I'-”"f)"!"r9!... E?i'rHE GUARDIAN ilabod ovary woaday mnrnlu at lil Prion SINGI. than lottotown. P. I. l.. by Tbs Tbomnoo Company umllzd. tcovon Ethos Edward Island Lilo the Dow" -Editor and Iannuu. in Ii. Bui-non. Auocloln Ddllor. Frank Walk: lranui office: of Suinmenido. Montague no Aiinnu, Aug”. Ind as Second Clan Mall :23; Pool Odloo Dopu-unool. Iy Carrion Ublriottotowu. Bummunug when to P. I. I 39.00. uto. D" -mum mu other Pnnlnceo and U. 8. A. sum Del annum. I "The -5- I18!!! memory is weaker than the weakest Ink." SATURDAY. sa15r.'B.- 1954 Atlantic Provinces Economy On Tuesday Economic Council meets in Halifax, the Premiers, their executive assistants and representatives of industry joining in a common effort to better conditions in thc' four Provinces. What they are faced with is the problem of maintaining existing in- dustries in a healthy state and of encour- aging the establishment of new enterprises ing successful. . Unfortunately it is the first problem that demands immediate attention. Light and heavy industries in these Provinces face difficult conditions and in some cases have been closed out. Everything possible, therefore, must be done to keep existing industry in a healthy state, by the supply of sufficient capital. efficient personnel, adequate transportation and access to mar- kets. The key to successful competition is, of course. low costs. It is necessary to pro- duce at the lowest possible cost even if it : means the consolidation of individual plants which are too small to take advantage of the economies of mass production. Mechan- ization must be applied wherever it will re- sult in a cheaper product even although the first result is a reduced demand for labour. Inefficient industries will soon not be em- ployers of labour at all. It is transportation, however, which will attract the main attention of anyone study- ing industry in these Provinces. The revolution in highway transportation and the possibilities of the St. Lawrence sea- way must be exploited as far as possible to the advantage of our economy. llanawed Hopos It is too early yet for anyone to say with certainty what good effects, if any, the Salk vaccine against poliomyelitis will have on scientific research into the causes and control of that disease. A full report on the 650,000 American children who were given the injections a few monthsago will not be made until next Spring; it is safe to say that never in the history of medicine, has a report been awaited with more eager- ness and interest. One fact, however, has been established: the vaccine is perfectly safe. This is news of the utmost import- ance in view of the fact that two other vaccines which were developed in the nine- teen-thirties did more harm than good. A tentative report presented at the re- cent International Poliomyelitis Conference in Rome gives the cheering information that all the scientists present at the meeting ex- pressed the belief that the new vaccine will work. At the same Conference it was announced that. thus far, the tests have gone according to plan, with nothing to suggest failure in the experiment, although on the other hand there is nothing to guarantee complete success. From another source, the National Foundation for Infan- tile Paralysis, comes the encouraging news that gamma globulin, a temporary deter- rent, promlses to be more effective than was at first thought. Taken together, these two reports give rise to renewed hopes that the end of one of the most formidable scourges in human history is near. "This Is A Ilnlversltyl" Dr. Sydney Smith. president of the Uni-. versity of Toronto, rarely speaks on edu- cational matters without contributing some- thing of value and inspiration. On Wed- nesday he addressed the students and staff at the opening of the University's fall term. Thg following excerpts from his ad- dress need no more light than their own to read them by. "Every scholar." said Dr. Smith, "is at s-.: lng which you are entering transcends na- tional boundaries. . . . This is a University. an inheritor of the dialectic of the classical I academies. the dedication of the medieval 'collegia generalla'. the exhilaration of the Renaissance. the rationalism of the Cartes- lans. the revolutionary ferment of the 18th century. the scientific and technological learning of the last hundred years, and the development of social science in this pres- ent century. Thus, in this new world into which you have come. there are strands surpassing time which link us with the ages past, as well as the strands transcending space which join us to the other parts of the world. . . . ' "All of you, whatever your age may be. will be accorded the courtesy of being 0' as reasonable, intelligent human I We expect from you, as from all u the Atlantic Provinces l I ing, a nign standard of human relations-a particularly keen sensitivity in the domain of Obedience to the Unenforceable. This is a community in which positive law is sel- dom invoked. We depend upon the self- discipline of the members of the University in order to carry on our work." Dr. Smith went on to show that this function of the University in developing human relations on a high standard is of paramount important in world affairs. "One of our most distressing problems," he said, "is the prevalence of fear-fear of war, fear of oppression, fear of insecurity. Fear is cradled in ignorance and nurtured in isolation. It has the power to cloud men's minds and paralyze their ambitions. It is self-perpetuating; it leads to irrational act- ion, which increases the nervousness of in- dividuals and nations and makes their situ- ation progressively worse. . "Courage imparts the spirit of adventure which will have a reasonable chance of be- l to men and nations. ' ' I we applaud the spirit of physical courage, whether it be manifested in conquering Mount Everest or swimming across Lake Ontario. We ap- plaud intellectual and spiritual courage. Recently it was written of Winston Chur- chill-that he displayed that courage which is a man's deliberate refusal to shirk from saying things he feels to be true, even though no one would comment on his, fail- ure to say them. It is something more than sincerity: a man can be sincere in every- thing he says and yet take care not to say anything which will disconcert his poten- tial supporters. . . . "We will all need courage in order to cope with living. Our paths will not have all the bumps ironed out for us. Dangers ,and risks, conflicts and crises, tensions and frustrations cannot always be removed or resolved. They have to be faced and con- quered. . . " EDITORIAL NOTES Tomorrow, the 15th Simday after Trin- ity, the 16th after Pentecost. O O O The annual lnterscholastic track and field championships are scheduled to be held today at Memorial Field, the outstanding school sports event until the wind up of the football season. , - o o 9 There is no Rhodes scholarship alloted specifically to Prince Edward Island but Is- land students with two years of college have until the end of October to apply in Nova Scotia or New Brunswick. 0 O 0 Moscow reports that Russia has instal- led a microphone at the North Pole. Amongst other things that is the Cana- dian border and it will be interesting to i hear what the CBC has to say about grant- 'ing or refusing a licence. . The agreement between this Province and the Federal Government on pensions for the disabled would seem to leave prac- tically no needy group unprovided for ex- cept, perhaps, those who are employed but lose their earning power through illness. 0 I I Canada's External Affairs Minister Pearson could with good grace support the U. N. proposal for an international agency to develop the peacetime uses of atomic energy. This country is a major factor in atomic energy production but has concen- trated its attention on the civilian aspects of the new source of power. - O O 0 Johann Strauss (the elder), Austrian dance-composer, died this date 1849. Born in Vienna in 1804, he founded his own orchestra in 1825. Both became famous abroad. He composed waltzes, marches, quadrilles and polkas and eventually had three sons in his orchestra. one of whom, his namesake, became the "waltz king." 0 I 0 As the result of a plebiscite held recent- ly, the town of Dartmouth in Nova Scotia has decided to add fluoride to their water supply in order to reduce the amount of tooth decay in that town. Dartmouth is the third centre in Nova Scotia which has taken this action. Previously Halifax and home here. The Commonwealth of Learn-T Kentville had also approved this measure. 0 I I The meeting of the Maritime Wildlife Federation at Amherst on Monday will very properly emphasize safety in gun handling. In addition. however. there will be a paper on wildlife research in the Maritimcs, a subject of outstanding import- ance both to hunters and others interested in maintaining the natural denizens of our countryside. I I 0 Many friends in this city and Province will be shocked to learn of the sudden death in Virginia of Mr. A. B. Cosh. re- tired chief assessor of the liicome Tax Div- lslon. Department of National Revenue. A native of Scotland. Mr. Cosh resided in Charlottetown since 1913. except for his years of service overseas in the first world war, and was held in the highest esteem by all classes of our citizens. Sincere sympathy is extended to the bereaved widow and son ' Illmbef-s of the Commonwealth of Learn-'05 this occasion. Tl'iere'll Be No Sleep Lost Tonight ' PUBLIC FORUM I'll: column In upon to Ibo thou- slon by oorrupondenln of question- of Interest. The Guardian don uol uoounrlly undone the opinion ol correspondents. LIGHTING FIRES IN COLD - ROOMS Sir,-It was Earl Grey who said about his father that he had spent his life all over the British Em- pire lighting fires in cold rooms. What a beautiful life that man lived? It has been my privilege to know many men and women who spent their lives helping and cheering others. l.e., lighting fires in cold rooms. There came into our community last week a man who had not set. foot on P. E. Is- land for sixty-one years. I remem- ber him vivldly as a child of seven, how kind he was to me In first days I came to school and these were lohely days, how he taught me in play ball. putting the bat in my hands and throw- ing me easy balls. "George" ever since that day. seventy years use. has been living that some helpful, cheering life. - My friendships have been most- ly among students. As I look back I remember my professors more gratefully than I did when they taught me. How much do I owe to men like Howard nnd Archie! But our fellow-students were dear to us. The Joy of returning to college in the ,autumn was a thrill I cannot forget and the stories of events and people kept us from our beds. I had a Negro friend. I-Ils color did not matter to me. He was a friend and I loved him Is :4 brother. He was a teacher and in school. in church and as a neighbor. his whole life was spent in kindly deeds. Toward the end of 1915 I returned to Trinidad alone, hav- ing seen my wife buried in P. E. Island. It was a big house and a cold one for me. for my child- ren and their mother had been there. Night after night my Negro friend came in and that friend- ship warmed ur my h0m9- 50 does friendship always do. Here is I piece of poetry I quote from ii not very good memory that seems to fit in here: "I shot an arrow into the air. It fell to earth, I knew not where: x For, so swiftly It flew. the sight Could not follow it in its flight. "I breathed a song into the air. It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong ' That it can song? "Long, long afterward, in an oak. 1' found the arrow, still unbrokc; And the song. from beginning to end. I found again in the heart of A friend." ' And thus it often happens that I kindly song sung in the night follow the flight or a friend will long be gratefully remembered. I am, Sir. etc.. W. I. GREEN Stanley Bridge. Vzeplafgf good Gmm The brain is wider than the sky. For. put. them side by side. The one the other will include - With cue, and you beside. The bmin is deeper than the us. For, hold them. blue to blue. no one the other will absorb. An sponges. buckets do. The brain in fun the weight of o For, lift them. pound by pound. And they will differ. if they do. As syllable from sound. -Emily Dickinson. QT-T-2 1'00 IEAIJIIIG VICTORIA (CPT - A fIl'OlRIE'I rucuc scone being filmed Indoors for a television show resulted in some city firemen being sickened by fumes of smoke bomb: om- ployed to make the picture rulin- tic. runs were. needed to clear the ball. or a soothing word dropped with 5 I NOTES BY one place a tip in not welcome is in a canoe. -Windsor Star. A new father call: his baby daughter a clamor girl. -Toron- to Star. Great minds have purposes; others have wishes. --washIng- ton Irving. About as9.ooo people. compris- ing the entire population of Trini- dad and Tobago. are to be vaccin- ated as a means of protection against yellow fever. This action follows the death of one hunter from that dread disease. The for- ward march of medical science is thus illustrated once more. Only a few years ago, the occurrence of one case would have led to the death of hundreds if not thousands. -Brantford Expositor. What In really terrifying Is the head-on collision between two can both doing 30 miles per hour or higher. At 30 miles the collision force of two cars is four times that of one against a stationary object: both at 40 miles. seven times; at 50, 11 times; at 60, 16 times. In the last case it would be as if each car, in colliding, suddenly increased its weight from 2,000 to 10.000 pounds. - -Saint. John Tele- graph - Journal. since fishing is I total expor- lence, being alone on a quiet creek permits one to hear the noise: of nature. A leaf sailing down the water can steer itself skillfully around the rocks and branches. A bird-in the stillness one can (le- tect. its call-can actually be heard walking in the brush. The insects go about their grubby busines and a frog or turtle looms large, giants along the creek's banks. -New York Times. In Omaha, Nchraskl. a night worker who had misplaced his house key rang the doorbell, then knocked on the back door. but got no answer. His wife was I sound sleeper. So. since it was 3 um. and he did not want to arouse the neighbors, be connected the lawn hose and sent a Jet of water through the bedroom screen, where- upon his wife bounced out of bed. It. was an ingenious effort. but we doubt whether it did much for ii happy family life. -Brantford Expositor. The United Slater already mu- sive population continues to ex- pond. Latest estimate of the Cen- sus Bureau placed it at 162,670,000 as of August 1, for an increase of 2,782,000 in the year. It is inter- esting to compare this latter fig- ure with Canada's population growth, which in the latest Bur- eau of Statistics estimate was placed at more than 400,000 an- vnually. Our population is a little less than one-eleventh that of the United States. but the annual growth has moved up to better than one seventh. -Windsor I. . Humility. I nus virtue, still has its uses. The carnal. demonstration of it given by Mrs. Imogene Lakey of Vancouver the other day no- quitted her of ii charge of driving a. car while her ability was im- paired. Mrs. Lakey had taken over the wheel of her husband's, cai- for the first time in 14 year: and promptly backed it into a parked vehicle; The charge was not. justi- fied in this cue. nld Mfl. Ln.key'a counsel. "In a case like this," he said. "there has to be ability which can be impaired." Mrs. Lnkey, humbly made no protest at this opinion of her motoring skill. Again. when the arresting offlcm nld Mrs. Lakey was unsteady on her feel and very talkative, Mu. Lakey replied. "nut rm always talkative." The humble Mm Lakey was an- quitted. -Mont all Guano. THE WAY Perhaps 93 percent of the advice handed out all the time is received either by people who don't need it or those who won't need it. - Kitchener - Waterloo Record. The weather In Europe has been so rainy, cold and genevlly mis- erable this year that its possible the tourist who postcards from there, "Wish you were here," means instead of him. -Winnipeg Tri- bune. One of the better known anom- alies of our modern ways is that so many city people will fall over themselves to spend as much of the year as possible in the coun- try, but that so few of them will work there. The -Lindsay Watch- man - Wardcr surveyed this reluct- ance in its own district where it found 600 unemployed but not one man available for farm work. - Toronto Globe and Mail. McGlll University has not been slew to realise the vast. potentiali- ties of the Canadian Noi-thland. Despite the quickening interest in the Arctic and Sub-Arctic areas born of mineral discoveries and development, the average Cana- dian has little or no conception is to the possibilities of territory north of the tree line or even low- er latitudes. Expansion to the north. current. and in prospect, present; I vital need for academic know- ledge in all phases of conditions in areas in which Canada has lagged behind other countries in both exploration and development. Russia, for instance, has estab. lished railways, cltig, towns and successful agricultural ventures in latitudes which, in Canada only a few white men have seen.' They are credited with the growing or certain small fruits-within the Arc- tic Circle. And what other develop- ments there may be is known only to those behind the Iron Curtain. -Montreal Gazette. s Old Charlottetown and Ill. mslzom The Examiner. Sept. 1!, ,The Charlottetown Gas Company announce that they have Imported a fresh supply of may. Plllfllr bllmefl. especially made to consume only three feet at gas per hour with the tap full on. The burners are an scientifically made that they will give . light equal to about ten candles at a cost of three-quarters of one cent per- hour. Mcssrs. Coyle and McQuIld in. form the public that they have 09911911 I new Ia0bM:00 Ilctory on Richmond street, in the establish- ment formerly occupied by Mr. Philip Coylo. . Henry Longworth. mq., leave; tomorrow morning for the Domui. ion Exhibition at R1 t my in commissioned by the Government to purchase young cattle fund sheep for the Stock Farm. Al A meeting of the City Council last. evening a resolution was pound to the effect that no article: shall hereafter be furnished by atouo keepers or other: to any gm-yum, of the city without A. requisition from the Oily Council. A resolution regarding the Canada Temperance Act was also puud. It appears thll I petition bu been not to the Government. uklng flint. half the fines collected under the Act. be paid to the prosecutor. To this the council objects. and hence they passed I resolution to employ A counsel-L. H. Davies. l'Jq..-who will no that the full flnu collected under the Act are paid into the oily creuury. 1 FOR rim arm: QUALITY AND VALUE VIN DIAMONDS TAYTBRS Jswsuunm Light. - -The second Assembly of the World Council of Churches bu pound into history and. almost everything that could be written about it,hu been written. Recent- ly. however, I ncolvod I copy of the turf. of tho Iddtou dellvorod by Methodist Bishop Bromley Ox- iiam at the opening service. and it occurrdd to me that some of the readers of this column might be Interested ip some of its con- tents. Dr. Oxnlm. who in in charge of s the Washington area of the Meth- odist Church, occupies a promin- ent placo in American Church circles: he is considered! to be an outstanding preacher and he is an author of lame repute. He has been a, member of the World Council Presidium Iince its for- mation in Amsterdam in 1948 and is generally regarded as I. leader in the Ecumenical movement which concerns, directly or in- directly. every religious group in Christendom. o o 0 Al was Almost inevitable in such a gathering, Dr. 0xnam's address was concerned with social and political issues of the day; all related, of course, to the speaker's interpretation of.Chrls- .tlan theology.. which happens to be in the Liberal tradition. A ,good part of the address was de- voted to the responsibility of Christians to resist totalitarian- ism whether of the Fascist or Communist variety. (It is becom- ing increasingly difficult to see much difference between the philosophy of Nazi Germany and that of modern Communist Rus- sin.) "A: Christians." said Dr. Ox- nnm, "we must repudiate the as- sumption that the state has the right to determine the philosophy to which every individual must give assent. Together we reject once and for all those theories that command people to conform or di and that an-ogantly af- firm: but dissent in treason and deviation is disloyalty." That was an obvious slap at international Communism which, of course, al- lows no room for either dissent or deviation. But it was also a slap at that ltrnnge undemocratic political aberration which some- times goes under the name of "McCarthyism" but which had taken root some tlnie before Sen- ator McCarthy appeared on the scene-the theory that any out- spoken and sustained criticism of majority political opinion Is a sign and taken of disloyalty to the nation's constitution. There Is little doubt that Sen- ator McCarthy. perhaps uninten- tionally. made this sentiment into a demngogic instrument: but most American political analysts now appear to believe that its real cause: went much deeper than that gentleman's political ambl- tlons. Perhaps It had its roots in the hysteria which came upon the American scene when it be- came clear that Communist in- trigue had entered into the coun- try's defense apparatus. Anyway. reports now are that it is subslding, that public opin- ion has begun to sense its poten- tial danger to the whole concept Anodilovomontof groolor safety . . MacKAY rogallv The Passing Scene l I; oburvoc DI. oximirs Annnnss of -free and iopuuntatlvo govern. monf; it in over being suggested that Senator Mccoi-thy himself ,. currently engaged in taking a new look at. the strange procen he helped to nourish if he did not, in fact. create it. If that in nu. he will do just as well. or even better, in his spirited campaign against Communist, infiltration. and the United States will gain in respect among her friends and allies who have feared that Am. ericann were bent on opposing totalitarianism abroad. while en. couraging it at home. - O O C Concerning the oft re view that the Churches Eligitilg "keep out of politics". Dr. oxmm had this to say: "It II not enough for Christians to iepudiate gh. atheism of Communism, reject a philosophy of materialism, and repel a fallacious theory of poem development and an abhorrent concept of dictatorship; they mus, also renounce the practical ath- eism that lies in the affirmation that God in not relevant to .11 the activities of men". He gp. pears to believe that, desplzg gh, inroads of materialism, greater moral advance has been made in business and industry. "Respo... sible leadership in business and labour. pledged to the moral px-in. clples that lie at the heart of the Christian faith, regard themselves as men upon whom heavy obllgg. tlon has been placed". he said. "A man who would corner the when mlrket Wdly would not be called a genius; he would be called a. gangster.” One does not have to accept any particular doctrine of 3)., nature of the Church to app:-9. clnte this paragraph with which Dr. Oxnnm concluded his adage", "The Christian Gospel is not found in Adam Smith's "Wgiim. of Nations" nor in Karl Marx's "Des Kapital". It is to be found in Matthew, Mark. Luke, and John, in the Acts of the Apostles, The Epistle: of the New Tuts- ment, and in the vision of John in the Apocalypse. It is to be found in tho Hebrew prophets, in the lives of saints and martyrs. in the service of faithful people, and in the continued revelation of God." The Age Old Story And Juno returned in the power of the Spirit into Galileo: and then went out I fame of him tbroun all the region round about. BOOMING CENTRE KITIMAT. B.C. (CP) - 'f'hi: new aluminum industrial centri will have a 50-room 3500.000 hate: with coffee shop and accommo- dation for luncheon gatherings Vancouver and Prince Rupert groups are building the hotel. QUEER THEFT VANCOUVER (CP) - Jock Wat son's car was broken into and rlf led. The loot: 18 summonses from the small debts court which he was to have delivered. - W117? ddlozzoed oorodynonwc design in ' Aoro WILLYS offorsprootor comfort . -. .1 . groolor visibility plus ' eye-coldilng boooiy. ... your KAISER-WlI.lYS a..i.i MOTORS "DOWNTOWN HALIFAX" Two iblnuloo from lllllwny llotlon. Bullnoll and Theatre DIP trlot. A Moderil Brick lulldlnt with Automatic Sprinkler Syltem in every Room for our Guest: safety. so :1. PETEIl's noun. ciuniomiowu ,:?;?"':,"',':,-,,'-',j, ACADIAN IIOIEI." ,,'f,f,”fjf.i. WATER-Single 82.50-83. WARM COMFOBTAILI WILL FUINISHED IOOIII WITH PIIVATI DATE AND SIIOWII - DAILY IATEB - SINGLE 35.00 and I550 DOUBLE S850. TWIN BEDS 37.50 NEWLY DECORATED ROOMS WITH HOT & COLD Double Moo-suso-85-00 z Olliout CIAILOTIIIOWN HYNDMAN Mill on. iusunauon Since 1872. LIMITED - EIJMMIIDIDI . i IIONTAGUE The: Guardian (4