759 Gumdiali "cum Prlnu Iildw-M lnlnnl uh an Dow" Published every inch -do: umrnnu ll 16) Prince Street- '.Ihn.rlouoIm1n. P. I-2.1.. by uulihumnnn company no. 44 Kill: SL W. Toronto. lluu-nl Office. 22.5 l..niverut.V Tawny Bldg. his A Burnett. Publisher and General Msnaltr Funk Wllklr. lidllur Ilzmbei -.m;uii.tuiuii,x xevtnpapu Publishers Association Member of Tho Canadian Pun Member Audit Bureau ul Circulation: Bunch otficex at bummersute, Montague and Alberta! Authorized as Second Class Mail In the Post Office Deplrlmeal. Oltuwn. by Carrier Charlottetown. summeuidn 615.00 pot in mm. Illlcwbera In P.I:.l 39.00 omu Provinces and 5. 312.00 per Innum .liKk'-I3AY, JULY :iT,Ti95s Dealing With Nasser In-t-sitlciit Nasser's action in Seiz- ing the slit,-I. cillltkl was takcii in tiolztlioii of an iiiteriiatioiutl con- tention unit of the Atiglo-lC;'.)'lllI3n agreement of I9-I5 which lil'i)t'.(I6d for the withdrawal of British troops front the canal zone. It constitutes. in the wot-its of the British Govern- ment's protest, "a serious threat to the freedom of navigation on a waterway of international import- ance." This protest is endorsed by the United States and France, and it is therefore a matter of concern to the United Nations' Securities Council. But prompter action is being taken, and appears to be ab- solutely necessary if any measure of peace in the Middle East is to be maintained. Nasser recently celebrated the fourth anniversary of his revolution under the gloom caused by the withdrawal of IT. S. and British aid for building the Aswan Dam and the disclosure that the Soviet had made no definite offer to help this development and irrigation project. It was his own double dealing that placed him in this predicament, and there was no reason to expect that he would be governed by any scrup- Ies In maintaining himself in power. Four years ago. of course, it seemed that the aim of Nasser's revolution was internal reform. He had destroyed King Farouk's cor- rupt regime snd suppressed the Pan-Arab Moslem Brotherhood. He had announced plans for reclaiming the impoverished peasantry. All signs pointed to the belief that the young Egyptian colonel would fol- low the example of Ataturk, who made Turkey into a modern state through domestic reform. It was this belief that prompted Britain and the United States to come for- ward with grants and a loan from the World Bank. Aside from attempting to court Nasser away from the Soviet bloc, t he two Western democracies sotight to give the Egyptian eco- nomy a lift, which is the basic pur- pose in the distribution of funds to foreign countries by the U. S. and Britain. Egypt desperately needs such aid to keep pace with a grow- ing population that will double in the next 40 years. The Aswan Dam could add two million acres to the six and a half millions now under cultivation, thus providing bread for starved peasants. The Aswan project required the agreement of Uganda, Ethiopia and the Sudan. which also use the waters of the Nile. No such agree- ment has been obtained. It also as- sumed that Egypt would provide 3900 millions as its share of the cost. for bulding the dam. Nasser's arms purchases from Soviet coun- tries, estimated at over 3200 mil- lions, and his mortgaging of the cotton crop for such arms placed serious doubt. on Egypt's, ability to meet its share of the dam's cost; These were important consider- at”nns in deciding the withdrawal of U. S. and Britsh offers of aid. Nasser now has played his big- gest trump card. If he succeeds, as pointed out by an Associated Press analyst in Saturday's Guardian, he may emerge eventually as the mas- ter of the Middle East. If he loses he could wind up in the rubbish heap of former dictators. The Western powers have had to deal with men of this type before. Ex- perience should teach them that swift and effective action is the only language they understand. Invacling Christmas Island British physicists, eng'neers and atom experts are headed for a far- away doughnut of land in the South Pacific. is new stage for nuclear thunder-making. They are on their wsy to Christmas Island, on stoll some 1,200 miles south of Hawaii, where a series of weapons tests will .;,It-e held party mat island llshman, discovered the Island on Christmas Eve, 1777. He named it, and stayed there several days to ob- serve an eclipse of the sun. The Am- erican claim goes back to the 1850's, when an American company work- ed the island's guano deposits. Later, a British organization did the same. The resulting conflict of interests in the island is one of the most amicable international dis- putes in history. The British designated Christ- mas Island part of their Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony. The Ameri- cans occupied ('hristmas and built an airbase there during World War II. For a little thereafter, a group of Englishmen held down one end of the Island and a group of Ameri- cans the other. At sunrise each group would raise its own flag. At sunset they would lower them. In between they would go fishing to- gether. There wasn't much else to do on the island. The Americans have left, but the island is still oc- cupied by the British. Some 100 (ill- bertcse work in the coconut groves which provide Christmas with copra, its one export crop. The physicists will find an is- land of some 200 square miles, one of the largest atolls in the Pacific. It is important as a possible base for airplanes flying between (Tali- fornia and New Zealand or Aus- tralia. It is at about the middle of such a route. Christmas lies just north of the Equator and has a tropical climate, but the surrounding ocean and the trade winds from the east prevent extremes of heat. The tests will take place in a daily temperature usually between 80 and 90 degrees Fahrenheit. Nights are rarely be- low 70 degrees. Constant blowing of the trades provides cooling breezes to offset high humidity. Rainfall averages 30 inches annually, but this may dwindle to eight inches in a dry year. Near Christmas in the Pacific lie Fanning Island, Washington is- land, Jarvis Island and Palmyra Is- land, the last administered from Hawaii as a l,lO0-mile extension of Honolulu's county line. The British have another ('fhrIst- -mas Island, a lonely sentinel in the Indian Ocean 950 miles northwest of Australia and 200 miles south of Java. Peak of a submarine moun- tain, this Christmas is also part of the atomic age. as the western out- post of Australia's Woomera rocket range. EDITORIAL NOTES Great Britain imported less coal In the first six months of .1933 than during the same period last year. Even so, more than 3'; mil- lion tons have been brought, in so far this year. Evidently ”carrying coats to Newcastle" is no longer an absurdity. O I 0 While there has been no official announcement, it is understood that the ceremonial opening of the new Federal Building in Charlottetown is being planned for August Ill. This date was given in an article in Sat- urday's Guardian, which regrettab- ly appeared under a heading carry- ing the erroneous date August 17. I O O A representative of the (Janu- 'dian Association for the Deaf has expressed the opinion that the Hali- fax School for the Deaf is ”a cen- tury behnd the times" in vocational training. If. as he has stated, the school is using printing equipment that wont out of general use many .VWH'F 35:0. his opinon is well found- ed. It is hard to see what advantage that kind of training would be to anybody. O O I Soviet experts now in India to advise the government on the estab- lishment of manufacturing plants are quoted as saying they "have no intention of discussng political questions". Perhaps not; but it would not he surprisng if they were to put in an occasional word for the Soviet practice of increasing heavy production at the expense of things which people need for a better stan- dard of living. An advertisement in a South African paper, placed there by a firm of real estate brokers, asks "Who wants to buy one of the Scy- chelle Islands (not the one to wh'ch Archbishop Makarlos was exiled). containing palm trees laden with fruit, three dwellings, and 3 Chapel " We don't-not for the , snywsy. Incidentally, it can ” iiwv Pwblhly I IN 3 &1l. It C5 AND bin 4, Oak sans ' muse TIIEIO-p voices 3 IENING THE GULF Aiucricaus arc closcr to their Wild West past than is often re- membered in these days of trans- continental airliners and atomic energy. Just ill years have passed since Comanche Chief Quanah Parker led the last nl his people to the surrender that marked the end of Indian wars in the southern plains. Quanahis aged widow still surviv- es. A rcccnt flowcr-scattering cere- mony at the grave of her warrior- husbanri the died in 19111 recalls the turbulent, frontier-taming era that saw the passing of a wild, free way of life. Famous for their fierce indep- endence and courage, the Com- anches were called ”Lords of the South Plains." and "Spartans of the Prairies.” says the National Geographic Society. They were a terror to encmy tribes. and for dec- ades delayed America's westward expansion. RELATED TO SHOSHONES The Com:-inches were originally linked with Shoshonean tribes of the Rocky Mountains" arid Cent- ral Basin. Separating for the oth- ers, they drifted in the early 1700': into the southern plains. where they eventually ranged from Kan- sas and Oklahoma to New Mcxico and 'I'cxas. Among the first Indians to ac- quire horses from the Spaniards. the Comanclics took naturally to the nomadic life of open rolling country. Tribal traits are hinted in such band names as "Those Who Move Oftcn," ”Mcat Eaters," ”Antclopes." and "Raiders." There's a note of community dis- approval In the ”Wandcrers Who Make Bad Camps." The Comanches' prime interests ucre war. hunting and horseman- ship, in all of which they excelled. Thcy accumulated wealth In large collections of horses that they priz- ed highly and tended carefully. The average brave was short and I tiliugging, smnkc-erupting mach- incs of strange invention, ances- tors of both the automobile and the locomotive, founded the "horse- less-carriage" age more than I century and a half ago. Long before that. men had dreaincd of some form of land conveyance not pulled by animals. Sails were tried, and even a wind- mill-powcrcd wagon in 1473; Leo- nardo tin Vinci proposed a spring- uind carriage. and Isaac Newton designed one pushed by a steam jct. But it was it Frcnrh military ciiginccr named Nicholas Cugnnt who built a wagon that run. In 1770. he produced a stesm-pow- cred artillery carrier--the first suc- cessful mechanically propelled ve- hicle in history. NOT ENOUGH STEAM Cugnol's cart. with three wood- en whocls a (I a huge copper boiler suspended out in front, wbizzcd along at a theoretical 114 miles an hour. After 15 minutes. howeu-r. it would run out of steam. One day it upset in I Par- is strccl and caused a panic. Nev- er used to carry sums, it still ex- ists in a Paris Museum. In 1803. a steam carriage ran in the streets of London. With whccls more than 10 feet high. It was pnlcnted by Richard Trevif- hick and Andrrw Vivisn. An ear- licr model. the partners noted for history, "sank into the road." Another burned up. Two years later, In Philadel- phia. the inventor Oliver Evans put s steam-powered dredge on wheels to take it to the Schuyl- kill River for launching. He nam- ed his weird contrsptlon,ln Greek. Orukter Amphibolol, the "Am- phiblous Diggcr." To get enough money to pay off his workmen, he cxlllbllfd it ”moivlng ll'0Illld Centre -square" for hversl dnys while he collected I-cont contri- butlonl from spoctclbrl. I Evans. pioneer in the use of high-preuuro stun. Ins became the flnt Amorbd b Id” 0 Id!- mmunr”zu- Survivor Of Comanche Chief National Geographical Society stocky, and on the ground gave the impression of awkwardness. But. once astride his mount. the Comanche was a model of grace. The headlong rush of war-painted tribesmen. their long black hair streaming in the wind as they charged across the plains on high- spirited horses. was ii sight that lingered in many a pioneers mem- ory. LIFE WAS GOOD Comanche camps. quickly pitch- ed and dismantled. held well-built tepees that were snug in winter and cool in summer. The scattered bands sheltered in thickets along stream beds, in canyons and ar- royos. When rains came. even the desert bloomed. Wild fruits, Ler- ries. nuts. and root. plants were plentiful. The horses grazed on succulent prairie grasses. The Comanche: hunted elk, deer and antelope. as well as smaller game. But their main source of food. shelter and clothing was the buffalo. a challenge alike to brav- ery nnd love of sport. Racing their highly trained horses beside the pounding. dust-enveloped herds, they skillfully picked off their quarry with arrows and lsnces. Afterward. the women did the drudgery of butchering. Massacre of the buffalo herds and ever-increasing pioneer pres- sures brought want and wars that spelled the end of plains life as the Comanchcs knew it. In June, I875. Quanah Parker. half-white son of a Comanche chief. and his hungry hold-out band of Antelope: gnve themselves up to the military auth- orities at Fort. Sill in southwest Oklahoma. Although formidable, the Com- anche tribe was never numerous. By conservative estimate there were probably 20.000 in I300. A few years after their surrender to reservation limitations there were less than 1,400. Today the Com- nnches. who live mostly In Oklah- oma. number about 2,700. Early Steam Carriages Notional Geographic Society For in century. the steam car led the field. RED FLAG LAW England had steam passenger coaches running on regular n('IlCdllICI until outrageous toIls-- and a law that required a man on horseback to ride ahead wav- ing a red flag--forced them out of business. In New York. Richard Dudgeon built a ten-passenger road loco- motive in 1568. Ten years later steam carriages set out from Green Bay toward Madison. Wis- consin. In the first automobile race. The winner took a week to cover the 2lo-mile course; It ov- ersged six mph. In 1386, Ransom I-2. Olds pro- duced : coal-fired steam tricycle in Lansing, Michigan (and went on to build his "Merry Oldsmob- lles"I. Even in I902 more than half the motor vehicle! register- ed in New York State were steam driven. and It was at smiley Siobmor that held the world's lnnd-speed record from 1906 to 1921--l21.s7 m.p.lt. at Dayton: Beach. by the zenith of the steam car. the gasoline buggy had long since been born. Etienne Lenoir suc- cessfully run I as wagon in France in 1863. when Abraham Lincoln was In the Wlilu noun, Siefizrled Marcus built a car in Vienna a few years later. lull In that both Karl Ben: and Gom- iried Daimler built their first suc- cessful ours. The usoliuanzine 8!? had arrived. ASK CUT MEANS TIIT Moosii: JAW, Silk. tCP) - -rn. Canadian Federation of the Blind will press for abolition of he means test and will all the fad- BENEATH NIAGARA FALLS The cavern hewn beneath the falls in gray And damp in constant twilight with the roar ()f rushinlzwaler. We must stay TIO TIIOTE In this fantastic grotto. Feel the spray Against your cheek. Your eyes are turned away . From me to see the hcaten waters pour Across the open window. I implore You . . . come! This power fright- ens me today. 4 For you are absent when you stand entranced By witching waterfalls, Niagara's might That catches you with fingers lac- ed in mist Remember me, my love! We two rnmanccd And -married in a sweet enchanted night . . . Then leave these fails! I am the one you kissed. -Mildred Fielder in the New York Times The Age Old Story I will go hclore thee. and make the crooked places straight- .. .. PUBLIC FORUM Iill column to open to uni Mlrub lion by rurrnipnndonu of . tlonl of interest. The Guardian does not Iooouully endono Iho oplnlon ll correspondents. WEST RIVER CAFSICWAY Sir,-I-In your issue of the lilth it is suggested that any objections to the West River causeway should be registered before July 23rd,, just four days of grace. What is wrong? There was no such sug- gestion when this ill-fated project was started over it year ago. The Government must now have little faith in this construction through the deepened hold on the West River. when It now asks for ob- jections. As everyone knows, in- cluding the Minister of Public Works. objcclions have been made already and plenty of them to the authorities and the sitting member for the District. If the Department wishes to know what the people who are most interested think, why not call a public meet- ing at Alton Hall (and have the Minister and Mr. Kllson attend. and have cveryonc invited. not just a few party lcadr-rs. There has been a lot of objection to the present projcct. and u lot of changed Ideas today in this section. If the people throughout this dist- rlct favor an improved mad first- and there is no doubt about f.hat-- then the road project should take grecedcnce over A causeway or ridge. which can be attended to later. Fifty bridges ncross the riv- er will not solve the transport- ation problem. A good road will provide A prompt rellof. If the government wishes to hear more objections. let them call A general meeting but don't go ahead with some-thin" that will cost a huge amount of money. thnt when provi- dod will he of doubtful value II lsolving an urgent travelling prob- em. . I am. Slr, etc . INT iRI'1STED MAXIMS The best vny out of n dllncnlty ls through it. i CADETB WATCH ARMY 80!-EST. Germany 'CP)'l'-waive teen - age Canadian rnsrksmen watched with professional interest Thursday no member: of the 2nd Canadian Army Brigade In Ger- many carried out jmctlce mon- oeuvres. Tho youths on members ml sovernmeni for an increase of the Canadian A , cadet tiflc 0' 130 Nile NIH Ionian from" team which cam in the an- 840toO0OomoIth.tIwuds- lmllllslcynhooth. lnnl eluted at the I notional wsoh.1'boy bro ' to purl convention that has 'l'Inm- their lam-my home An. 8. Tbs Ianbeleutos tbonisns udotsfronimsnyppts-,cooI autumn ,. -an-,dI.snlnchumi . -R tailed that Q . Q Inlet. kliidcd I I Medically ” Speaking N 3!IarInnN.l T Il.D.I gym Gulfdi:lT NOTES T BY THE WAY "T DO YOU GET IIEASICKY Me You Pllnnlnx I nu voyage or lake excursion this vacation season? Then. let me give you n little advice on how to avoid ses- slckness. ,. If you are about 25 or so ybur chances of avoiding motion sick- ness while traveling on- water are much better than they are for others, either younger or older. For example, studies show that Z)-year-olds generally become I ill more easily than those five years their senior. - MINIMIZE FEELING Whatever your age. try to get a cabin amidships. This will help minimize the feeling of motion. Don't read a lot while aboard ship. at least not until after youtve developed your "sen legs.” And don't watch the horizon. In fact, during the first day or so on the water eat only the sim- plesl of foods It you have reason to suspect you might fall victim to seasickness. These foods. and fluids, too, should be taken at fre- quent intervals in small amounts. MAKES YOU MISERABLE Prolonged motion sickness rar- cly. if ever. is fatal. But it can make you feel pretty miserable. Furthermore, the condition can become quite alarming. You may become dehydrated. lose a lot of weight, not feel like eating any- thing and be very depressed. But seasicknes needn't. worry the modern day traveler much with all the new antimotion ill- ness drugs we have at hand. By taking one of these drugs and by following the advice I've listed above, even those of you who have always been susceptible to motion sickness probably will get along pretty well. THREE HELPFUL DRUGS As for the drugs themselves. re- cent tests conducted on service- men and reported In the Journal of the American Medical Associa- tion indicate that Bonamine. Phe- nergan and Marezine were the most. succemful when given three times a day. The effects of Bon- amine lasted longer than the oth- ers. the report states. Meanwhile, other new drugs are being tested, too. Among these are Vlbazine. UCB 158. Cogentin sud Sandosterie. 'With a few commonsense pre- cautions. you can make just smut any sea voyage an enjoyable one. QUESTION AD ANSWER T.W.: My girl. 7. is 10 pounds overweight. is it advisable to put such a young child on a diet'?. .. Answer: It is not advisable for children to reduce until they have reached their full growth. How- ever. the diet should contain an abundance of fruits. vegetables and milk. with smaller amounts of starches and sugars. OUR YESTERDAY5 From The Guardian Files 25 YEARS AGO (July 30, I931) The Provincial Boy Scout camp. which is being held on the farm of Mr. Allison MacMillnn, Fair- view. is now in full swing. The boys are being instructed in the various tests leading up to their Second (less badge. which is hop- ed all will have before leaving camp. The wet weather has made the haying season quite late for our farnu-rs. There seems to be quite a heavy field of hay. TEN YEARS AGO (July 30. 1946) For the first time in the history of the Province. blueberries in commercial quantities will be flown to New York within the next few days. The Dominion Bureau of Statist- ics givcs the following Prince Ed- ward Island returns for the third quarter of 1945: Live births. 578: still births. I4; marriages, 205. The annual celebration of the feast of St. Anne was held at Len- nox Island on Sunday with fine summer weather and a large crowd in attendance. This was the fiftictli anniversary of the estab- lishmcnl. of a church on the Island. only CBS television Iias lit-fl for ear and eye human mmusnmo F9,-127.”: . Colin"!!! the women at church does not prove that women need felllloii four times so much as men do. - Brandon Sun. "9" llfllle It is that many pie who stand up Vljurougly for ?-helr rights lie down deplonbly on their duties. -- oshsws Times- Gazette. We are told the chance: against being struck by lightning ug 000 to one. That's just dandy for the 364.909. but small consolation for the Person who it hit. -. oz- tawn Journal. Reports from Edmonton that th rats are being beaten buck across Alberta's Eastern borders should be heartening news for all citizens of the province. city-dwellers and farmers alike. Latest word is that fewer than 100 colonies are believ- ed to be in Alberta at present com- pared to more than 500 In 1952. - Calgary Alberton. , Education cannot be postponed to some future and more conven- ient lime. Learning, on all levels. must be 111345 available to the not- ionts youth from five years of age onward. and the necessary expend- iture has priority over all other government costs except for the maintenance of law and order. The Farmer's Advocate Motorists who knock down a tree in Preston must replace it with in tree of similar size and type. The park: board says fifteen map- les in half a mile of boulevard have been destroyed in this why. The council has ordered its con- stnbulnry to report names and Id- 'dosscs of dnyone damaging 1 tree. This is a sensible provision. Trees are hard enough to get and to grow. Preston's plan might well be copied by other places. - Lon- don Free Press. The city of ltnthrl. On . centre of Shakespeare” c:T:;::: list voted down a plan to spend sso.ooo on n ll-mom addition in its high school and some disagm. sole conclusions are being drawn -Ottawa Journal t Apropos of foul service. s um in Kelghley. Yorkshire. Ehglud advertises "Fresh eggs hid Wm; .you wait." That might call for , lot of patience, both on the pm of the customer and the hen, St. Thomas Tlmes-Journsl . There is no need of to tell the motorist. Ilcl?:lIlemll?l boundary lies between Manltob: and Ontario. The tires and spring 90' his car inform him eloquenus whether he is going into Oman: or coming back into Manitoba 1,, short. the Ontario highway '5," face In sood; the Manitoba pavi ' 1! Door. - Winnipeg Trihung, There are far too manv Vic, Nelly: In public life in Caliarla .. people who hive no salt. in them and who aim their utterance at m,' ears of old ladies exclusively. We do not call for foul language in the House of Commons. but we do long for men who can use the wholg glorious vocabulary of the Eng- lish tongue with grace, pfecjgjon and effect. - Peterborough Exam- inc. Fish and wildlife authorities in Canada will be watching the sum of legislation approved bv the United States Congress this year One bill invites wild ducks to run" Uncle Sam eat up his Surplug grain. Grain will be scattered IIOIIK migratory routes in an at. tempt to lure migrating birds from the farmers' fields. Another bill declared all-out war on the so. lamprey which is destroying com. merclal fishing in the Grant Lakes. - Sudbury Star. MR. OTTO CURTIS, GINNING JULY 25th. Mr. Curtis will cover When your hogs are Otto Curtis, Bedeque, Tuesday night. GRAFTON ST. ATTENTION HOG GROWERS COLLECTING HOGS FOR CANADA PACKERS, CHARLOTPEFOWN, EVERY WEDNESDAY, BE- Lower Bedeque, Fernwood, Chelton, Borden, Carle- ton, Augustlno Cove, Albany, North Tryon. phone 22-31, not later than Collect calls will be accepted. CANADA PACKERS LTD. BEDEQUE, WILL BE the following distrlct.s:- ready list them with Mr. OWN early date. Office: Parkdale School. Phone 4208. TAXES - SCHOOL UNIT NO. I All unpaid taxes in School Unit No. 1 are over- due and payable immediately. The list of delinquent ratepayers is now prepared for publication at an The Minister of Education has decreed that judgment will be taken on all properties where set- tlement is not made in full. GORDON M. RICE. Secretary. flash for . do-it-yourself projects When you need extra money for materials to complete I home project. ,bon-ow with con1idenoo-fion-l-IFC- CIlIl.dl'I first and foremost consumer bonnet company. LounsrroipS50tos1tXX)srenudqinoncdsy,inpnvscy. Repayment plans srruigod to fit your income. (Louis also made to pay bills, acuonnl sxpsnses, or any good reason.) Phone or come in for friendly. helpful service. '56.. .. IAIIII VIII! Inn uuinsv may no can mnsm nous Mun ti sous ' II nus g I - nus , the your to lixl