Page 14 Reveal Result l Of Study On llls of feel i By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE l BUFFALO. N. Y. (APieFunRlI-3 diseases of the feet such as ath- lete's fnnt aren't "catching" and it's useless to sterilize Ihmier mama. (Innis. socks or ahnes. 8 new :tLl(l)' sziiri Thiiisrtay. lt says most people ami;ii'entll'. nick up the fiimzi as children. and get lnnre of them i'enraiPfll.t' 13'9" on But the fiinzi cause, trouble. nnly uheii srimethinit h3ltP9"-f W, the skin or lower iesistaitce. The iermit HHS tti'PM"I'llCi'l tn NIP Airierican Public Health ASSH("lR- tiirn hy Drs Riiritilf L Barr. Stan-. Icy A, Rnsetlthal and Hynian R achefsky nf New York l7nivei'sit)t pngtitraduaie niediral school and; Jerome 7. Lin nf Clevelarirl. pr”-"gr are fiilllll'l on feet lrmk rreileciiv normal the)' 5.1. thp lifIK'kY things are Just norttinists" tiiiilml ("F 3 l9l'd”ml nl skin 4'lCfPllCPF NFIGLIGIBLPI PART "ll lF ilselessatri attempt in sivrll l!ill('lI said. Wip- l7P .-articles in and ai'i'l-lild hall". ,,,,.me- ,ir.m-pr: aiirl siiiiiiming ,..,..1; .n- in impregnate them xxilh tungrstziiic agents." said Dr. B:-ier .(-,,mam,.n. ny pxpnStlrP from the ni)I5lfiF, ;-imiriars In play a tlPfillK' this role in causirti Vll'l”'””-V M" rue attacks. Tm,” rnnfllL(1rVlliS based on their nun and other studies in one ex- ..,.,,mg,-it people uno showed signs nf f-rngits infection did not 89K 3? niiihreak nf infection even if they soaked their feet in Mater cyn- ranqmatefi tirth fungi. , -3 As tips in make your feet mote resistant to the fungi and PI'9V”il .rr;.cks. the study siiltsfsl-S5 wear perforated shoes in hot heather for ventilation to rediict: mni.v.tiire oil the feet: near tottoi sot-ks xxhich will or hniol moisttli'e: gistatic ftmt piixxder: near when shoes or soc . and dry the feet t"arefilll.V- ll W"”1d- laiiibis wool ..l.)e change font- riit . txlfferzlprgcp Wm); ” NM”. skm wndf 'the. recommendation of a royal ' Uh raw Crack m. mack-.315 cornmission which set in H947 to (l ' ' .. rntpstigate the control. manage- -.....,.. . .--c , intent. and ownership of newspap- See No Dent In Europe's Huge T Drug Traffic Rnmtg IRPlliP'5i - Memhrrs oi the 47-rrniznrrnl Inter-ittitinnal Police Oraaiiizntrnri - lii!P1tD0l 339'” ThllF5(la'i that Europe's D061-Vkhl" crime wave is over but that little dent has been made in the ire- mendniis drug sntiiL'Ql'-nil twill?- One liurirl-ed detectives also agreed as iirterpul tmuiid till it viee.k-tom: meeting that English has become the lanszuage of the international crook ellalliini mm in move iieely from c)unt.:.V it eoiintrr. The ri'.'2tllllI'.it.nll aiirroiiiicecl ythzii soon it will operate its Ohll iadln station from Paris. The Interpol chiefs decided try itsk various intbinatirriial bodies to draw uh 8. treaty in he, signed bl" member nations ltllltll will fix the pmvers of irirplriiie Captniiis--s:ml- lar to sea captiniis. The power shniild nmilr, ll'lPt' said, when planes are tr...-ed rlorin in l'Nll0llS vihere there are no F.'f'.ClPlll. pu;ice force and miItJl5El'kl7CS. Ah0lil('l thing they viaiit hotter srsiriit of i-tr-trpcriitioiz iro- tueeii lhll.fR at al.p(l:'lS sing,-e ltihltllbi ariinn is needed to catgh international i-r-mks using iilI't.t'i'-1 mlrtals ii F.iiiopn-iii ilnieriives mid "we are jiisr ,.h(i”.t Litllllll on-k to iioritial after we so ioiis riinrc wtiverrfol-, lnu iii: the Serorrd World War. But ihev admitted the flllll)l'Clti( of sex t-i:rr1es.r.:;wi-.nl1v in Bi'itaiii.Fi'niiei: we.-t r'.o:m;airv and Sc-anrtiiirivia, hmi the-nr .-tti'!lf”i. is 'a A terror"! sairl Miiisrlle. Pitnilqt; In s'.l. rtir iwivuzi-st Eiii'opeair digi tattir it-nun with Lebanon iliii mrvr. so-irro of the lta1'C0liCS. Plan Collil-itleiiilierl Tests of Guided , i Missile in North . "liT'Ul'-il. Will v (told-iieatliri lcsts of Nike. the !llp"l'50llit" nntr. -t.-er-aft tziiirlett nt..ss.le (lPl'PlOp(3d Iii ilw 1' S Arnri u.ll be con. t"lIlP(l near Fort ('hiirrhill. Mari. n Jariiiaiv and Frhiiiaiv, the do. l"il'” tlttmrtiiient nirirnriirrnd Fr-if ti": rriizht. Canadian soldiers 'iainNl during the lalit teir on the vi:-apnn at Port. Riiss. Try. will carry out the tests termed operation '1-imq .y,.,.ii'. it. tins the first 0fll(l2l disclosi me that Canadiari soldiers havi- been trained tn fire the Nrkp. . Thmltllt the rtefeni-a department did not HEY so. it imis learned that M anldiers tnnk A )BtIl"5 training on the W!'HDnn at Fort Elisa. neat" Fl Pnao. . I 1. SPEOIAI: sit: T OF CHOICE. QUALITY PLATE at absuul - use a drying. mildly fuii-. ks get wet,rai'epl-i-yerii ample opportunity to . t'lll7.Fl1 connaiio" BEEF Press Council Gives Report on Newspaper Ethics ; LONDON 4ReuiersleThe preatr roiiiicrl. set up at year ago to judge: newspaper ethics. reported in-drresday that tho main question: with which it had to deal werey alleged invasion of privacy. dis- closure of secrets. reporting of crime and treatment of sex. The council": first annual report shirt that exceedingly few specificl vases of invasion of private life liiril come before it. i Complaints sometimes arose be- cause of the large number of re- porters wishing to question people in the news. The ii9l7i71il SUKXCSWCI t a-tremedy for this. On crime reporting. the report said rnmplaints that some news- yianers nave criminals "a kind of zlairrnr " appeared to be grossly exaggenited. I p p The report criticized officials who believed they could suppress! a document merely by labelling i'. 'iprivaie and confidential." It said: "Many a fussy little jack-in-office woiilit like in set tip his own of- ficial secrets act in this way. Dl'TI' CLEAR "PIvei'.v experienced editor will refuse to be fenced off. It hushing tip a matter is against the public interest, the duty of the press is clear: it must tell the public what is happening.” The report hit out at municipal governments which do too much public business in private ”to the detriment" of the interests of tax- payers. it said: "it is wrong for mem- bcrs of a town council to treat the public affairs entrusted to them as if they were their own private con- cern. and in make arrangements for -the spending of vast amounts of-plibtic--money without giving the have thbir own say in the matter." The press council was set up (ml iers. .. Comprised of editors. publishers and representatives of the National Union of Journalists and the In- stitute of Journalists. itii purpose is to maintain press liberty and pass Judgment on any alleged lapses of ethical standards by newspapers. it has no direct dis- ciplinary powers. ASTOR CHAIRMAN Col. J J. Astor. chairman of the ('rillnCl - rid of The Times -Asaid ltl' a foreword to the annual report' that the first yo-ar'ii work en- rnui-aged the hope that the coun- cil might do much to encouragi- and Justify the confidence and goodwill of the public towards itii press. The report. entitled ”the press and the people.” said: "A free and trusted press is the only ulti- mate safeguard of our democracy. The rights of the individual to ax-. press himself are precisely thou: of his nr-wspaper. If those of the llr'ti'sp:-int?!" are whittled away. tlmse of the individual as surely rlimiriish. . "The ('IIlln('ll therefore holds the view that such disciplinary atithniw riy as it wields should be exer- cisert against those practices. which. by bringing the press into rlisreittile. tliresiten that priceless lihor'ty. and weaken the confidence which shoiild exist between the and the professional journa- lisn" t ' The report said most cases dealt with hy the council had not. been of a seriniis ch:iracter and were the kind that arose through mis-l jiirlgoment or human error. lN('REASlNG nt-zitroustiiitirr l .li-Illlllfilliflfl in today; cnrnplpx -Society carried increasing respond sihilities and ”the printed worrll can be a peculiar irritant" shut rieiispatiers were entitled to vlr tectiori from immoderata cnn., .natiun. , d l'P.""Fi sairl the council had uritltm bqeniaskerl to condemn a re P'”" "'7 ll” Rrounrls that it was in efbarl taste." . it i'ohimcnied: "This is difficult and disrrtiinble ground. Classical .liter.ature is ftill nf reminders that we -have as many thousands of tastes as there are persons living and that what is right and joyous to some is pirisonniis to others." Listing the type of complaints re. i-'NVt't'l by the council. the report Hid some came from those wltli ”rhiirs on their shoulders. axes toi grind, or been in their bonneu." if Zest lor All patnlc-s' Banlboww PRFPIHIED MUSTARD g. fliusicsr CIJRED JUST RIGHT mi 30c lb. -At J. M.'s MEAT MARKET IUILDING 535 The Guardian Monday. October 18. 1954 Drove Off Docli O WADDINGTON, N. Y. (APi-ln- reatintnra think that I mother! distress over the alow proqrua of her two young daughters in achool led her to kill herself and the (ma by driving into the st. Lawrence river. The bodies of Mn. Dorothy Lak- lna. 3:. Betty Guy. 11. and Sylvia. 6. were found Thursday in an auto- mobile hauled trom 20 feet of wa- ter near an old ferry dock where an accidental drop into the X'iVM' appeared unlikely. District Attorney Charles 3 Powers said Friday Mrs. Laklna apparently racea the car off the dock intentionally. The woman's husband. Clarence. said his wife had been deaponderit. 35:3 the newspaper world should findlmrer the In-13' 1.5); of proji-as tn ' uhooi. .-.9159: gig-e.. :4. fr? to-.v.v - .y .t.,,(t of wiry. , WQXV, l i i . Churchill's cousin Publishes New Book On Grandfather By DOROTHY ROE NEW YORK. (AP)-Sir) Winston cburchilra cousin Anita Leslie can in not no bad. living in ii cutie it you know how to trii-iii. Thd wtilowy. blue - eyed Anita blevi intao New York the other day to in on hand for publication of Cllasloilgh. belong: to her father, Sir Shane Leslie, in County Mona- ghian, and the other. Oranmore. in County Oalway, to her-husband. RAISE BEEF CATTLE ”We'i'e ferniing the land like mad," says cousin Anita. "It's the her new book. "The Remarkable only Way anyone can keep up I Mr. Jerome". a story about castle nawadalya. you know. We Ohurchtlra and her own Anreri- raise beef cattle -- and my hun- can grandfather. one of wall band's really quite good at it. now st.reet.' earliest tycoons who iilsn that. I've got. him out of his aub- hm ., niai-ine." tutu for fine horses and' beautiful actresm. i Anita and King met during the Grandpa Jerome we: in finm- war. she drove an ambulance for boyant character. but so :5 hlsitive years. first for the British great-granddaughter Anita. She imyariiiy in Africa. and Egypt. then married to Cmdr. William l-(inv,;.1 for the French. and ended the war who comrniuided a SulJltl1tt'lllC f0t'iWith a victdry luncheon with cou- atx yeara during the Second World sin Winston at Potsdam, Says she: War. She has tvio children. 'l'ai-kii "It. was great fun, you know, Dick. 6, and Leonie, 3: She lil'('5;Wlll('ling up in a blaze of glory. in two Irish castles. one of which.lbecau.ie I hadn't. seen Winston all till I Ql3;lI:fIIF'lQ?&q 4. Km. mi million Canadians begin to drop in to banks, and invest- - nwnt dealers . . . . . and when thousands of Pa) on tlieir fellow employees. .. . to help iitake their future plans come true - and to be - prepared for future needs T - by buying and storing away all the new 9th series Canada Savings Bonds they can manage. Be one of them. -' lsgnqga l t I I VA'llh:lf . ' tvlrillij tilt if I 3-43 .7li?'l.g5 2 ii,.ruuru ; l'.,?'l?'l?'lli7'lf'l?7;l?;':l, ....a.m.., uui-in -an wu. soul at in were putty b . But when he heard a cousin of la wu with the lunch forcea nearby he invited all to lunch, during the Potadnm confer- ence. I yaven peaked at Itailn through a hedge." Anita got the idea of wrlttnt the story of Leonard Jerome while poking about in the attic of her father's cutie. where her grand- mother. Leonie Leslie, had saved and annotated "ainvply tone" of family letters and kecpaakea. in cludtng some or the gown; at that glittering era. FAMILY LOVE LITTIII she worked for three yeau. and produced a biography which ex- plain: a great dent of the vigor and brilliance of moat of the dea- cendanta of Grandpa Jerome. Cousin Anita bu written two other books-”Traln to Nowhere." I book about her war expertenou. and ”Love in a Nutahell." an ce- count of her delayed honeymoon with King in a 31-foot ketch which he built to nail around the world with his bride. "By the time the boat waa built X . vADNtQIII -r HIS is THE DAY when more than a” - roll Savings workers call ' Tlfe new 9tIi action.” Candi I Saviip' "' tiidi, are now available for cult or iuotnlnunta; .Thcy bear interest at the mo of 35179 Old) yyear for 12 years. and .'f.” -. . . are'caehablo 'at.full ifaoe fvalue'(l00 I cents on the dollar) plucginjagou, no any bank. at any limo. xrtuuurriiuruuuuuuuuuuuuu an woof-nu-.1-uulaI.I.IOllI.I'lII&uug couldn't go becetiu 1 tr inure he turned to , mg to have a baby. lo my hua raw; why we named him t.hat'a Scandinavian Ia otter, ,, 'iittlo water wanderer." um LIQUOR SITUATION feinporcnu Federation Annual Meeting. Baptist Hall. Charlottetown. October 26. Speakers: JOHN LINTQN. Canadian Secretory. T KOO! EATON. Maritime Secretary. and otliors. 3 PM. 7:30 P.M. Indlaq when thO III)! wu thru