I11 cl Tia It luau Audi Bureau :1 Clmliaunu T &hu It la-parade. luuuuo and Albert. AjhiaaIoaaaCu.aIaallbytnPoaoIIiu "III druged memory is weaker than th weakest Ink." PAGI 4 THERSDA lncllgenous Churches For seine time. I)l'(lli'Sliillt Churches with lllissiolial-y bases ili Asia have been trallsli-l'l'illg.: their properties and leulli-r.-liip to local groups, a policy which is evpcilielit If they hope to continue t.hcir in- fluence alnid (I rl.-illg tide ol na- y . tlonali.-nl. ti ; The latest tl.'mslel' of t'tlllSllIl'l'- , able size was llliid” lly the Presby- tl - terian ('lil.lrch ill the l'.S..k. It gave I away its entire lnlx-iollllry field in Thailand, where lnls.-loll;ll'ics have I I been at work for lilo years. Tile l property. ('0IlalSllIlL' of iliilri-lies, ., medical and llgriclillllrlll scliools. will .' I henceforth lw colltrollvd lly the (Thurcll of L'llri-I in Tlillilaliil. a llllltin of wycizll l'livle-t;lnt llodic-i. The parent ('lllll'l-ll. llowexev. wtll continue to one the fluid K.'lT0,l)(l0 l annually, the zlmollnt it has been ill ' spending on llli-.-l-llllllgv work in t I Thailand. This will nlciui that fewer missiollai'le- will he golllg trom the kVe.st to Tliallulld. Indeed. Ill recent 3-(-am mis-,sioll.lrlln- lime llccii lzttlllii from Tliailzlnd to other Asiatic coun- tries. Some of tllelu have even come to tile L'nited States; a few are serv- .. t log on lnis.-'lollal'y Il()f1l'(lS in the parent ('hllrcll. The Pl-eslwlol-izlll ('lllll1'll seems to have talicll the livid allttlftfl the Prntnslalll dellolnnlations ill this policy of trail-fcl-rill: l'cspolislllilit.V to indigenous ('lllil'clles. Last year three nlissiolls in India lleczune part of the l'nlIcd Cliurcli of Nortliern India: and mi.-siolls ill Japan. the Philippines and ('lllll' were trans- ferred soon after World War Two. Another field. that in the French C.-lmel-oolls, will pass into the ban-'13 of the local Church sulnetinle this fall. Tllp ltolnan (';ltllollc (tlillrch has always set as its goal the building of native lllcl'arl-liles in the mission field, l'c.wl'llllg. ot the lmr portallt link with tile Holy See. As for the Aliglli-all Cliilrclt. llicludilig the Pl'(llt'Sllilll I-.'p'l.-ropzll Chilrch in the Iiilited States. the (illllrttllfts in (tllina and Jalliui have been. for all practical pl.ll'po.-.cs. auluiiolnous for several years. ('flllltSP. Statistics In Religion IVli'rlteier the l'ft.twfllI.S for if and whatever may be its significance on the life of tile respective countries, there is nlorc visible ililel'est in or- ganiI.ed relilzion in the United States than Ill Brit.lill. This the main concliislon l't'.'lt3lll”l ill (I slirvcy coll- du('IQ!(1 jllinilc ii; the Anlcriclln Iri- gtitute of ltllllllc Opinion and the British Institute of Public Upillion. Following are some of the stu- tlstics glllliered in the survey: (in any given Sllllday nxorning in the early months of this yftillt. On R pmpol'tion:ll Iigluix there were more than three ti-nos as many people in chll--l-ll in the l'nite4l States as tlleie were ill liritaill. Si per cent of American adults attend church mole or less l'el:lll;lrly. compared with only 1 I per cent ill Piritaill. Incident! ally, the American figure is the highest ever reported by the tn- ltltute. The reverse is true in Brit- ain. where I in every 4 admitted that he usrvl to go to ebllrcll more frequently than he does now. Near- ly 4 out of 10 said that they "hardly over" attend church. To the question: "Should the Church express Itself boldly on social an political matters?" 36 per cent d Britons and 47 per cent of Amer- kg. add "yes" Answering the "Do you think that a per- ggn an be a Christian even if he WI believe that every word of X-New Testament is true?" 79 per I Alnertcana and 66 per cent kill: said they thought so. In iimlrlea a majority said they h U0 after death; but al- as many Britons as either refuted the Idea hiennn about It. A ma- Alltorlcaoa believes "there . ll : a mllorlty of Human Bohemian:-itunnld i.l is they regarded religion as "out of date." Only 7 per cent of Americans subscribed to that view. Finally-and perhaps most sur- prising of all-81 per cent of Amer- icans interviewed said that they be- lieve religion can find the solution to most of today's problems, while in Britain more people thillk that politics wields a greater influence on the way people live than does organized religion. A Good Suggestion Both labour unions and industry, the two arbiters of 20th century economy. realize the dallgcrs of in- flation. but hitherto neither side ii is been willing to take serious and meaningful steps to l'()lilIliIl them. The pattern hzls hcl-ll lllttltttilsit in wages followed by ill:-l'ell.-e in pl-in-s followed by incre.lse in llzlucs fol- lowed by ilicrease in prices. 'l'll;lt, stripped of lC('IIlIl('l'll plllulsoologv, which doesn't add ullylllilll: in it. is what inflation means: and sci-lnilluly there is no end to it. At lea-t. there won't be any end it until sill-It times as the two E.ll'l'ill folre.-' in economic affairs czln join hilnds to apply the curhs. It! It is, therelole. In-.lrtc-linL' to bear that Till". Walter ll. lTl'lllllel'. head of the poucrllil l'llltcd Allin Workers I'nion. has nlade all over- ture to the automolllle illdii-lry in an effort to iillllzc ii l'dllL'llIll" be- ginning ill the fight acllill-t inll;ltioll. Ills suggesllrlll llI:Il llll' lil.'i,ltll' companies cut prices on their ltlivs models In all aycrllw of at l--ll-t 3100 a car. In retllrn. the l'..-NW. would modify its new ('(lllll'5lI'l de- mands dolvllwards when they mine up for review next year. Iilr. Reli- ther calls this ”a positive and prac- tical proposal for makilit: 9" ttllttl” tlve beginning in stopping and re- versing the inflationary trend." He says it is based on ”an old maxim in collective Italflillllllll that you cannot draw water from a stone." it is. of course. true that one industrv and one ilnion cannot by themselves remove the d:lllL'Iti'S Ol inflation. or even lfllPt"lt' lllttlf l"'”' gress, by a stroke of the pell. But it would be. as Iilr. Pu-lltllcr says. a beginning: and their has to he a beginning before pl'ogl'c-'s ("rill lit? expected. Alid it may he tllzlt other industries and nlller unions would feel impelled to follow suit. At any rate, it sounds like a good sill-'.Rt'r tion. EDITORIAL NOTES Canadian cheddar is still ahead of its competitors in liritllin. sellillz fnr 4.1.02 per Illll pounds, as colli- pared with 33,111) for its iicurcst rival. Scotch cheddar. I I I Although the sale of lll;lrl.:llrillc is prohibited in a tell :ll'PHb ttl Canada. its marvllllli-lllre is big lithi- ness. Last year imports of xczzctiilllo oils for the purpose were valued at nearly 3189': million. U U U It seems likely that ill the neu- future the l'nited States will with- draw some of its forces from toreilzii bases. This is Indicated in a state- ment issued by Cenerlll TwlliillL'.. the new chairman of the joint cllil-ls of staff. at his first news collferolll-l-. "Our forces were never illtl-lldoli to be abroad indefinitely he Hlltl. U U I ()fn(-talg nf A V. Ilnrt l.td.. the firm which is eager to tnlic oVl'l' control of the Dominion Steel and Coal (inrporntion. have denied that the company's interests in other industries might be deterimelltnl in the interests of lY)S(Y). That may be. But evidently the New Scot!-1 Government and Klayors of citivs where DOSH) it tlte chief sollrcc of employment and, consellll-ntly. of economic strength. would like some- thing more tangible than a simple declaration of good intentions. And who can blame them? I O I According to a member of the 1'3. House of Representatives Ap- propriations Committee. only 16 of the 86 countries of the world are. not getting American financial aid in one form or another. That is one reason. doubtless. Why the Picni- dent'a financial estimates in that field are reduced by the iionlzre-'8 at every opportunity. nightly or vlmngiy, the feeling is growing unoiu Americans that they are he- fits Imiln-rd upon. especially by nov- ernmenta which have no intention M taklrj a firm stand with the free world It the cold war. CARRYING ON Nclsser ls Squeezed William 2. Ryan, Flelllx lll Sll-la appear to hale flt'.'Ill ll Ill-ilvy blow to liigyplls I'l'(txllIf'IIl has-l-ii. Indications are that he le helm: pushed into an llill-ollliomlllle .- q u c e z e w lili-ll eveliluillly iilay force Iiim to clloi-so llclwl-en fllll collaboration wllll llie Sol Itil bloc or reconcilia- lion with the West. Sula: current army shakcup, llllII('illlIIL! an ever closer align- nll'llI of l)l'lIllHM'Il.l with Moscow. ti-lids lo sllailcr .Vasscr's hopes ol pi-lwlllllling Arab leaders of ihe Iliddlc East to deal as a single bloc wllli the West. The Illl.'Il colnmand of Syrian army has Ilf'('I1 taken over by Afif Hliry. pronloted by presidential di-cree lI'ltflI llclltcnanl-colonel to comlliilnder-in-cliicf and chief of stuff He is known throughlnli ilic 'tlldllli- llzlsl as. at the least. an extreme leftist. CAIRO TRICATMI-ZNT TERSF. Tlli-re have been A number if llldll-atlolls that Nasser is greatly lIlxIlII'I)('(I. One of these lilnts ls Ill lIII' ireutlnenl by the controlled I-I;-yptiaui press of recent Syrian l't'IIlltlflIl(' nclzlltiaiions In Moscow. 1 The (talro press gave only fact- llal. l('l'sE (';llrn's propaganda radii: went all-olll to hack Syria's charges of an American plot against the Da- musciis regime. Arab murcgx say Nasser. in- deed. Illl! been doing all in IIH power to shore up the conserva- Ilie ftopllllsis in Syria. They say II was has-arr ullo persuaded Prcsldcni Sliukri Kuwatly nut to rcsl-.:il last time the leftists moved III on army control. He is said to tune llrlzcd KIIWEIIX to stay as a llll-ails of b.1rl'lnL' the extreme ll-ll-sis from full power. 'l'hr.-i- sollrres say there It little doubt that Col. Abdul Hamid Ser- cnveralzc, although i Associated Press ral Young chief of Syria's army intelligence. remains the strong luau in Syria behind the 1-ct-lies. Illit they look ilpon Bizry as dan- gerous. A Lebanese by birth. Hizry remained in Syria afier. serving w i t h French colonial l troops before the war. There is llnln e expectation l among Arab sources that event- ually the defence minlsler. Kha- led Azem. will emerge as presi- dent in place of Kliwatly. and that rm, mu” month, and yen" M Altram Ila u r a n i will becilnle ; premier in place of Sabrl Assall. ll And yet 1,, is "M lunely go, he Ilauranl is head of the leftist; Baalh party which supports Scr- rai. Mll.l.l0NAIRf-I I.EFTIS'l' Azcln is a mullimllliollalrc lzlnd- ' owner in the old fclulnl style. pcr- l ham me mlmnt I" St"'”'i "9 ll" He does not miss the people of ii I political ambitions. Buck from his . l Moscow negotiations, he I hailed Smlci help as a means of making the country strong. "I has invited in Soviet experts and it-'”l'"lf'tt'"5 tilt" ”'tl”"tlbl-V it'll I Scanning at night. the moon and I silpervise it iich lhinlzs as the. building of roads. railways and sea and air transport facilities. in addition to other projects. ”The Soviet Union has given us political sllpport and iulpplied us with arms which we were unable, l to ohlaln other than from the Sov- iet union.” An-in said in III! for- . mill rcporl. , Thai. more than anything else. I seemed to be Ille key lo the grow- ing Soviet intlucnce in Syria. which some fear eventually will Mrlm” M w'd"”d"y hi" "i 4 permit the Soviet Union to em- ; ergo as a Nledllrrrancilln power. Union seeks more concrete forms of collaboration from Nasser. to an extent which the I-Zgyptlan leader doe; not ncem willlna in i go. White Russiclns In China David Iluham. Canadian Prea- Al'Iltlll;1II they are from the slime colllllry. living together Ill 3! lorellzll land. yet they pass in llIl' slrltcls with never a word. 'l'lley -peak the same lanzualicw bill when they meet there In no lllrkrr of recognition. Tlirv and lllc Ilcrl liusslans of llarbln, in lied ('hlna'n far northeast. Itllo are the Red Rilsslans? They are the Soviet technicians Il4'Il1IlIl! tllc ("hint-se rlln lbcir fac- lorlcs and train their industrial workers The hotels and official places here are full of them. Who are the White Rllssians” They are the pathetic remnant of a once prilspcrnll: colony of I30,- am. who first settled here in rxarisl days. and whose numbers were later replenished bv refil- ners from the lillsclail rcvolillion. ll.-null! tied from one Commun- ist rrlolllimn. they follnd them- llrd from Red Ruuia in l9l7. in will lleri cllina submerged them. Eiellwherc in city. -till Russian In its architec- ture and in many of its character- istics one new three relics of I Iorlnel- day. They are poorly dressed and most of them are un- employed. They have little new to do but eke out their live; and dream about the past. NIMIIEIS DWINDLI Their nlimhor! hlvl OWIIIIGI our the year: and today Iona than 7.000 remain of the vast tol- nny of former timer. Many have drparlpd ln recent year: and, many more have Invllotl to lo. Red cilmll hail no use for them and makes no objection to their going. A -nolzenmaa for the central f'ftIm('lI lit the soviet Oveneaa Ao- mcmlon la llarlla odd that of about 151m Rauiaaa living in Harbin Ia ICC. 5.5 I8 re- turned to the sou-t Union at the arc the while Rllsslllnsl this strange 1 I said there was extreme pressure on White Iillsslanx from the So- vicl colislllate in llmhin to get them to go to the Soviet Union. There are regular services of the Greek Orthodox t'hurch l Ifarbin. but no religious instruc- tion in the schools fnr lilislilan 1 children. Russian priests remain ' but their chief is a Chinese. They function under the bureau of re- ligious nffalrll in Peiping. 1 Better System i Winnipeg Free Press Mr. llarkness. I later of Agriculture. wrote re- ccntly to MP3 of all parties ask- lnlz llu-m tn ulbmtt a hit of dlns tuvr palm-d with very Ill- namcs of people who. they think. I regardless of politics. l Some folks mil.'ht say. I Thpai sh wn h"l For with To d" "m. hnwmmn H" Smm thers Flying Circus of Toronto in later had gone to let a sick now the Ming V.-.,..l,g entered for Inspection this year lmlike Rood Inspector: ( under. who: cliulilfed In another. Theyj Pr-irle F-rm Asusliincct. AP- - , poinlmenls will be made on the l balls of these list: PFAA appointments were on- MPa and defeated Liberal cand- ldatea. who often ..- tbeir own siipvoriern for PFAA bba. The new approach reflect: a falihoatlie partofibe0ovora- meal in the fairness and Iain- rtty of the new member: of Far- I llament. The Government deserves cred-I V9t"l0tt 0' "IQ Cnnadtnn Feder- ; It for this move. While the when , nttttt "0"?! Ind School Assoc- ”, w", in p,,..-,,. ,, 0""... 2 lailons who met in annual can- t donhedly mnu,m.,d by um"! vlllc paid a visit to the prov. .aEf; . l7oe&&-vwzz LlGlITll0l'Sl-'. KEEPER This ll,'!lIlI10llsE keeper is I lone- ly man. left here t all by himself. I Tending his llglil according to I p you plan U, ",9. Help mu you. ll ll never varies; on a rocky clf aolitudc. knows Companionship with which lie is enducd. wt-Ilsprlng tllat lllroligholll each moment flows. Brlnglllli lilm happiness deep content A and the ocean frlcndly hours are spenl. Watching the wales that weiir I IIIOMY crown. lliarll on high. Eternal majesty of sea and sky. -IJIIJIIP Darlgv in The Christian Science Monitor OUR YESTERDAYS 'l'WE.V'l'Y-FlI'E YEARS AGO (August 22. 19.17! The management of the Great Air Meet to be held at L'plun celled word closing the ciuitract with the celebrated Lclivens Bro- with a personnel of seven. and four aircraft. Besides lhl! group- there will also be several other outstanding performers. This first air meet at Upton Airport iii expected to draw a large crowd to watch the lvillora per- form. The light llouse at the East end of Summerslde was almost destroyed by fire last evening and only the alertness of several children playing In the vicinity prevented the loss. .'tIr. Fred Muttart, keeper of lhe light. had lit the lamp and a short time frlcnd. in ii abort time the chil- dren noticed smoke coming from the top of the lighthouse and the fire department was notified. The blaze was quickly extingui- shad. TEN YEARS AGO (Annual 21. I947) The fint inspection of potato fields entered for seed certifica- tion is completed, and the Ipecllan service Ttporu that to date most Cobblers and Katali- tle disease. The total acreage 32.750. in only slightly less than that of Int vcar. About 70 delegates lo the roll- vention during the week at sack- lnt.-.a yesterday. The visitors were '9 0! Premier J. Walter Jones and Mr. L. VI. Maw, zzvlaclal Director of liduca. l MAXIMS tr 5?! . i ll ii.-E; 3; is 53 is In- K ltlillltltt tlilllglgi II! t :3 iiigglglg 535' 31153 Air Travel For Ailing Person: I; flu-an N. luduea. nu). Even though you an under I doctors care. it may be perfect- ly all rialn for you to trlvtl by air A: a matter of fact. it's eul- Iiated that about LIIIMII of the M..'lfIJ.tlIl passengers flown by until I; scheduled United States airlines in a single 12-month per- The types of ailment: ranged In severity from the common cold to advanced stages of can- cer. While there are some impor- tant exceptions - many of which we have discussed in an earlier column -- the great majority or ambulatory patients can fly with no ill effects. Many patients may find air travel the most convenient, com- fortable and least fatiizulng way to get about. This may be a deter- mining factor when a patient is going somewhere for rest and convalescelice. ALLER(ll(' AND SENSITIVE If you're allergic and senslllv. to airborne allergen.-. you'll pro bably find relief while flying be- cause of the absence of cxclianls. Patients in sluius asilimalicub probably had better llfll fly. How'- ever. flying ilslliilly lb all right. for those with iiilIl1 asthma if they travel helwecn attacks. Hut occaslollzllly all asthmatics may have an altack brought on by tension created by any kindt of travel. l A word of ciiiitiuli is in order" for patients with coloslnnllcs who: ll 1. plan in fly. Dllriiii: ascent you will find lIlt' cillllslollly bag tends to fill I'2Il)lfII) lleul-r IN' sure tot empty it jllsi before departure lime. l BODY CAVITII-ZS l As I plane asi-ends. the gases. In closed body callllcs expand because of decreased aliiio.spher- ic pressure. l The expansion of these cases may Pn(IlllIL1Dl" anyone with up-l pcndlclils flI' deeply croilcd pep-l tic ulcers or sollle other serious weakness of the gastrolillestinal wall. l by the noisy devlcea of an Oil- tnrio farmer to Iiup them away from his 1.500 turkeys. Al uln- down the turkey: settle down for the night to the strain: of rock 'n” roll. Ilnglnj commercial! and the latest new: and Ivaathar re- ports. The farmer bad that ra- dios and live loudspeaker: Insul- lod on Illl turkey farm. By day- llzbi the set in Iilent. but what: dusk comes and the foxes start roaming. the radio: atari blar- lug. The foxes keep away from human sounds. unable to distill- guish between what in broadcast and what II on the wot.-Capo Breton Record Inoaqulto breedlnx. la making everyone"; life nut.-p. lhla.-Oltawa Citizen A -an who in drive: all Ill. Iomoblle for many years mm. out caualu an accident or man; Involved in a serious B('tllll'IIl III II IIIIICII FIEIII. to be plllud of bin achievement as llio.,;lt II: had written I book or ltllil. posed a prize-w-inning Dtwlll ll doe: not just. happen ihal shill! driven have accidents and tilt: on do not. There in Sullle rrg lnvolvad, of course. but II I. Ialhly not the factor wllil-ll (ll. vlden them. The quality III Ev driving in the real dIIIeX'k'llll - . Cape Breton Post CASH PRICE ONLY Attention Poultrymen SPECIAL-FOR ONE WEEK ONLY AUGUST Had to AUGUST zsrll Inclusive Purina Check-R-Mix 1696- Laying Mash 83.00 per ewt. Purina Check-R-Mix Fattenlng Mash 88.15 po In a combination of five bag lots, or over. DILLON 8: SPILLETT LIMITED, cnammnmwu. nu. rnrt. TELEPHONE 3626 In sllori. if you are In (If)llI)I.l ask your doctor whether you can fly. And it he's not sure, or you cant locate him. cllel-Ii with the. medical dlr('('tiIr of the airline. expert guidance. QUESTION AN!) ANSWER .l.ll- What foods should one wllh hardening of the arteries a. void? Answer: There is no one dell ltoilte food which would be avoid-' However. it is believed by llomci authorities that the restriction of certain foods high in cl1llles.l tcrol or fat is of aid in preventingl the progress of hardening of tliei arteries. The Age Old Story In qillctncu and In i-mlfldcacct ahll be your strength. i Charlottetown, X. XI. XII. for acadamle excellent opportunity to obtain ” ora. O0 expert instruction at lnlnlmiiin coat. l-nation addreu your inquiry to: A. L. lllibley, B.A.. Pro. clpal . ENROLL NOW I MARITIME CORRESPONDENCE ' COLLEGE Post Offloa Box 403 Maritime Om-rupondenca Collage will be receiving ap- plications until Aiuuat 80 It: bpipe study courses lll oli..Ill - all phases of COMMERCIAL EDUCATION. Single isillijclr are permlted In all gradaa. Itlldoain my write Ix-(ll-natlwr not by tha Atlantic Pi-ovfncaa' Examining Board. This is all MHERCIAL DIPLOMA. lvln my P. 13.1 and complain courses in GRADE XII tJun. Malrll For completa Inlw INROLL NOW I Week - and Super - Specials BIAIICOIII EGGS FIIEMI : m T - i - - - GRADE 'tA" FRI-ZSII CAPON ROAST BEEF Sll0lTl.l) I'll! STEER LB. 39c DEVON SLICED GRADE "I" GRADE "A" FRESH LB. 73: 39c Ll. D01. 49:: FOWL 35c Ll ALL? I-IERRING HAMliuiio ISLAND CHEESE lb. 49: LOBSTER! IADDOCK IIADDOCK FILLETS T IIBII FROZEN SCALLOPS T If STICKS OIIILLED SMOKED FILLEIS 2 for 25c fresh 2 lbs. 57; Broken Pekoe TEA lb. 19: i SUGAR 10 lbs. 81.09 . Graves folk 8. IIANS 1-ao ca. tlas 39: Perfection MILK 6958 930 Fancy Mixed COOKIES lb. 393 T SIPIISIIDS 2pbp.b79 comm SOAP Cadaalk vs 46051- Simldat OIANGIS 1 aka. 69: Island CIIIIS 3 tar SS: 4 .3 11;. M0 SI.” aniuura. oaocarnu g i and than encouraged ll-my. I the I)l'(tsCH”' -oaqulto cmp bu nourished amf ;' :