u can-nu Chsrlouounvs. suiumersluo suns pas non. hilsswun no PJ-1.1. nos. Psdvinx . 11.8. 312.00 pot uinun. SATURDAY. SEPT. l. 195! . Newfoundland service As reported All today's news columns, the Federal uoverfiment has approved the proposition of the. Provincial tluvcrnment for a sub- .s'lfll'l.0(i slcainsliip service between ports ill Prince lidward Island and lxeuloundland. The amount of the subsidy is 5r'cl(l0,ll(Ill. 80 per cent to be paid by the l9l)(it'l'al Government and 20 per cent by the Provincial (iovcrxnncnt. This -should be 0i glieat value to our shippcrs. as there is no question about the growing import- ance of the Xcufoundland trade. Herclofore steamship arrangements have not been satisfactory and have resulted in a heavy annual loss to this Province. V Under the new agreement Ottawa recognizes the importance of this service interprovincially, and the subsidy precedent being established, no doubt the arrangement will be continued indefinitely. Our Island representatives at Ottawa have work- ed closely with the Provincial Gov- ernment in obtaining this concession, and are to be commended on their efforts. The new service may well mark a noteworthy step in improv- ing trade relations with Newfound- land, which is expanding industrially at a rapid rate. and bids fair to be- come one of our most profitable markets. September Feigneth now the dear September, Like a slowly dying ember fades the summer, past its glory. Yet remains tho varied story of tho - autumn. In the haze flames of goldenrod upblsze; - And the daisy, child of summer. Stays to greet the staid newcomer. Still to lend its bright good cheer to the slowly dying year." --Thomas Curtis Clarke Yes, September looks forward to the "varied story of the autumn” and backward to the long days. It is an "in-between" month, lacking the ostentations of midsummer but giv- ing only a faint whisper of the raw- ness that is on the way. It witnesses many wondrous things. A flower, not yet ready to leave its summer habitation, bowing its head in sub- mission to the inevitable. A song bird, gathering with its fellows preparatory to making a long and krduous journey into the unkown, having learned in some mysterious manner that from now on warm and sunny days are likely to deceive the unwary. A tree, standing silent, expectant, waiting for autumn's colours to clothe it for a short season in the garments of beauty. Ripcned grain in ”sutumnls happy flel&": bright red apples in the orchards and along the sides of little hills; vines bearing tender grapes "that by and "by will gladden the heart 'of man. A schoolboy, "with his satchel and shining morning" face creeping like a snail unwillingly I to school". A little girl adorned with bows and-ribbons setting out on the meat adventure. A youth seeing far- . off visions, unaware of the disli- lusionments and disappointments that lie in wait over the distant hills. There is wonder in it all. And ' deep mystery. ' Labour Day " Labour. Day has been an official in Canada since 1894 and it no. . " . ukrr. HY . Llnierestlng to note that the legis- '" tion was piloted through Parlia- slr ,f,JdIl1 Thompson, against . bleqpposition, politloslsnd i' Today the status of an-nan; dwelopment has been parsl- lc1ed'in the -substantial prozrest in living standards and general econo- mic security throughout -the country. Organzied labour has resP0Y13l' bllities as well as rights and privi- leges, and these have not been over- looked in the statements by responsible labour officials. We are entering an era of rapid t9Ch"0' logical change in factories and of- fices, These changes fall under the general heading of automation and offer a challenge both to labour and industry which. if satisfactorily met. will result in higher levels of pro- ductivity and better living standards. These two objectives are lnter-de- pendent. Most labour disputes arise from failure to recognize this basic principle. Production is also a vital factor in meeting the threat of in- flation, which is perhaps the Swal- est danger confronting us economi- cally today. Labour organizations in this Province have been reasonable in their demands, and have not failed to realize their dependence on our basic industry of agriculture which- ls the backbone of our provincial economy. The parent organization, the Labourers Protective Union. is still going strong and has a. fine record of achievement- West Novas' Reunion The members of the West Nova Scotia Regimental Association are holding their annual reunion tomor- row at the Charlottetown Legion rooms. Each year the Association holds this gathering in a different area in the Maritimes, and it is in honour of the large number of Islanders who fought with the unit in World War Two that the Island capital has been chosen on this oc- casion. Needless to say, the visiting members will be warmly welcomed by all our veterans and by our citizens generally. The Regiment achieved a splendid record during the war, and suffered many casual- ties in the engagements in which it participated so gallantly. A feature of the reunion will be ithe parade, at 2 o'clock, to the War Monument on Queen Square, where a wreath will be placed, after which His Honour the Lieutenant Governor will take the salute in front of the Legislative Building. This impressive ceremony will be followed by a get- together in the afternoon, and a banquet in the evening. Veterans are coming from all sections of the Maritimes, and from other parts of the continent, to attend the function, ' which will be in the nature of a reconsecrstion to wartime ideals of service as well as a pleasant social reunion. EDITORIAL NOTES September will open to a good start with the Queen's County Plow- ing Match at Mr. Hazen Howardls ' farm, Cornwall, on Monday. There will be keen competition in the several classes, and the program also provides for junior sports and dancing contests. O O O The 30 whooping cranes still in existence will come to no harm in their Texas winter haven if the United States Department of the Interior is able to ensure their safety. The Department has placed a 4,640 acre zone at their disposal. No hunting of any kind will be per- mitted in the large area. I I I It is most unusual for any drama group to satisfy all the critics. But that seems to have been the good fortune of the Stratford Shakes- perean players It the Edinburgh Festival. Apparently, not a dissent- ing whisper was heard from any source. It is an achievement which does much credit to all involved in the ambitious enterprise. I O 0 Speaking in Calcutta. nulls, Chief Justice Wsrrln of United States .,,gsvs it as fhstlsw. I pwss fllln W-til-ll"-3.9?-i:3.l,5'il""lG If in the future another Gibbon should arise to write a history of ' The Decline and Fall of the Brit- ish Empire.. he will probably trace the beginning of the decline to Socialism, particularly to the La- bor Government with its pet and tie did those labor union leaders and lheir highbrow Fabian back- ers. who were so ambitious for politicalipower, realize that they were undermining the very found- ations of the Empire upon which British industry. commerce and labor depended for their existence. They forgot or ignored the hist- oric fact that British industry and world-wide trade were founded and built up entirely by free enter- prise. The pioneers of the British Em- pire were all iudividualists who ”w--.-nt out not knowing whiter they went." They had no thought of building an empire; they were dar- ing explorers. lnlSSl0IIEI'ir:a, trad- ers, and emigrants seeking a ”bct- ler country." Home-sick to a man. those emigrants settled in the wilds of strange lands. Toil- lng from dawn to sunset, they hswed clearings in dense forests and made for themselveg ngw homes in the wilderness. ' DENYING THEIR ORIGIN When Americans or Canadian; speak haughtily and derldlngly of ”colonislism" they are scoffing at their forefathers and "denying the rock from whence they were flown." It was colonization that transformed the wilds of North America into the vast farm lands and great cities that today are marvels of industrial and scientif- Goodwill Skunk: (Winnipeg Free Press) The possibilies of y ceful co- exlslencs are well illustrated by the case of the deodorized skunks. By courtesy of the San Diego 100. 1W0 I00 per cent American skunks will shortly be exchang. ms stares with Muscovites and thus promoting, one hopes, mg comlty of nations. In what is obviously intended as a pleasant courtesy, the S51) Diego authorities have named their former charges Bulgbnin and Khrushchev. In like spirit the Russians wlll presumably rush off Ito California I polecat named Dul. es. As lhcre exists among mm Americans a certain prejudice nkainst skunks. the U.S. ambas- sador in Moscow would be well advised, in making his presenta- tion. to emphasize the diffcrnence between skunks before, skunks af- ter. and political skunks. Th: op- position to skunks is not. essential- ly, opposition to the skunk ssls person runleas. of course he be- longs to an opposition party): it is rather to certain emsnnlons of the unreconslrucfcd skunk. If It is pennlsssble to draw an analogy from politics. Mr. Dulles dearly loves Russia but objects i to that emanation from Russia known as international Commun- m. So long as gifts and compan- ied by appropriate explanations, Americans are not to ho criticiz- ed for ssylng ft with skunks. Tho sffslr mu indeed re! s happy pre- cedent. with s lmls coppsntlon all round. Sir Anthony UK would probably be only too plotted to express his regard for Premier Nasser in some tangible way. pos- slbll: with s gift-wrappsd roule- sin a. fateful child, Nationalization. Lil- , HIGHWAY ROBBERY Fatal Nationalization By Lewis Mlmgsn ic advancement, such as the world has never known before. And all that was initiated, developed and accomplished by free enterprise. It could never have been achieved under the dictatorship of Commun- ism, and it could not persist and prosper today under the industrial nationalization and the encrvstulg welfare-state of Socialism. when the Labor Government nationalized industries they start- ed something that was to spread by their example to other count- ries upon which Britain depended for raw material and trade. Iran, for instance, followed suit by nat- ionalizlng the Anglo-Persian Oil Company. The Iranians quite nat- urally thought that what was good for Great Britain was just as good for their own country. They took over the oil fields, which had been developed by British private capital and ongineoru. When tho company withdrew its technical staff and management, tho nat- lonalizers found that they could not operate the great industry. They had "nationalized it out of business and thousands of their own people out of employment. UPSTABT DICTATOIC That was the work of a dement- ed and upstart dictator, Dr. Mo- hammed Mossadogh. And now sno- ther upstart dictator has arisen in Egypt to nationalize the Suez Canal. That gnu waterway was planned and undertaken by a French engineer, do Lesseps. through whose untlring efforts a company was formed and the nec- essary capital raised. It took ten years to complete and cost 30 mil- lion: pounds. As a highway to India and the Far East it short- ened the voyage by 7.600 miles. It is well at this time to recall that when the canal was built. Egypt and the whole of the Arab countrlos were under Turkish do- mlnatlon. The governors of Egypt were appointed by the Sultan. The people were in constant uprising against their rulers, whose ID- presslve taxation and personal ex- travagance: brought the country to a state of bankruptcy. As the chief creditors, Britain and France established a dual control ovsr Egyptian finances in mo, A nat- lonal revolt occured in the next year led by Ammed Arnbl. The Sultan refused to quell the rebel- lion. Britain and France sent fleet: to Alexsndrl... The French hesit- afed, and the British bombarded the city. suppressed the rebellion in a land campaign and restored the Khedive to power. That was the beginning of British occupa- tlon pf Egypt. Brltsln withdrew from Egypt ten years sun. The severance of that vltsl link be- tween the East and Went would 'Ielve llussls free to occupy Egypt and extend the Iron curtain over the Middle East. oun YESTERDAY: from he Gsofllu Illos TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Sept. 1. 1311) Much Public lstorest VII manl- feued is the formal swearing in of the new mom Govurnmont in the historic Cosfoderslinl Chambers on Saturday. In the fore- At the rorosoon service in St. James Church yesterday tho di- dlcsdon look place of the fins.” ThonAgo Slory tho iumg so sad pulpit eroctd old Church by Mrs. .I.l:.l. Mccrlafy ; of her his IIQDK. us need. That is. they follow lswl unconsciously and nood oolrthinb in my last discussion: porhsps MILKWEEK PODS I hope I am not guilty of de- fraudlng some feathered personage of any seed Which, when supplies are scant for his marauding, Might minister appeasement to his need, I Or of dlminlshi , by oven as much As the weight of one of these soft silvery threads. The heritage of wonder that must touch Children who see them float above their heads. Z Ilosqult posts. I don! dluzreo with If-renal. But thorrelmure than mu- !-boy may be downright danger om. . flu the (LS. mosquitoes hnvo been identified as tho Iprssdors of at least three types of enceph- alltls among humans. Encephali- , til win I condition characterized by Wnflommation of the brain. It can be fatal. MANY CAUSES While there are many unless such as physical and chemical in- juries, as well as complications following dlsess llko measles and mumps, mosquitoes play a major part in spreading the dis- ease of encephalitis. Viral encephalitis is. primarily a danger of the rural or suburban areas, although it sometimes does strike in the cities. Generally. it occurs in summer and early fall. August and September are the worst months. especially in areas where hot weather has prevailed for some time and where mosqui- toes are numerous. , FROM MOSQUITO BITE You can't transmit viral enceph- alitis from person to person. You get it by being bitten by s mosqui- to harboring the virus. Symptoms appear from I to 15 days after you're bitten. Symp- toms of mild cases are similar to non-paralytic cases of polio. In more severe cases ,lhe vic- tim suddenly experiences high fever. headache, vomiting, con- fusion and mental stupor. Some- times he lapses into o.cosns and sometimes dies. Death rates have been as high as 00 per cent in some outbreaks. Infants and the elderly peopls appear to be more susceptible to the serious type of encephalitis. Others may have the disease in such s mild form that they are unaware they are affected at all. FUTURE OUTBREAKS Kentucky reported the largest number of case: last year. There were some in Illinois. too. Investi- gations are under way in many states to determine what can be done to prevent future outbreaks. Meanwhile, I suggest that you do all you can to protect yourself against bites, ospecially if you are in rural areas near places where mosquitoes breed. -For one thing, don't sit unprotected against mos- quitoes on your porch these warm evenings, no matter how hot it is. QUESTION AND ANSWEI 13.55: My metabolism is extra- mely low. My doctor wishes to give See. I am circumspect; I take but few , Of the slim tapering pods. In- i opened still. I That at my happy leisure I may ' view. Unfglding on my sunny window ' I . Their airy shimmering secrets, as beguiled And satisfied as any bird or child. -Jane Merchant in the Christian Science Manila. PUBLIC FORUM Ills column is span to my .fgg-. loo by sorrupondauls of queuin- sl lntarosl. nu puma don oss Iooooosrfl! enlono lbs oplslso of sorrosposdonls. HARMONY AND RHYTHM Slr,- It"! 56"! again. just to add that eloquent or effective 59990" Ind "flood" literature de- pend on harmony and rhythm - to Hum up all I said previously. But I doubt if so brief I summary Z-liuld be clear to average read- Aialn. harmony depends upon sound and atmosphere while rhy- ' mm depend: upon arrangement of sounds. etc. Thus the poet or aufh- i or makes great use of careful choice of words each in its proper place. Sometimes he cannot find the right word for his particular rhythm or atmosphere so he makes use of "poetic license" and makes a new word or transfers one from its meaning. "Presently" is frequently trans- ferred becausc it has three syll- ables and has a softer sound. con- ducive to easy atmosphere and di nlly. lasso. wrller. don't be so him: on traditional use of language. Our M.Pls. faults are traceable to (gum in our schools. I fre uently hear I1T0W'1 Wflllle say " u" air in- su.-ad of lthe' air. The school sys- tem is prcscntly to blame as well as past. It is not only pronuncia- lion that counts. but how and wlgre the word is usod. rose and pootry on well as or- atory and painting follow the sum laws. But there are natural orators on well as musicians and artists whose sixth sense saves the "over" amount of university that most of Mm! II Wrillnjr (ii "iii - me thyroid. Howeve . I have had tuberculosis and am dubious about taking it. Answer: Persons who have had tuberculosis and hsve a low me- lsbollsm don't. get. along as well as they are not taking thyroid. In your case. It would be advis- able for you to follow your doc- torls instruction. STATE DATE-STEP! l " '3 Capitol, rising above Baton Rouge. has 48 steps, each marked with tho name of I Stats and the duo of its Union entry. NOTICE A special meeting of the ratepayers of Spring Valley school district will be held in the school on Monday evening, Sept. 3rd to dis- cuss use of Kensington fire truck. Meeting at 8 o'clock. WWI ISLIIIS-BARIIOI FERRY SERVICE Juno I6 to Sept. 13. Daily from each terminal: 1 s.m.. 9 s.m.. 11 s.m., 1 p.m., 3 pm.. 5 p.m. STANDARD TIME for daily roport dlsl CFCY no first weather tuoodcsu. Catch Ill early crossing snd svold delay Baoorvauons Limited For particulars contact: I ALIIITON. NOR'I'HU'MBl3RLAND , ' . FERRIES LIMITED Adlml rssoossom TII I-sovmcl csnmmn. ?. ll. lslud . lshodstbo Insslstrsto ftxos ass for suurcmsuiul-lcus fort. when they used fullaidlb mirrors.-lrsodnn sun The metres of using as cos: W h0II0Ymoonsrs' can if some -out of date. The newlyweds much From fer to have full tins of csnnsd goods to help fill the Initial larder, --Oshsws Times-Mercury The -old narrow trolls. when two cars could barely pass with- out colliding, are being replaced by splendid wide hlghwsyf when six and el ht cars can collide st once.Guelp Mercury One of the posts this world can do without is the lltterbug. Obnox- ions and s dotriment to the nest of humanity at any time. he be- comes especially obiilctlonable in the Summer. when his talents for spreading waste enter the danger ' ”' fion.qSudbu.ry Star A man who got behind in pay- ments on his automobile In Illeg- ad by the police to have dug a hole in the earth in which he bur- led the ehlcle; then he reported it stolen and claimed the insur- anca. It is s pity to nee so much energy put to so bad a us. A man capable of digging s hole big enough to contain his car should have some way usefully to cm- ploy his singular talent.-Ottawa Journal Now we have proof that count- ry squirrels are smarter than their city cousins. To test the IQ of squirrels. Morris Johnson of the University of Missouri moved some city squirrels to the Azhlsnd wild life area. The city squirrels to the Ashland wild life area. The city squlrrells kept getting into Johnson's squirrel traps. He known because he marks them and turns them loose. Ila hasn't caught s country squirrel yeti Of course, city squirrpls may actually be the smlrter Therein a free meal in the trap, and they know that Johnson always turns them loose. -Country Gentleman Shim LAUNDERED -ro 1-nnrnctuon RITE-WAY cnmunns Dial 7387 Household App Television DIAI. 4021 I56 Grout Goo. Sf. GDNSULT: FOR voun Illsumlllcl-: NEEDS IIYIIIIMAII I& no. I.Tll. ilssu-usolheoms, Ouroxpsrldeoofovdlhrooqusrlorsdseentufvlslnnnr sscoundsrvnliomlsstyourdlqossl. odlcu: cIlAlI.0l'I'l'l'0WN - nnnamns - Monmout- I I log! Iusyisoonsdory g.-5”, ldllllkl .IlI'blYlllK '0? lob: wt um-opoutsn Toronto co-pi: '5" ('1' Grade 8 mathematics and u tests; on Metro M. Inna depsrtmaat reports, why were they lsllowed to grsdum from high school? They should have boen let out without I cer- llncste.-Brantford Expositor A great deal can happen 5,, tween now and harvest. hug me, ION DFOSPGCJI Ire that Western Canada will have lnother good crop. Some observers are begin. ring to talk about a wheat balk vest. equal to the 495 million hush. els of 1955. This will men s )1; news! of the storage problem nu. Fall.-Winnipeg Tribune Since bottles of one sort or .... other seem to be the inevitable ac. oompsnlment of motorists, um, should be some special container as part of standard car equipment to take care of this accumulating debris. As it is, the litter tossed from passing cars can be a men. see to others. and in any circum. stances is s blot on nature's beau. ly and cleanllnes '-Ilgh Rive, Times DIVIDENDS mivr mun ovzn sow. DURING run us-r THREE runs... rum: REPRESENT 59.. ran ANNUM or run FUND'S Avamlor DAILY am vswr If your lncomo dorlvod from lnvoumonn .. .you arolnvllod lollnd oul a how M.l.F. can provldo you -, will roqulmlty of lncomo - at 3' nonlhly or , oily lnlorvaln is -brood divonlllcollon In load , In Canadian coniponlos-lrw , J l dam from ibulllplo suecosslon dulios - roody mazlolublllly "h and othot odvonloqos. hlpodsdonfnn ' '. P.J.Bssll1A"Ig'.l'Connnr c lltlichsnlit. Ohvlomlovl MUTUAL INCOII FUND 544Howo st. Vancouver L CD14 To me owurns or SHARES or -rne opportuhlty to use your Hghuubllrdrsssmls ..;.;.......: tho 4 Bank's capital stock auhlnyelgncaolisurmncsngcmoiunou