont in itself. but it is l dfcstlve d an ominous principle nt. . merges can cause suffocation, and in these times of huge truck capac- pitica willy-nlliy diimp.ng constitutes in hazard dcserviliq of closer super- ,vis.on. There is samethimz suzces- pl.lVC of the l'Pil'il2":.'li0r deaths of , Letters From Readers l f()ti:iwa Journal) A col-rcspnndcllt sends us a lct-- tcr intended for plllJliC.IilOll non" appends tlzc ilistruciloii that wcl pmilst not chiiiinc "tlic um-d 0: (hp order". indicating that if we have ."n free press" tlic corrscpondcnt has n right to claim this space and this coiisidcrlitlml It needs to be kept in mind t.lint' l-he rizhl in print involves equally: the right not to print. The respon- sibility for what is printed in It iifiislmncr or nny pcriodlciul rests "D011 it! editors. and R corrcspontl-' ent who socks in use its cnluinns has nrlvllcze: but no rights. The Jmlrlinl WNPOHICS letters from its rnatlers nn Fiihlrcls nf gen. er.-ii interest. hill Jmn-Hal edlmn nlllFl- dFcl('iP wlml tn print. andl how much in print, alway, D"... vided. of POIIYFP. flint. the '9;-rm-, of 5 letter must uni. he lrmt, Br cl-gang;-d, The Question of "it free press" docs not arise. There is no more involved than making the best, possible use of A ltmm-.1 llmmm of space on mu; mgr, and giving it the greatest pnnsihln ,1",-9, M interest tn the larsrsl, pngslhlg number of readers. trend. As Churchill would lay: "It shows that the maggot is in the apple". Those parents who do not see in it s usurpation of their rights and an indictment of their capacity to cure properly for their lcthllden are living in is false secur- V. In conclusion let me quote 'Dr. Miller Macl..urt's recommendation to the Home and school Associa- tions: "I suggest that the Home and School Associations should institute in kind of devotional per- iod at their meetings. during which selected passages from so Little For The Mlnd' would be rend. I think that would do a great deal of good". so do II THE WAY children in this suffocation of per- sons under dumped loads. But muni- cipal restrictions an abandoned re- frigerators appear to be doing a great deal to reduce the toll. In- sistence on a greater carefulness. if nothing else. should help reduce the fatalities and injuries in bulk deliveries. -Windsor Star. Old Charlottetown. to ma 1-. I. I. A GALA EVENT "On Monday. the 9th instant, at St. Paul's Church. Charlottetown, by the Rev. L. C. Jenkins. rector, the HON. Keith Stewart. Command- er of H. M. S. Riiigdove. second son of the late. and brother of the present Earl of Galloway, was mur- ried to Mlsry Caroline, only daugh- ter of His Excellency Sir Charles and the Right Hon. Lady Mary Fitz Ray, grrmddliiighter of the late. and niece to the present Duke of Cum- berlnnd. and gi-uiid niece to the Duke of Grafton. "The beautiful and accomplished bride was attended to the altar by Sir Charles and Lady Mary Fitz Roy. the Misses JB.liVll. Huvlland. and Palmer. who officiated I5 brltlcsmnlds. and by Lleut. Fitz Roy, Mr. George Fitz Roy, and Mr. Arthur Fitz Roy, R.N., The Hon. Robert Hndgson. Acting Chief Jus- tice. Mr. solicitor General and Mrs. Peters, Col. Lime. Mr. Hnviland and Mr. Spence Smith: and the officers and gentlemen of the Ringdove supported their worthy and noble Commander. A large circle of friends occupied the adjacent pews, anti the rest, of the church, both nbove and below, was crowded to excess with well dressed people. "Upon the cartege leaving the church after the ceremony. it was found that the horses had been taken from Capt. Stewart's oar- riage by the seamen of the Ring- dove. nnd the bride and brides- grooni were drawn in triumph by the gallant tars. from the church to Government. House, amidst the deafening cheers of the numerous spectators. A spacious and elegant tent had been constructed upon the delightful lawn of Government House, when soon after their re- turn from church. the bride and bridegroom, as also Sir Charles and Lady Mary Fitz Roy. received the ,lit-arty congratulations of numerous friends. A large party afterwards to the number of between '10 and 80 sat down in the commodlous hall of Government House. to an ele- lglant tdejeuncr ii. in fourchctte: dur- ing the repust the health of the bride and bridegroom was pledged in bumpers. of spark- ling champagne . . . "Al the end of the collation the; happy couple drove off to s cot- tnge. delightfully situated on the blink nf the York River. which had been fitted up expressly for their accommodation. and where they intend to pass their honeymoon . . . '”lthe clay was most. propitious. and Chnrlnt.iet,own presented a mine out gale-ty seldom or ever be- fore with-nu-d. All classes seemed to join In giving effect to the joy- fill event. whlla the ships in the harbour. following the example of the Rlngdove. were decorated with colours of every shops nitf vsrlety.” -noysl Gazette, Aug. 10. 1041. 25-Pm Ilooll c.......u'.. "Russia ilo-vlowotl" As a foreign correspondent for tho Naw York Times in Moscow, Harrison Salisbury was farlsiddon tiotellallheleumed--butmn he's home. December Render”: Digest brings you the story he couldn't writ; behind the Iron Curuiu. Read this fut.-lusting report on the sinister facts of Stalin's death, .vut slave labor camps, nuliltic vignoths of lilac in Motoow, and Runis's sin in would shin Got. your copy of Doouulbr Readers Dignt today: 3 urtiduu of looting interest, condensed from 1 fun sir, etr. ' w. .1. mmalrrl I Charlottetown ' loading magazines. curnut books. 9050 4 The Gum-dlu, Dr. Msrtin Essex. An American educator, said in s recent sddi-en that. because of fear. much of the touching in American college: is in grave danger of becoming "sterile. dull. Ind meaningless." He gave the opinion at A conference on sea.- deinlc freedom attended by rep- resentatives of citizen grouph par- ents associations. and -schools of various levels. The fear he had in mind. or so it would appear from the text of the speech, was that which follow- ed Governmental inquiries into ul- legedsubversive activities in educa- tional circles. In the course of these investigations very few Communist liympiithizers were discovered: but quite in few professors and teach- era in the Liberal tradition were subjected to ' ' . for no ren- s-hoot, Communism. In the opinion of some of the investigators that could mean only one thing. namely, that the teach- ers were inclined tgwnrds Commun- ism. Thnt is exactly like saying that doctors are in sympathy with disease because they spend much of their time inquiring into its vari- ous phases, and that the scientists would like to see atom bombs fall on our cities because they have learned the secrets of the atom. . . . . It All sounds very foolish, but it has had the effect of making educators and teachers very wary. They take the view - at least some of them do - that, if intellectual c inquiry is to be looked at with sua- plcion, or even associated with political subversion. the less they indulge in it the better it will be for their own security of tenure. Most. of them, until they were put: right. by the subversion-hunters. doubtless felt that the more young people learned about the weak- nesses and evils of Communism the less likely they would be to fall under its persuasive powers. If they were wrong in thinking that way. the only thing left for them in to stop making serious inquiries into any- thing for the benefit. of their stu- dents and thus ignore the facts of modern international life. One of these facts is that 800 million people in the world are liv- ing under varying degrees of Com- munlstlc control; most people in those countries which thus far have been preserved from totullturlaii tyranny believe that the fact. is highly deplorable; but that it. is indeed s fact no one can deny. "You cannot. prepare young people for democratic citizenship in a vacuum", said Dr. Essex. ”0na of the great. purposes of education is to prepare our young people to be good citizens in n democratic soci- cty. If the teachers dare not. dis- cuss the isaiien of the day because of fear of reprlsals. than you have lost. the entire function of the school system". Does not that sp- pear to be 5 sensible view? . . . It will be recalled that in the years immediately following the war. before Russia's intentions had been fully disclosed, A great. many well-meaning persons in all walks of life were attracted to certain "Soviet-friendship" organizations which were growing up everywhere. Others, equally, well-meaning, join. ed various social groups, whose sponsors, as far as my one could tell then. were good Ind loyal citizens. anything of the sort. Later on many of these groups were revealed as "Communist-front." organizations; they had been so carefully camou- flaged and so cunnlngly designed that they deceived the very elect. Is it not reasonable to suppose that, if. Communism and its insid- ious methods had been better under- stood, fewer responsiblle citizens would have succumbed to the prop- aganda that. was put out in the name of friendship and social ser- vice? Today there nre hundreds of disillusioned persons who are play- ing heavy penalties for their un- intentional folly in Joining 1 group whose real purposes they knew nothing about. After ten years or more - some of these organiza- tlons began before the war ended -- their names come up in official investigations as instances of "fel- low-trlsvelllng" techlqucs. when T The Passing Scene Q1 Observer ACADEMIC FEAR. actually met: only crime was ignox. Inca. surely. if I free nation is to mm. but. the evils of Communism slices. sfully, its citizens must. know what, these evils are and by what pm. cessu they are made to entmp the unwuy. High school and College yous always have been 'crltical years for young people, 1-ma Wu true long before Communism be. came a dangerous menace. It is es. peclully obvious now; for, 1... Us make no mistake about lt, com. munist. begullements are never my fsr from any large campus. The chief need, it would 5mm in not to put. Communism on hush-hush basis-that leclllllqllg never succeeded in anything and never will-but to make sure, anti with no thought. of subversion or ' doubly sure. that communist sym. son except that they had discussedlpsthlurs on not Riven access to with their students all the modern any school. There are ways of do- soclal and political trends. includ-ling thst without having to pm ing Marxism and its Russian off- everybody under suspicion, We may be sure that every ilzita s college teacher. who is qllallg. led to refute the bogus claims of totalitarianism, refuses to do so for lenr his intentions and motives um be misconstrued. the soviet plan. ners rejoice; for they know that ignorance of what their evil pug. pose is is the chief aid to its pro. pagution. Vhe To " The wind-witch rolls her sleeves- Oh, shut my door ngslnst '11-; down! ranted Tonight the yellow tide of lanes will lap the lattice of the fault. 'Ilhei-e's still a song on the Siilill lagoon. And still 3 leaf on the limo: bough; But. if is hope be dying soon. Give it is grave in the black il.l1a now. Oh. shut my door on the nakt-ti nest. A song once built in the high ..rr.: leaves; But. call a name to cut. to war Before the witch saws down n-.1 eaves. -Edwin Qil .i .--., The Age Old Story Praise wnlteth for thee, 0 Grid. in Sion: and unto thee shall the vow be performed . . . Blessed is the nun whom thou clsooont. sud cans- est in approach unto thee, tlist. he may dwell in (by courts: we nhsll be satisfied with the goodness of thy house. even of thy holy temple. AEROWAX 3AVE3 RE-WAXINGI On. The Willi EASY BUFFING! 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