THE GUARDIAN runniuoccnzyuouumniuniacrrimsuui cs. lowdown. r.:. 1.. by The nouns Company u.uiu'a. ' "Conn Prluc Idvud Inland use In Dav" Editor and Manner. Ian A. Burnett. u Auociau Editor. Prank Walker ruch ulllcu It so old . M d . cu .. mu aT.?'iI.u'uy .25"?-5.3! 5&l..”s'252”Rm3.i?.""' lawn. Cbuiouetmu. Sunni: Ido u:.no . E. I 0th. other Piolvinees nnti”:l..:m: Der nnnum. "759 ltmlllest memory is weaker than the weakest Ink.” I)! Curiu: i when II F. MONDAY. AUGIU-ST 13, MM Vlslcono Mink Imdors Handsome movie stars have nothing on Charlottetown's latest guests when it comes to fascinating the fair sex. There seems to'be something about mink coats, jackets and stoles that the ladies simply cannot resist. It is strictly business, however, to the members of the Canadian Mink Breed- ers' Association who are in the Province for the three-day annual meeting of the Association which is being held at The Charlottetown. Practically all Canadian breeders of mink belong to the association which works for the best interests of the industry in a most enlightened way. By striving to maintain and improve the quality of the product and give buyers the assurance that they always get what they pay for, the industry is kept on a sound basis. This Province has long been vitally in- terested in fur ranching. The original home of ranched black and silver foxes, it has also gone in for the raising of other high quality furs, the most important of which at the present time is mink itself. Every part of the country has its own particular advantages. Those of Prince Edward Island are a relatively mild cli- mate, the availability of low-cost sea foods for feeding and our insular position which makes it reasonably easy to control pests and breeding practices. During the next few days, however, we shall probably hear of the special advant- ages of many other parts of the country. All of them add up to the fact that Can- ada is in a position to produce and market top quality furs. unexcelled by any coun- try in the world. Wide llorsus Narrow That young persons with wide feet-the wider the better-can look forward to suc- cess in life is the finding of an English doctor who examined the feet of 200 per- sons who had ”made good." 9091p of the feet examined were much wider than the average and the remaining 1002 were by no means confined in a straight and nar- row last. To ensure scientific affirmation of his important discovery, the doctor has commissioned three general practitioners, who have no partiality towards either the wide or the narrow, to make a survey among 2000 persons in all walks of life. As might be expected, people with nar- row soles, some of whom were under the impression that they had done fairly well in their chosen occupations, are writing indignant letters to the papers and calling the doctor everything but a gentleman. Strangely, wide-soled correspondents seem to be no less disturbed. Wrote one man to the local daily: "I've the widest soles in this town and I've never been able to put my hand on a spare shilling." To which the doctor rejoined that.there are exceptions to all rules and that 21 107E mar- gin of error is customary in all scientific surveys. That should reassure the favour- ed group, but it will make the narrow- solers more chagrined than ever. How- ever, they should not lose heart; one of these days another expert will come along with absolute proof that the doctor who praised wide soles simply did not know what he was talking about. In almost all scientific research there has to be a lot of contradictions before the real truth is finally determined. Fishing With cnrmorants Many techniques are employed in the fishing industry, but surely the strangest is that carried on every summer in Japan. where men and cormorants team up for the season. Along the Nagara River in cen- tral Honshu Island, Japanese boatmen take their trained birds out to dive for the rich catch of ayu, a small salmonlike fish also called sweetfish. The partnership is an ancient one, car- ried on by traditional methods, says the National Geographic Society. For at least a thousand years, Japanese fishermen have made use of the big bird's skill in scooping up the slippery fish in their long, hooked benkss One family is reported to have pas- sed the occupation down through 18 gen- erations. The birds are controlled by a leash with plenty of leeway for swimming and diving. To keep them from swallow- ing the prize, a metal ring, strap. or string is looped tightly at the base of their necks. After-dark cormorant fishing presents a bizarre spectacle that has fascinated many a foreign visitor. . The head fisher- man wears I ceremonial skull cap and I water-repellent gran skirt resembling a hull 00lW.m?- 4" W G?! 3ll.l!!.b9P- 1 ed and placed in the boats strictly ac- cording to rank. As daylight fades, an iron basket alight with flaming pitch is sus- pended from the side of the boat to lure the fish. The dark, sinister looking cor- morants - with snakelike heads, wedge- shaped tails and webbed feet-are released in turn. An alert master may hold the reins of 12 fast-moving birds at a time. when the cormorants have filled their throats with fish, they usually swim about languidly, a hint to the boatmen to pull them in and relieve them of the catch. In order to keep up interest, the birds are sometimes permitted to eat a fish or two before going back to work. Otherwise they must wait until the job is over before re- ceiving their reward. A lively cormorant may take 100 to 200 fish an hour-an in- dication not only ofenergy but of the voracious appetite for which they are not- ed. Fishing cormorants were introduced into Japan from China, where they had been known from time immemorial. Some pres- ent-day Chinese use a different system. On the Sungari River in Manchuris, the fish- ing is done by daylight. No leash is used. The birds dive freely, although their throats F. When . enough fish are taken, the boatmen recap- ? ture the loaded birds in a butterfly net on 2 are tied so that they cannot eat. a long stick. Rebellious cormorants oc- casionally try to escape by flying off, but with their wings clipped, they cannot go far. Cormorant fishing, both as sport and as means of livelihood, flourished in medieval England. Later, during the 17th century, an official at the court of James I was designated Master of Cormorants. EDITORIAL NOTES The latest volume of the Soviet Encyclo- pedia to be published covers the letters ”MA" to ”ME". Such names as Mao and Malenkov happen to be in the completed section as well as that of Marx. The season of local exhibitions is well started off today by the 50th annual Eg- mont Bay and Mont Carmel Exhibition at Abram's Village. These exhibitions play a most important part in improving agricul- tural practice and, even more important, arousing enthusiasm in the younger gen- eration for the finer points of farming. I O O Mothers must be -somewhat surprised to learn of Dr. Benjamin Spock telling the Institute of Child Psychiatry at Toronto that parent education may well do more harm than good. The well-known author. lty on child care takes the view that par- ents spontaneous reactions are more de- sirable than too great concern about follow- ing advice. Voters are advised bv Dr. G. Brock Chisholm to investigate the mental healthi of candidates. "Is any behaviour more ef- fiectivttely suicidal. than to elect psychopaths, euro ically anxious, violent, egocentric or preJ”d"3ed People I0 public bodies?” asks the former director-general of WHO. The famous psychiatrist may be right but polj. tlclans might properly object to his lan. guage as unparliamentary. Cyprus has never been politically part of Greece. Richard the Lion Hearted took the island from the Eastern Empire and it Dassed through a number of hands. Britain assumed control in 1878 after 300 years of Turkish rule. The majority of the popula- tion is Greek, however, and there is just now a strong demand for ”enosis", union with Greece. The Arab and Turkish min-- orities are opposed, however, and Britain has plans for developing the island as an important base. 0 O D Eleutherios Venizelos, Greek statesman, was born this date 1864. He was born in Crete and became minister of justice, for. eign minister and premier of Crete. He became premier of Greece in 1911. having saved the monarchy by a masterly revig- ion of the constitution. He broke with the king because he wished to take the allied side in the First World War and was only recalled to office in 1917 on" the abdica- tion of Constantine. He was also Prime Minister of the Greek Republic. t x A conference on public education. un- der the puspices of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Or- ganization, better known as Unesco, was held recently in Geneva. Switzerland. Dele- gations from 54 countries were present at that gathering. There they heard from Luther Evans, the director-general of Un- esco, the startling information that of the 50 million children of school age in the world, more than half receive no-education whatever. They receive no schooling be- cause there are no schools for them to at- tend, or because they live in countries where there is no compulsory system of edg A tion. "”TTT "V" 5,-3 gLsk”-O-at , heinier speaisi we I ,ofaa.sr'6z7zyZc':f'.- . . - "one Island brand? It Would Stand PUBLIC FORUM This column is on: to the nuns- -lon by corrnpondanlu of quulious of interest. The Guardian does not necessarily andoru tbs opinion of correspondents. EISENHOWEIIJS EXAMPLE Sir,-Two short letters have lately appeared in the "Public Forum" on the subject of prayer. . And now President Eisenhower gives suojcc. I powerful witness on the World before a meeting of the Council of Churches. one of your correspondents be- lieves that many of the farmers' lproblems might be solved through prayer. We will not oppose him Another says that gambling is now getting more attention than prayer. And today a house decorator, who has been in and out of the peoples homes for 40 years. says that nearly all seem to have forgotten God in family life, but are quite hot on gambling as a recreation Dwight Eisenhower, who is going through just as difficult times as ever Lin- coln or Washington lived in, is de- pending on the same unseen powcl as they. Was not General Foch 'driven to his knees before the imiracle happened that turned the i tide of battle in the First World a I am, Sir, etc.. l Al'iCl-I. MACKENZIE Kcnslngton - TERRITORIAL FAME Sir:-It may surprise most Can- adians, but for 84 years about a third of this nation has not been called by its true name! Maps of Canada show some 1,- -300,000 square miles called "North- l west Territ:zrics." This is not really is name at all but a real estate lclescriptior. which is not even ac- curate. To Bniisli Cnlumblans tnrse are Nc:thEAST territories. The two-centuries-old name of LAB rug.:n. in disuse since 1870, its Rupertsland. The name should be resltred. 1 "Ruiz-srtsland" is among the old- est of Canadian place names. It or.;.nated in l8l0 when Kin; Charles II granted a charter to Prince Rupert. his cousin, chai- terlng the Hudson's Bay Company II-Exact boundaries were not defin- ed, but were ds ribsd as embrac- ing the area draining into Hudson ,Bay and the Arcl.c o::s.n. I Rupertsland was named speci- I . ly in the British North Amer- lica Act, which plovided for in clusion of the vast r::.on into for Canadisn confederation. In a trans- laction wh.cu sliiud . . gcvery school child in Cnnilda ns jthe ”Rupe:t.sland Purchase." t'n( jinfant. fezleral government. at. Oi- ,tawa paid the Hudscnls Bay Com- pany sl,35B,000 tZ00,000 Pounds! for more than two million squarc L4v.l.l. - miles of territory. The year was 1870. From then until 1912 large portions were carved into new provinces or added to existing ones. Perhaps the name fell into dis- use because the Fathers of Con- federation intended to divide all the region into new political sub- divisions. This did not take place snd the remainder is still the Rupcrtsland name in the DNA Act Except for Au.stnL7ia's Northern Ter:'lt.ory, Ruperulrmd is the woi-lcl's only large land mass is- borlng under anonymity. No other Arctic region is so sllghted. Yu- koni Allukal Siberia! Lapland, The world does not question their ownership or fall to recognize them. By contrast "Northwest Territor- ies" means little to other peoples unless followed by the phrase "of Canada" and the very luck of A name implies dubious title. Many Americans picture the Canadian Nortzhland as trailing off into Polar. spaces no nude- fined u the boundaries of Antarctica, A recent United Press report. from Washington said that 11.3, military officials feared that the Russians might. be establishing sir bases "in the Arc- tic wasteland west. of Gleenlnnd." Nothing in the report indicated that thus officials knew that all territory immediately west of Green- land in Canadian. An Ottawa pres rspart said last. winter that ofn::r..n of the newly renamed Department of Northern Affairs and National Ruourcu bopod to man clear to Wufmls-' ton that tho Canadian North is under full onnsdlsn sontslgnm-. now better so help this tbln.to IIICO I not nlnsdy lines in A Tricky Experiment (Hamilton Spectator) There are some deep and au- tlicntic doubts about the power of the United States Government. to "outlaw" Communism the way Con- gress now proposes. and not a few misgivings right in the Washing- ton bailiwick. F. B. I. chief J. Ed- gar Hoover and Attorney Herbert Brownell, 'who are the best quali- fied to speak of the operation of tracing and prosecuting sabotcurs, donlt. think much of the idea. There will he a wave of what. for Want of a better label could be called academic protest-sincere and un- compromising-against the use of undemocratic measures to elimin- ate undemocratic elements. There will certainly be a new shout :- bout drivlng the Reds underground to do more deadly work than they could up in the fresh air with placards to the fore. But most noisy at all will be a fresh burst. of abuse about Ameri- can "hysteria." We might. as well admit. it, right at this juncture that some Americans are doing their best. to give that catcall potency; rarely has the Commun- ist propaganda band waggon found a more receptive world climate than it has just lately. . C I 0 As modified by,the House the other day the "outlaw" proposal made some sense It was primarily an attempt to deprive Red-domin- ated unions of rights other unions have under labour laws, without carrying through the senate pro- pasal to impose penalties on indivi- Llusis who are active Communists. In one of those tdrtuous bll1-bounc- .l:g displays. that confuse every one, t.h House later cspitulsted Lo the enste and voted to accept the lattexfs stipulation that Com- munists should be subject to five years in pruon and a s1a,ooo fine. in its new form the bill met con- siderable resistance both in the Senate and in the House. It is under the shadow of an almos certain veto by President Eisen- newer. who is strongly opposed to .he measure on the grounds it us. cncyclopsedias u the name if an Anglican diocese? With restoration of the historic '.e:'ritcrial name, the administra- :;va districts of Mackenzie. Kcewa- ..n and Flnnklin would remain un- changed as components of Imports- lnnd. No costs would be incurred except for new stationery. Ecme persons may contend that names are not important. Perhaps not, but world mags show civiliza- tion above 69 degrees north lat- .itur.1e ln Bzmdlnuria and the So- viet Unlou - blank spaces in Can- .(;a. Llsrnlssing more than 9. mil- .;on square miles of land as not worth a name is not. a good way to attract. settlers. Instead of pie- turing limitless areas as forever Jnrrcn, frozen tundra, Canadian school geography books should de- pict street. scenes in Whitehorse. Y.T. and Yellowknife, Rupertsland It's to be hoped Mr. James Aub- rey Blmmcns, M. P. Yukon-Mao senzie River, will press the name Lssus at the next session of parlia- ment. ' I am, Sir, etc, Lester Hnlpin KELOWNA, B.C. S .f-ya will make martyrs of individual Reds and upset effective existing laws. The hurdles ahead for even I modified bill need no stressing Australia, as an example, return- ed the Menzies-Fadden government in 1951 on the issue of n Com- munist Party dissolution bill, and the Labour Party later cspitulsted to allow it. to become law. The act was then ruled invalid by the high court. A referendum to al- ter the constitution to allow the act to become valid was subsequent- ly defeated. , C 0 0 Australia had good reason to fear Communlsmk exploitation of labour union: for political ends. The United States has been tortu- ed and confused by the same kind of infiltration of Red saboteurs into vital industries. with big af- filiates like the C.I.0. doing some healthful cleansing on their own. Red espionage has been notorious- Iy successful. In Canada we have had the lesson cut into our con- sciousness-r should have had-in a way that wil cool off any pom- pous preaching to Washington. In 1946, as its leaders subse- quently revealed. the notorious Canadian seamen's Union was used as an agent of Russian im- pcriaiism in blocking the trans- portation of supplies to Europe un- der Unrrs, with perhaps the most. outrageous display of violence and thuggery in the history of this continent. Communistrdommated unions still call the union tune in industries turning out 5 wide range of weapons for Canada's defence-even in the manufacture of materials for atomic bombs. The country was jolted out of I mug and profound slumber by the Gouzenko revelations. showing be- yond all cavil that traitors in high places were not indigenous to Eut- opesn operas. The C.I.O. in Can- ada has itself done A first rate job cf outlawing unions controlled by Communists. U 0 O Na one can prevent a Commun- ist from devoutly believing in his creed and certainly no one can prevent him from preaching it. No one should. No one-which is more important-cares It is not. the Marxist priesthood democracy wor- ries about. nor its carpet bag full of stale-pale class conflict trest- ises. All but the most inzenuous dupes have long since sensed the essential caste divisions of the Soviet autocracy. It is only the exploitation of labour unions the Communist over- lords want, and only that ex- ploitation there is any reason to fear. Without ability to so con- trol these groups that they could be histruments of disruption to serve Moscow's aim the whole Page 4 rho.cui-an. NOTES "BY Toronto Star. Nothing In the news rouse: In average man to quite such a peak of apathy as reading that some screen star he never heard of II going to give up a career he didn't even know she had.-Portland Ore- gonian. There are few if any on In Durham in their seventies. Evi- dence of this was given at I gathering when prizes were beinz offered for the oldest present. When those between 70 and 80 were asked to signify. a glance around the hull showed no hands up; several women. however. re- ceived surprised stares from their friends. But there was I! proud response when those over 80 were asked.--Durham Chronicle; Speaking of the recent heat wave In the United States, Doug- las Willis, BBC correspondent In Washington, said: "At. Dallas, Texas, where the thermometer has shown over 100 for the last nine days, a concrete company used crushed ice to mix their concrete to keep it from setting before it could be poured. At St. Louis, Missouri, the Municipal Zoo can- celled a parade of elephants be- cause the pavements were too hot for them to walk on."-Lon- don Listener. Newfoundland: . are angry for the reason the Post Office De- partment. in Ottawa is giving new names to several communities in their province. They have reason to be angry. The place names of Newfoundland were chosen in the first place from out of the experi- ence and character of the people who settled the island and there- fore are meaningful names root- ed in the island's story. Fussy. bureaucratic interference fr 0 m afar seems intolerable. The New- foundlanders are learning there are liabilities as well as assets in Confederation. If the Cann- dian Post Office doesnlt take care it is going to earn the nickname of Meddlesome Mattie. - Sydney Post.-Record. VA: it? &mm SIC VITA Like to the falling of a star. or as the flights of eagles are. - Or like the fresh springts gaudy hue. Or silver drops of morning dew; Or like a wind that chafes the flood, Or bubbles which on water stood: Even such is man. whose borrowed gbl. Is straight called in, and paid to night. The wind blows out, the bubble dies; The spring entombed in autumn lie ' I 5. The dew dries up. the star is shot: The flight is past.-and man forgot -Bishop King (I592-1669.) The Age Old Story There is one body, and one Spirit. even as ye are called In one hope of your calling; one Lord. one faith. ""0 bllliillll. one God and Father of all. who In above all, and 1 irough of nation: seems to be accord.-. fTHE WAYW In the midst of I gun a long inning discussion. .cI'Itl? ism and counter-cr"lclnn on n,, vexed question of the teaching up English in schools. I book recent. ly published in Canada appear, both by its name and its aim t( have words of considerable wisdom to say on the subject. Written by an already well-known professor of the Ontario College of Educa- tion. it is entitled The sense of Wonder, and in the foreword ch. author writes that "A major .1", of the book is to centre education in the love of learning." Tl-.95. two phrases are of such lignin. csnce that they are worthy 0: be lng capitalized in every Cgmdm scheme of education - the Sens: of -Wonder, and the Love of Learn. ing. As Education has becom. and more professedly functional more and more at the mercy of . technique rather than a spirit, It has tended to lose sight of um, fundamental realities which lie at its very heart and which. between them. contain the secret of mak- ing education for young people H, adventure and a challenge rather than A dreary and imposed neces. sity.-Halifax Chronicle-I-lama, Old Charlottetown "And P. II. CAVENDISK "The name Cavendish is due (.1 William Winter, an army office, who was granted Lot 2' by Guy. ernor Patterson. Winter. Whosq commission as lieutenant in tha 12th Regiment of Foot is dated May 20, 1761, served in Germany under the command of Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick and fought at u" battle of Minden. Ha came to the Island about 1771 or 1772, and hnv. ing brought with his family A few servants and trades-people, estnb. lished himself on the north shore of the lot fronting on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, w h e re Cavendish now is, a mms he gave to his residence in honour of his patron, one of the Cavendishes - probably Field Marshal Lord Frederick Cav- endish. colonel of the 84th Foot. for which regiment a Mr. Winter was for n time the London agent. "The diary of Benjamin Chap- pell. New London. has the follow. lng entries referring to Winter: May 16, 1775. Being short of pro- vision. we went to Winter's cove for oysters. the storms such as we could not get back. May 17, 1775, brought home our boat loaded with oysters. May 23, 1775. Giddel and myself went. up I river by Winters after fowl. but found lit- tle.' "At the outbreak of the American revolutionary war in 1775. Winter returned to England and re-entered the army and saw service in the West Indies. He was gazetted lieutenant In the 9911': (Jamaica) Regiment of Foot, June 3. 1780, and lieutenant-captain and captain, Nov. 1, 1782. After the peace of 1783 he obtained the appointment of Provost Marshal of Prince Ed- ward Island and. returning to the Island, settled on Hunter River near the eastern boundary of Lot 23. Winter River. Lot 24, is not far distant. In 1805 Captain Winter went to England, where he died. The Mlcrnac Indian name is Pen- amkenk. m e s n in g tthe sandy besch' ." ' --Place Names of Prince Ed- III. and in you III. ward Islnnd..0ttnwa. 1925. WHEN YOU SEND SEND MONEY Responsibility Not Accepted NO MORE FILMS TO BUY MAIL FILM SERVICE P. 0. Box 11 CHARLOTTETOWN. P. I. I. A NEW ROLL OF FILM FREE WITHEVERY FILMSENTEIOUSTOBE DEVELOPED and PRINTED (Any Size) ALL PRINTS MADE SUPER SIZE (Double The Sin) . IN SMART POCKET ALBUM l Films Developed-8 Prints ....... ......................... 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