pl-;BRUARY 29. 1552 -uv"' ?h:;NelgllbOfS Iy George Ciorir "Someday you may be proud he wanted to tag along. General Eisenhower was once Just a kid brother." EDUCATION WEEK MARCH 2 - s Erluculloll Wcelofll the one week of tho your in Mulch eli- iwns have an opportu of studying our educational system, and keeping abreast of lopments in this important field. In observance this week. special radio talks. visits in schools. and regional educational meetings have been arranged as follows: 'ltllL'llSDAY. MARCH li- NORTH RUSTICO-IIEV. FATHER SHARIUSY. KENSINC-TON-DR. L. W. SHAW SOURIS-ERNEST D. REID FRIDAY. MARCH 7- MURRAY IIIVEIL-RALPH MHCLEAN MORELL-PROF. BRENDAN 0'GRADT 0'LEABY-REV. LOUIS DIUBRAY WINSLOE-DR. L. W. SHAW CRAPAUD-DB. FRANK DIIBKINNON HUNTER RIVER-MALCOLM MICKENZIE RADIO TALKS: (Over CFCT'l- MONDAY. MARCH 3-'l:l.'i l'.ill.--Tho Hair. J. Walter Jones. Premier of P. E. 1. TUESDAY, MARCH 4-11:30 AM.-Mrs. J. A. Lawson. Charlottetown. Regent I. 0. D. E. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5-7:15 l'.M.-Dr. J. A. Mac- Mlllan. THURSDAY, MARCH 0-11:30 A.l!I.--Mr. F. A. Large. Wr-st Rent. Home and School Association. FRIDAY. MARCH 7-7:15 P.M.-Mr. Edwin Johnsionv. (jharlottetown City Councillor. ALSO ON MONDAY. MARCH 3-'l:1li P.M.-Station. CBA-Dr. Frank'MacKinnon, Principal of P.W.C., Charlottetown. visrrs T0 scrrooLs: -rue ouaaoran. .Cl IARLOTTETOWN 9 P.W.C. llews & Views on Wednesday night the P. W. C. basketball team played their best game or the season against the Balms at the st. Dunstan's gymnasium. In the first quarter. sparked by the four baskets which John MacNaught sank, they held the Saints down to a two point lead. Hilson Carr was the star on the blocking end of the game and stopped the saints from scor- ing many times. 1-lilson, along with the rest of his teammates. turned in a great deiensive performance which kept the opponent team from getting near the basket through most of the first half. The Welshmen seemed to tire in the second half of the game and began to drop more points. In this half the saints started playing their regular style of fast basketball with which the P. W. C. players were unable to cope. . . . Now that the Hockey house league schedule has ended. inter- est rests more on basketball, and the P. T. Instructor, Earle Nichol- son, has started up an inter-class basketball schedule. since the ma- terial for the team is not so good this year, perhaps these games will uncover some hidden talent for next year's squad. There are seven teams lined up in the sche- dule and the Welshmen Scxtette also participate in this league to help the less experienced mem- bers along. It has been discovered that after the college jackets and sweaters had been picked up, that there were two not claimed. These two are size 36 and would suit girls rather than boys. If these jackets are not picked u or sold soon. the Student Co cii. consequently the college students, will have to bear the loss. I o O The editor of the College Times. Bob Platts, declared that there would be an issue of the paper next week and Q-lat the Times would go on sale sometime in the latter part of the week. The rea- son why it is so late is because there was a noticeable lack of material coming into the editorial office through the Times' boxes which are tacked up on the bulle- tin boards. coo Roy Campbell, Fourth year stu- dent, was picked by the student council to edit the P. W. C.. Year Book for 1951-52. Roy will prove io be a good choice as he is very cap- able in this line of work. .. . .. Yesterday morning there was a bad storm. bad enough for an an- nouncement for the closure of all city schools on that day. However. there was no such annr cement for P. W. C. students. many of whom had trudged through the deep snow to attend their regular Thursday studies. It seems that this same thing happened 1”; month. When, or if there is anoth- Wednesday afu-moon. March 5. is being set aside as Open House in Schools during which time the general public is in- viled to see their educational system in action. (Special pro- grams are being arranged in most schools). MEMORIAL LECTURE- Durlng Education Week. Tuesday. March 4. at 8:30 I'. M.. I)r. Watson Klrlrconnell. President of Acadia University. will speak in Prince of Wales College on the subject, TOTAL- ITABIAN EDUCATION. Teachers and students are especial- ly urged to attend. REMEMBER - EDUCATION IS EVEBYBODYS BUSINESS ALMOST INCREDIBLE mi-NTS SUITS l Sizes 35 to 44 Values To 55.00 FINAT. CLEARANCE - 25.00, FRIDAY and SATIIRIIAY Wish - No Alterations - No Rotunda 8. A.lMonoulw 1 r-' storm of the severity of these two, it is hoped that there will be an announcement over the radio at 615 instead of at 9.00 or later. That Body 0f. Yours Continued from .pa.-gi-zip of time each rat would swim be- fore becoming exhausted. Rats on the first diet swam an an average of 13.3 minutes before exhaustion, and those on the soc- ond diet. 13.4. of the 12 rats on the liver suptpleme t, three swam 63; 83 and 87 minutes. The re- maining nine rats were swimming at the end of 120 minutes when the test was discontinued. These experiments suggest the presence in dried liver powder of some unknown vitamin hormone or other food or nutritional factor which is capable of postponing fatigue. a While Ceylon exports many pre- icious stones. graphite is the chief mineral exported from the domin- ion in the Indian Ocean. MY DOCKING lllllit REPAMS GENERAL MACHINE Slit)! ,1 .9m-hm Am.-Inn 1 llmm folding 5Cudlu lav dnclung vessel: up to 650 tons Modern l'q-upinem lm wmli on Steel and wood Hulls. 0 Run". u. (hour I r.'rneI Auvulm lime--u and Mann Hardware. (Km... Ac...-m. D-nu available NORTH SYDNEY MARINE Stmgo lot This I1 I. II. MacArthur lteaalaa is essentially a disease of children. More than half the cases occur in tots under five, years of age. and more than 00 per cent occur in chudr-en under ten. A strange thing about this disease is that it usualy breaks out among groups who have not previously been exposed. For example. the training camps 1917-1918 were vic- tims of a measles epidemic because a large percentage of the recruits come from rural sections and had never had the disease before. An epidemic of measles in the Faroe Islands. lil46.' attacked 8.000 0! the Island's 7,800 population. In 1875. a British vessel carried the germ to the Fiji Islands. Out of a population of 150.000 there were 40,000 deaths in five months. 75 per cent -of the deaths from mea- sles occurr in children under five years of age. If a child gets thd disease before reaching the age of one year the chance of its dying is fifty times greater than if it were between five and fif- teen years of age. . . . Man's search for the elixir of youth is as old as civilization itself. Many false prephets have arisen and many others will arise in fut- ure years. but we ought not to be led astray by their announce- ments. for the hard. solid truth remains that old ago is inevitable. There is no escape from its grip. - only for those who meet a pro- mature pathologic death. Ponce de Lion sought the foun- tain of youth in Florida. He found a. fountain all right. but youth eternal was not there. Doctors Varonotf and Slclllilcli claimed that their methods would oh 1.T RAILWAY CO LIMITED '4"lv it.r”..l iv Li S. .'7".1 re; ' the elderly-gland graft- hard work easy. and that is to on- wasthoasaalovand whlohjoyit. ins they claimed. would loan a young colt out of an old hon. Not so long ago a delegation from the British ministry of Agriculture nos- ed into the Var-onoff-lteinsch Ine- thod. to discover that there was not a shred of evidence to uphold the gland grafting experiments. some herb doctors hold fast at the notion that somewhere in the world grows an herb that will ward off old age. If there be such an herb it has yet to be found. Mean- while. those who live cannot hope to escape death. Nor iu re1uvenes- cence possible. Those who think so are only wasting their time in futile talk. and we h'ave had much of this the last quater century. I O I O 4 Master Willie Archer's nose prov- ed quite a collection besket when the three-year-old tot was examin- ed recently at his home by the family physician. Willlie's nose yielded a bit of chalk, two buttons. some small seeds. a tiny marble- and pieces of wood. There are 71,000,000 drinkers in the U.B.A. and Canada. of these. 4000.000 or roughly six per cent. are a serious problem. They lil- clude: 1.750.000 chronic excemive drinkers. 1.250000 comnuisive drin- kers and 750.000 chronic slcliolics. In May. 1943. only 28 per cent of the male oopulation in Canada called themselves total abstruners. while 55 percent of the women des- cribed themselves in this way. Drinkers in British Columbia spent seventy and one half million dollars in booze for the year end- ing March 31. 1951. or 563 for every man woman and child in the province. In 1949 it was 70 millions. and in 1948 sixty-eight millions. From the above figures it would seem to indicate that there is a general provincial plot to cure British Columbians of the insid- ions water-drinking habit. ' There is only one way to make Two sisters-in-lav, who live on the same block in Snyder. N.Y. and shared the same hospital room gave birth to their babies - a total of three-in twenty -four hours. Mrs. A. A. Drull. gave birth to the girls Mrs. Krull. the mother of the twins, remarked that it was; "like having tripets." A California seer predicts the! end of the world will come this: year. It's a moot question whetherf that would be the worst or the best thing that ever happened to it. In four years 87,000,000 boys and girls were tested for T.B.. the white plague that kills three to five million people every year. So effective is the work of the UN. Health army that they are on the march in every corner of the globe and winning great victor- ies over the enemy. I O C O In India. thousands of children come to centers for tests, riding on the backs of elephants. In North Africa. camel loads of children are a common sight; all part of thr- vast army of .'i7.000.(lOil boys and girls led by the W.1l.0. disease fighters. Among W,l-l.0.'s outstanding achievement was the control of the i947. cholera epidemic in Egypt. The disease spread at the rate of 1.000 casese a. day. W.H.O. stepped in and checked the epidmeic in six weeks. We are fortunate to have a World Health Organization that is aiding the peoples of the world to attain the highest possible level of world health. Why can't we have a world Court strong enough to abol- ish war and its attendant miseries? Spandau prison, in Berlin. Ger- many. ls unique among penal in- stitutlons in that its allied war- crime prisoners are guarded by Americans. British. French. and Russian guards. They take month- ly terms of running the prison. Ernml to chill. tsunami cnwri . .. Fools all con- Inl all (E131 on PERRY 04 W5" ' PAGE NINE L Ono loospooalul ol PAINKILLIII in water or milk-warms tho wlrolo sy cbosi areal INKILL Used by millions PA 3-way reliofof iii! 3g Brootho in the soothing vapors ol P claors rospilalory syalara-helps you hrootlso ooias. ER Success Tip- Bake it with MAGIC! DATE-ORANGE PUDDING Combine in a greased Continuing scientific. tests of all leading toothpastes prove it 9 PEPSODENT casserole (6-cup size) )4 1:. corn syrup. 1 tbs. grated lemon rind and m c. orange juice. Mix and sift once, then sift into a bowl, 1 M c. once-sifted pastry flour (or 113' c. once-sifted hard-wheat flourl, 2'-Q ispa. Magic Baking Powder, K tsp. salt and F; c. fine granulated sugar. Mix in '4 c. corn flakes, slightly.CruslJed, and M c. cut-up pitted dates. Combine 1 well-beaten egg, 34 c. milk, M tsp. Vanilla and 3 tbs. shortening, mclterl. Make a well in dry ingredients and add liquids: mix lightly. Turn into prepared dish. Rake in morir-raicly lmi. nvnn, 375". about 40 minutes. Serve warm, with pouring cream. Yield-6 servings. J; W CAT and only Ppepsoclen-I- ., M- M - M- 'l-IE uses ?.FPS9.P.F."fT-. T99 -'- The "cleaner your teeth and your mouth. the less likely you are to oiend. vrrurrsr rim: SWEETEST BIIEATII gloolll are yours with . rrrsoorur Here's why? Impartial tests made by a leading University have shown that Pepsodent Dental Cream gets teeth cleaner than any other leading toothpaste. And laboratory tests show again and again that PEPSODENT and only rsrsoosrrr gets your teeth brightest. Obviously, teeth thatiare the cleanest. and brightest are also the whitest! So if you're not using PEPSODENT, try it today. ' Youlll see the results yourself . . . in 7 days MY DENTIST ADVISED IT BECAUSE "tr CLEANS so SAFELV owes me WllI'l'ES1' Team was, Lneoiisroav TESTS counnm tr, '7 our olrio PEOPLE NOW USING LEADING TOOTHPASTES CAN HAVE WI-IIIER TEETH Ill 7 DAYS , . 1 g svlcuansmc-ro DAILV . ” P59500917 CARE 2 1: Prove it your-self-change to Pr-psodent mi in just one week ace. the dmerence. See how 1 much whiter your teeth will he. J if you prefer powder, '6 M90159" Popsodoni Tooth Powder also give: the whiiosi loath-..tho sweeiosi breath A Pr-psodent is really safe -i oven for children's first; teeth. And they love AM cool, minty tasti-