PAGF. FOUR THE GUARDIAN Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department. Ottawa. The island Guardian Publishing Co. President and Associate Editor. Ian A. Burnett. Associate Editor. Frank Walker. CIRCULATION ”Covere l'rlnce F.du-aril Island like the dew” "Tho strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink". cnAiz1.o1:'i7i;1'oii'.s,wcnxizsnar, MARCH 25. 1953 Queen Mary's Death Once again thc Angcl of Death has vis- ited the Royal Family, calling this time to her eternal reward Her Majesty Queen Mary, venerable in years and beloved by all her subjects throughout the Common- wealth. Her Majesty's long life was one of undeviating devotion to duty, and she en- deared herself not only by her dignity, graciousness and self-discipline, but by her many benevolent acts and kindly words. She lived to bccomc the oldest Queen in British history. maintaining until her final illness, hcr 7.czil'and interest in public at- fairs ancl, more particularly. in the many charitable activities with which her name has so long been associated. it will be recalled that during the four , years of the First World War Queen Mary was always at her husband's side. a model of self-sacrificc, almost daily visiting hos- pitals, canteens and munition factories, and more than once going to France on inspec- tion tours of allied hospitals. Though less active during the last war, hcr devotion to duty was equally marked, and at all times her courageous example was felt and ap- preciated. Her cighticth birthday, in 1947, was an event celebrated throughout the Commonwealth: in London it was a special occasion for rorjoicing, thousands packing the way as the Queen drove slowly from Marlborough Housc, her official residence, to Buckingham Palace for ii family re- union. ' . In joy and sorrow, peacetime and war, Her Majesty shared so intimately in the life of her people that she came to sym- bolize their traditions in a manner unique in modern times. Hcr exquisite taste, shown in her beautiful needlework as well as in the performance of all her formal duties to the minutcst detail, was but, one char- acteristic of n naturc singularly endowed with the graccs and virtucs of true nobil- ity. To Her Majesty the Quccn Mother. Her Majesty Quccn Elizabeth II and all the members of the Royal Family. the heart- felt sympathy of their millions of loyal subjects will he cxtcnded at this time. Yet all will feel that in a lifc so nobly lived there is less rcason for tears than for proud and grateful thanksgiving. Already enshrined in thc hearts of her people, Queen Mary's mcmory will remain green throughout. thc yc:-irs. and her name will continue to fall likc a benediction wherever it is spoken. l c. It. R. Financing Although thc volume of freight lralfic, principal sourcc of rcvcnuc for the rail- ways, rcachcd n ncw high last year, in- result slightly less than in 1951. Adjustments made by the Capital Revis- T 1 ion Act, however, made the greatest im- pact upon the balance sheet. Under thc Act, interest-bearing debt to the amount of more than 5736 million, representing more than half the borrowed capital outstanding at the end of 1951, was exchanged for four per cent preferred stock, on which non- cumulative dividends must be paid to the extent that earnings are available after in-l come tax has been paid; and outstanding loans from the government of 35100 million iwere converted into 20-year debentures on .whicli no interest is payable for the first ' ten years. The Act also provided for trans- fer of stock and other arrangements, all of which make the picture of operations much clearer to the Canadian public. T-li;TrTTt Deadlock The 11-nation Security Council of the United Nations has rejected Russia's second nominee, Madame Lakshmi Pandit of India, as successor to Secretary-General Trygve Lie. Madame Pandit was the fourth candi- date to fail to secure the required vote. Two non-Communists, Canada's Lester B. Pearson and the Philippines' Brigadier Car- los P. Romulo, and one Communist, Polish Foreign Minister Stanislaw Skrzeszewski, were previously rejected. The Council, notes the Montreal Gazette, is now deadlocked, with the two favored candidates of each side having failed. This deadlock unfortunately is an accurate rep- resentation of the situation in any of the U.N.'s various divisions when anything of importance has been proposed in the last four years. The Secretary-General contest. brings this situation sharply into focus." Mr. Lie, for the purposes of his position, has not been Secretary-General since the Korean 'War began. At that time, the first oc- casion when an emergency arose in which the great powers were seriously involved, Mr. Lie supported the U.N. decision to re- isist North Korean aggression. Since that time, Russia and the satellite states have not recognized him as Secretary-General. Although the General Assembly, over- riding Russia's objections in the Council, extended his five-year appointment for an- other three years. which is to end a year from now, Mr. Lie chose to resign now. He resigned for the good of the U.N., in the hope that a successor might be a regain some sort of co-operation from the Russian bloc. With the issue deadlocked, says the Gazette, this appears unlikely at the mo- ment. Yet Russia, though practising dead- lock as an art. is very unlikely to carry it so far as to break up the United Nations. It is to her interest to maintain her delega- tions in New York, for the U.N. provides her with the tallest soapbox in the world from which to broadcast her propaganda. For this reason, and not for any which re- flects the U.N.'s ideals, Russia is likely, after prolonged haggling, to make some compromise. EDITORIAL NOTES Annunciation. Lady Day. I Grcclt Independence Day, 1821. Mis- solonghi was besieged by the Turks in that THE GUARDIAN. (".HA"".fl'l"lil7.'Il()Vilr4 ' l l The Fall Guy ' wmxr NEXT?" DEPT- & I . THE VILLAGE STORE Your architecture may be plain. Your windows may not nppei-tain ii-gleam In simulated marble theme. contends trends, Cherish and love you, Village store The years removed your hitching D0-St. -m)(DGIm09i(l0mtEOOO1& ' Old Charlottetown ' The streamlined world, perhaps, You're out of pace with modern But. we who oft. unlatch your door. E The Age-Old Storyg lI?oe&';&mm' is gone out of shall bow, swan r. every Oddities In English (MB. in the winngeg Free Press) Your buggy whips. but. not your seeking a spelling reform in the host I . of time, jwith gratitude we lift. our hot. And honesty needs application. ,To a more colourful purvey: Your stove. with its potbellied maw chaw scythe. The herring keg. yet you are bmhe You've lost none phere That closely knit your long career scale far- How hopeful and intent we are. But Oh. how cramps When we drop stamps! coins if we put stamps on all our mail We favour you, a rampart , Aizaiiist the tide of rush, unrest, And the forever frenzied quest Short, weight is an abomination- Your cracker barrel has given way of the atmos- things are of all who come to you for mail-- (mm me . ,, Letters from mends mm, and ng somewhere. along the line the '10" llctlfsslly for Such ll me&3llI'e- has crept. in. In the same category of the (nmcume! met by peopye of You must get the instead of Surprise would turn our l". M. pal: staunch English language, has introduced Though be tired from weight another bill at Westminster on this subject. The bill is intended ble toillis goodwill still works overtime. to meet the problem of ”hackward readers" in Britain. It. was esti- To one whose practice has been mated in a recent. report of the that Minister of Education that 30 per- cent. of the children who were 16 years of age in 1948 were in this category. Under the bill an iiivcstigation would be made of sim,plli'led Eng- lish spelling to see whether it Where cronies met to smoke and could help children to read prop- erly without preventing their re- Passed with the oil lamp and me turn to existing spelling later on In life. Mr. Follick in greater argued that few found weak spots everywhere. A few examples will do. "0" doing them? Latin "duplus". is "trouble". tlmity offers. 'lt.hat a simplification of Let others seek the super mm-L- would aid naval signalling. urgclgiuzf,” time Ml? Fomck named stance of "buttress". But the word If .1 p I 351?) "U Rad om”-lld,9lV came from the French ”buter" and I recap 9" M13 ml dCC9ll3t there should be no double "t." in 39"” 5””- MW it at all. It. was also Johnson's and concclpt? .-I Look unto me, and be yo saved. all the ends of the earth: for I V , V place at. the Wel- am God. and there is iiono' clsc. mrbance took I ha” m"'' by "'5 M”' II” II”"' lington Hotel. at about ten o'clock, my '"”""I "I when great violence was used to- righteousness. and shall not re- or 1 Mn. h u,- f t, , 3 wards the inmates of the home. V9 II 5 (195 HT T0" turn, That. unto me. every knee one of whom had his m"g"” Mm" severely bitten. Wm. Mont Follick, the British MZP h""l"8 "'5 "Mr W” '3" W” who both inside Parliament and out is distinguished chiefly for Mllllll BUFFIANS AT LARGE "On Wednesday evening a dis- finger Cundall, Esq.. J.P., was called on, and meeting the parties outside, was severely beaten by them, as was likewise Moses Hayes, ii constable, who was pursued down the street where he resides. On his wife when she was stabbed by one of the ruffinns, and her life is con- sidered in danger. Informations were sworn before Donald Mec- Donald and William Swabey, Eeqs., against such of the parties as are known, and warrants issued for their apprehension; and it is pad the miscreants who com- mittcd this entirely unprovoked outrage, will be speedily brought to justice. His Excellency the Lieutenant Governor has called the attention of the House of AI- scmbly tn the subject. and a re- ward of fifty pounds has been of- fered for the apprehension of the person who wounded Mrs. Hayes." -The Colonial Herald, April 2. 1342. in the same issue it ll an- 5' O I Notes By l New school boolu in Denmark include the story of Jack Miner, the famous naturalist of Kings- vilie. Why not have it. included in some of the Ontario school book's? -Oshawa Times-Gazette. Pablo Please I: in wrong with French Communists for an unflat- tering portrait of Stalin. The Com-mles would be maddier if they could be positive it's Stalin and not lj:uL: a scrambled egg. - Windsor Political oonaldentlomi upnrt, Canadian headline vn'it.era and radio news. announcers unfamiliar with the Slavic tongues may feel a strong sense of relief on learning that the next. secretary-general of the United Nations is unlikely to be Mr. Stanislaw skrzeszewskl. - Ottnwa Citizen. The witchcraft of the 20th Cen- tury is somewhat di erent. from that of the 18th and 1 th but ch; results are largely the name. We can put on hexes and take them off, exercise powerful and secret influences on our fellows. utterly confound the human intellect with the intricacies of the electronic brain, and even cause our enemies and ourselves to disazppeu in ii -puff of smoke -- mushroom shaped - at. will. -Victoria Times. . Now! that Marshal TlI.o'a regime in Yugoslavia has conceded defeat in its efforts to coliectivize Yugo- slo.vic's peasantry marks 3. mile. atone hi the postwar history of that country. Instead of pushing forward in an effort to duplicate in Yugoslavia the agricultural or- ganization of the soviet. Union, the emphasis is now to be put on vol- untary farm co-operatives. The stubborn resistance of Yugoslavian peasant majority has won out over all the forces of compulsion and percussion employed in favor of coliecbivization. -New York Times. The one-room school In I port. of American folklore. All great men are supposed to have been taught in one-room schools, where they imbibed large and inspiring doses of -moral rectltude along with the three R's, going for-t.h full of common sense, useful knowledge and sound ideals to build up their million and make her mistress of the world. Newfoundlanclers are lea sentimental, less given to myth-weaving nostalgia, perhaps because the little red achoolhouse is much more of a real problem and much lea a pretty fable than it is elsewhere on this continent..- st. John's Telegram. In Japan they are null etlolilers for etiquette of a higher grade. even than that propounded by Emily Post. In that polite and de- MARCI 75. (95 The Vvaxj. 3 corona (except. for a law um-.m,, lapses into eavageryi) land of in: RM"! 51111. the Prime MuiisLe,. Mr. Yoshida, has just. had to call 3- Kmeral election because of ,. Hill of the tongue. In the heat 0; debate on the budget. lie BDDIIHI I70 an Olvponent. the word, l-g,.k.,. 5110." Which. being interpreted 1. "Stupid ass." Perhaps, in Ja,;a,'1 as in England, and Canada, 1,, 3; taken that the legal mnxim, --mi. greater the truth the greater W, slander." applies! In both c;mM,' Md Brill-El.-n. however. there is M. allowable parliamentary p,-mi. 886. subject. to thc. Ni9I'I.n9S.x judizimcnt of Mfr. speaker. -31- ford Bcpositor. When he wanted to speak agaimi Oommu.ni.sm,at a Communist ralii. in Toronto ll few weeks ago, M. Farley Faulkner was told, to 4., hire a hall." That's just. what 1... did. with an anti-Communist, mm; at Massey Hall that had the com. munist. meeting put in the sham. After every Communist i-an." wherever held in Canada, it mlzhil be a good idea. for someone Vin "hire ll. hall" to give answer. 'r:,,. Reds would not then he so 9 to hold meetings.-Windsor sm, soot; are I race inclined to tum nothing for granted. so it is mp ural enough that expcrim;-11:5 should be conducted at G13; M Unverslty to determine nhr the current chlorophyll craze in-i. any scientific basis. May-ca vm Scots scientists had heard rm limerick about the goat which met lived all his life on chloroph-'1 without demonstrating its deori-in ant. effects. Their findings llldlc.I'- ed that. the goat. test. was as good as any. According to the l'Fp0l! they published in the British Merl- ical Journal chlorophyll has no deodorant. effect whatever. How- ever, they established that it is m: entirely without effect on RTDEILI . It. makes onions smcll worsc.sl..u. don Free Press. It may be doubted whether thc Montreal Gazette does a u56!'.i public service in suggesting HIP transplanting of a newly di.scovm- ed freshwater fish to Quebec lakrs and Mlreame. Because if this hav- pens. the whole angling fraterniti- will have to adopt. an entirely new standard of mezisuremcnt. to on- soriibe the one that got away. Thr new fish, it. appears. resides lll British Guiana. The first specimen to'fall into the hands of science measured six feet, four inches and weighed 148 pounds. This, limi- ever, was obviously it fingci-lin.-. because the natives report (and no Iiahermans veracity can be ques- tlionedli that they have taken ex- amples of the same species up to 15 feet long and weighing 400 pounds.-Ottawa Citizen. Order your Spring SUIT and TOPCOAT Now while the new range of samples is complete. 2539.50 up. J. P. MacPllEIlSOII & SOII 157 Queen St. nounced that the Lieutenant Gov- necd of crnor "has recommended to the overhaul than English spelling. He House III" 95l3b”5hm9"'- 0' '1" ,cfiicient. Constabulary force for The Wm-d Charlottetown, to act. in criminal new wen you know the depth the "double" for instance. What is the Cases only-recent event: having ' The wow comes cnnviii.-crl him. as it. must the Buy, House of Assembly, of the urgent other tongues who set out to learn Mr. Follick brings his spelling 1:. Consider cxoughir in the words l1:.fDl'mIDl'Ojf3Cl. up in the British tough dough. through. and bough. ousc pom time to time as oppor- in mention 3 gewy th . I 50"” momhs 980 stnlndable that newcomers are. con- cm was a debate on nnval csti- fused mates. and his proposal then was ' It, is under- Dr. Johnson was blamed for All Spelling sorts of bungling in his dictionary of 1755. It. was the origin for in- PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. A. McGuigun BABBISTEB. souorron. Etc. No-mar, Etc. Currie Building J. S. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Eye: Examined. Glance Fitted Comer Kent: and Queen Stu. Office Phone 1956-House 1013 Palmer & Huslam A. J. HASLAIII. B.A.. LLB. Bari-letor. Etc. Bank of Nova Scotla Chambers Chnrlottetown, P. E. I. MONEY: T0 LOAN M. Albun Farmer. 976 A. Waltlien Guudet. LL.B. BABIHSTER. SOLICITOR. Etc. Phillipe Siilliling 111 Grafton Street Money to Loan Collection .-rederic A. Large. QC. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. P. E. l. Loam on City and Farm Propertlel MucPhee 8: Tl'CIlIOl' H. F. MICPHEE. B.A.. Q-(3 FL SOMERLED TIIAINOR. EA. barristers, En-.. T-Guudet 8:.-Huszarid O 4 crcascd operating cxpcnscs cut. so deeply year as alga in 1323 and 1325.26, Lord For something new-we know not 350” dT0PPl1llZ lllclnllle "ll" 31- fault that there was a "3" in de- 35 LL; ' I . - . , d . . ' . " . . . Vl'llal-- ' "”'"h"? The W '" "d””'W d”' ”l””- SIMGSPHW and Milton aurinfefnna solicitor ""0 T10 DIOWS lhr1l.0llI.V -1 m0 9lat8- SUl- Byron died fighting there for Greek inde- Your master is a patriot, Sealed a similar law were correct. etymologlcllly in B. k I C B "M, ouusmvr A, oaum-;r, B.A.,l.l..1l PIUS W15 Wt "CC0lidlllR '0 ill? allllual l'9' pendcnce in 1924 and a monument stands in gnlselgilelgnelf amino: oymmodox-e. SOD13: H,?'f.'Z.Z2f Jiiiiiii; m?.f ”;;df:llle"t air it came from " ”ch:,',':,'::,I,':,,, " ' ' Barristers and Solicitors VIEW Of financial l'PSUilS Oi ODEFEIIIOIIS Of his memory in that town. Greece was pro. y ' 536 Smre" Spelt lite way if. is and not ttcofl", cognecagfl whgiive; -lilitiht-rv1.o M0"e, W L03" Mom?! W L05" the Canadian National Railways which was claimed a republic, although the king was 1.-mi.,,,.,,, P E ITS Bmow mm 3.” d1i,t(3)ltlr:)tfltIoI'fl' dergiiiiklilefpegig bligg g!:jn0”1m dof Jorjmsom lmmakest r H Bank of L H IHM - ' . . . . ' - ' t eve ope , was n assoc ating tho . 'r:rr”-'-:":m' ” Iilblm 1" ill" H0115? Of gC0mlIll0nS. 1a.Si allowed to ictaln his title, this date 1924. m 7m--- 59931 gt!-' "”1””IBll- He had done word sovereign with "reign". The Chgs, R, MgQugid MGTIIGSOII, Peake 8! week Howmrm" for the first time m its a u o o Til: letter ”l"-personal pronoun word m'Engmh gune from the B'A' NICIIOISOH history thc annual statement gave an ac- Q g PUBLIL FURUM -was dealt, with. How -puzzling it :?i:lncSlIiak,e:l;ve?lPeinWbreA5T;:l BAmus"m' s0uC"o"" A. W. iiATHEsoN Q11 curate Dlclurc or operations of the system. I Bbftmbel Comtmand of the R. A. helld mstmlzzufataresfgeglhf nwrggkltriigj said "eouverim". NOTARY. mo." . A. ll. PEAIU-2. 3.5.. l.l..ll." Changes made hy Ihc Canadian National Hlggeslt DOS "max Be?f:'T(l31lSCC -d. U033 Tnnwmumn in "W" I” we find so many ways of spelling this w00D:lliT)0Gd?. idigl-End (CF) E::X;l1(:-::E1':l:w'::n' JOHN R Nluuulmn” LL - Railway Capital Revision Act of 1952 en. mg .- 3.” W90 - ” 5.v .3” la” 3" discussion by correapamlenu. :'2w:'x,f:3:td'”x:Vm'”:'ib.;::lcrnnting .. Coronation morning will be l1n- h' ! (.0,lecun:::'TIIm:":;”:r" L,,,,,, . American fighters from Britain and West. of questions of intereut. The . .. 1"” l I” I9 nolmced in lnhabltnnt-s of this '' "M '7 ' ' i abled the managcmcnt to present a ieport E t k t B b C d Guardian does not. lierelluh "5 ii" tflilel. lz as in sign; nigh" gugmk mwn by mm. M thc , 175 GIIIWII Strut . ,- , . . - ern uro e 00 ar . om er omman ' as n tn: " ls” ' il - -' " " " that was compaiablc with other laige iail- P 9 , ll: endorse the opinion of as in cry; .,o,?. u9f:1I:hg1:8;,e smallest and noisiest. cannon in of. K. A. MugEq;hern . . f)eW Canberras washlngtons and Lincolns correspondents. - Y England. They weie built for I'. n . C759" way organizations. . ' ' gg And on they go. Queen Victoria's Jubilee and at CungopnAC'ron DENTIST Net operating ,.m,mu(,S declined more in attacks on targets in Geimany, France mlgnnu, ADVICE mgirigglishmils said to be spreading that time gavenperforrmance which p,,;,,,,, g,,,,,,,,, Dental X-ray ..L MD I! tian any other of snriashed windows. This time they UnAnmnET()wN Above Charlottetown Lllnu" than four million dollars during 1952 in spite of the record volume of freight, but this was caused by unprecedented operat- ing costs "due principally to higher wage rates." Passenger fare adjustments and in- creased traffic.combined to raise passenger revenues by more than M8 million. There was a falling off in immigrant traffic but- increased Ynllitary travel more than offset this factor, which indicated a change in the times and international tension. In the ex- pressdepartment, It was reported that an, increase in rates accompanied by a record- breaking number of shipments accounted for an increase of nearly 17 per cent over 1951. In the communications branch of the system a similar picture was revealed. A substantial increase in rates plus an in- crease in the volume of business accounted for the improved showing. So far as the hotel operations were concerned, however, revenues showed an increase but expenses ofthe nine Canadian National hotels and three summer resort lodges produced a net and the Netherlands, the Canberra jet bombers operating at above 40,000 feet by day and night. C. N. R. President Donald Gordon's Government is not taking a sensible position on the railway operating a bus service here garded as the choice between a useful serv- year and may well be curtailed. . ' . We don't like to brag but in this Prov- ince we Iive in the biggest houses in Can- erage number of rooms in a Canadian home is 5.3. Prince Edward Island's average dwelling has 6.6 room; Nova Scotia 6.0; New Brunswick 6.0; Ontario 5.7; Newfound- land 5.6; Quebec 5.5; Manitoba 4.7; Sask- atchewan 4.6; British Columbia 4.6; and Alberta 4.5 rooms. comment that the Prince Edward Island (mg: to, cable Head, sir,-In several letters to the Public Forum, Mr. George Mac- Ewen, Greenwich. sent some in. t.ei-eating comments and questions. I for one enjoyed all such letters, but. I must. say the last one was very unfair to the district he re- also the people in it. True. there are many vacant homes and for many rea- DOM. but the people are hard is not flattering to our political leaders but W"”"8 and Mmil "en ll they no not as rich all some. Those understandable when the question is re- lonely moles he spoke of.-it. is by choice they are so. As for our 3031001. Why is it. closed? Because ice and one that goes unused most of the his district. had to come to Cable Head to procure a capable tench. or for their school. How many teachers came tram his district in many years? There in a. thought there. As for cable Head we are proud of the ambition of the young, ma ada. According to census reports the av- they of their district. I am, Sir, oi,c,, Csble l-feed Welt. -MRIIOW. lnxluid. (OP) - Mr. and 1m. Joseph stopietnn at Van. oua time: during the lat nix you-e Ptwnod fumlturo to meet theli high electricity bills. Now the elec- tric commnv hu paid than no READER. the world's languages. This in spite will be fired at the town outskirts. 1-hon. 1012 201 Prince St to compensate for 3 "leak" from faulty wiring. . COMPLETE ' a Iustnmncn SERVICE moms 540 end 541 131 QUEEN 81'. g CHAItD0'l'1'lL'l'0WN.P.E.l. AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE PROVINCE W.K. lingers Agencies Llmlteil J. A. Currutliers. R.O. OPTOMETIIIST in Kent street Phone 2872 (Next to 8lmpoon'e Agency) Allison M. Gillis. LL.B. BAH-BIBTEB. BOLICITOII, Etc. I80 Blchmond St. - Charlottetown Phone 590 OPTOMETIIST ' III lent street Iyron J. Grant. O.D. Phone I?! 202 Queen St. Dr. A. L. Moclsauc IIENTIST Dental X-llny GLORIA BUILDING . I79 Grafton SL Phonic 3" ..,. loll. Mutliieson 8. Foster Blrrlltoro. Bolloltorn. lltc. B. R. BELL. Q-(1 Phnno Ti" 0. It FOSTER. LLB- Lolno on City Ind FIN" Properties 150 Blchmond Strl'PI- (Opposite Bowen Ilotel) Chnrlottoidwn. PJC. I. OIAITEIID cum I'. Muriuinson. (mi. Other omou It Ilelltu. Manolo McDONAl.D. CIIAITEIED ' H. R. DOANE 8: COMPANY ACCOUNTANTS ' I48 Grout George so. Charlottetown . Phones 1000 - M41 RANDOLPH W. MANNING. (LA. iuivm J. lIlcKl:NNA. Mr :1. St. John's. Amhont. Dlrtnlllllll Inntvllle. Liverpool. New Gluten end Tnirn. CIIRRIE & CO. AOGOUNTAN 1'! Iiontml. Quebec. mt-wn. Tonnm um John. uimimoiie. vanw"'” Kirkland Lake. Mcnotnn Ourrlo lldl. Glinrlottoimvn. ton. Edmonton, Charlottetown. m Telephnno l