, v Cualdiau iihm PIE: IIIIII Ideal Uta In 00" "-.".g.jg,yqntIIlJIll55Pl'llOl93l'0U- win. !.l.l.. um Tlnmxn Conn!!! Ul- dl Kill St. W. ihrolln. ft I-Ina! own. an uuvenny 1-5:: am: Iunllt. Publisher and Genar anal "T mu wuim. I-zdunr C 'l.tJan IJILLV NKWIPIPUI l . lumber an A "0. lumber of The Canadian Pnnp lumbar Audi! Bueau oi circulations pug onions II Sumluenlde. Ilontnllll Ind MMFWI Anthrlsod as Second Class Iul by the Poet Dunes Depanmuu. Ottawa. Corner Cnarloneuzwn.summersldo snow on an Elsewhere In F.l-11.39.00. other Province and U. 8. 812.00 PI! nnnum. ' MONDAY, AUGUST 29. 1956 The Repul3licans' Turn The scene has changed. Instead of the stocky ard district of Chicago it will be the Cow Palace at San Francisco. In some other respects, too, the Reptiblicz-ui .'x'ationul Conven- tion licgiiuung lotlzrv will differ from that ol the l)emocr;tts a week ago. To he sure. there will be the usual display of nonsense, arrogance and attempted identification of the party with mp Iiiiinc Wisdom. all of uhlrh have been iticorpwatcd into t Ani(irl(';lr1 pre-election articles of I faith. lint the evirlcnccs of uncer- tainty w hich cliai':tctei'ix.cd last week's convention will he lackiiig. There is no question on whom the mantle of favotir will fall for the first place on the ticket and hardly any with respect to second place nomination. Unless President Eisen- hower at the last moment should frown on Mr. Nixon-a most un- likely occurrence-this part of the proceedings will be over and done with before, or shortly after, Mr. Stassen or any other dissident gets around to saying "Mr. ('hairman." This means, of course, that there will be no occasion for the intrigue and scrapping of the sort which kept the Chicago meeting in a state of tension and confusion for a good part of the time. Then, too, the Republicans feel certain of victory A provided Mr. Eisenhower stays in the running- something which could not be said of the Democrats last week, despite the bold front they tried to present to the nation. Ironically, the best reassurance the Republicans have for their confidence of victory came straight from the Democratic Con- vention hall. Former President Tru- man's categorical assertion that Mr. Adlai Stevenson could not possibly win against President Eisenhower will be quoted over and over again; it might even find an honoured place in Governor Langille's key-note ad- dress. Incidentally, it is to be de- voutly hoped, for the sake of Ameri- can prestige abroad, that this key- note address will be an improvement over that delivered by Governor Clement in Chicago. Certainly It could not possibly be in any worse form: for such a hodge-podge of puerile demagogy, sickening emo- tionalism and downright sacrilege surely was never seen or heard on sea or land. There were fine senti- ments in it, of course; but most of these were crowded out by the foolish ones. Fortunately, key-note addresses are not taken seriously by the elec- tors, nor are they intended to be. So it isn't likely that the Democratic prospects will be affected one way or the other by Governor ('lement's venture into oratorical asiniuity. The trouble is that citizens of other Countries who have not been initiat- ed Into the mysteries of convention procedures are apt, to take them very seriously indeed. Anyway, by the end of the week the general pattern of the campaign will have been established. Barring any serious and unexpected deter- ioration In the health of either of ' the nominees, it will be Eisenhower vs. Stevenson. In so far as each is able to influence the conduct of his colleagues-there will of course be limitations in each case--there is every hope that Issues and not de- rnagoglc sidetracks will dominate the campaign. . Assault On Antarctica A: the Northern)-lemlsphere Inlters in summer heat, 166 ad- fveamren at the bottom of the world 'm through billiards. bone- j cold, and g four-montlm night. The Seabees ' , -hm: svecmihu. an behind to Assault on Antarctica," tn the Au!- ust National Geographic Magazine. Admiral Byrd tells of the work of the latest. foray into the frozen south and its part in preparing for the coming International Geophysi- cal Year, 1957-58. At least 10 other nations are joining the United States in the An- tarctic phase of the geophysical un- dertaking. Bases will be manned around the white continent, while scientists probe earth and atmo- spheric mysteries of an area nearly twice as big as the United States. Though the campaign is for science. it is using many of war's tools-- ships, planes and pondcrous tracked vehicles. Its "troops" are as hlElll.V trained as any a fighting war de- mands. The preliminary cwcfillion alone included 1,800 men. seven ships and nearly a score ol aircraft carried and flown in. Forty illustrations and an Antarc- tic map with the Geographic article bring to life the expeditions sur- roundings and achievements. Ships, men and machines are s h a r p I y etched against the blue-white tints of an empty world of endless ex- panses and giant walls of ice. Orange - and - black helicopters take off to deliver cargo and shuttle staff officers between ship and shore. Iluskies, symbol of early exploration and still used in rescue worlt. stand beside modern snow tractors. Men play softball on a frozen field. chart flights beyond the Pole in small rooms of base huts, test ”survival suits" in near-freezing waters. and move mountains of material under a gale's lash. Operation Deepfrceze set up two main bases 447 miles apart in the Ross Sea area. One was an Air Operating Facility built by Mc- Murdo Sound. The other, Little America V. chief United States scien- tific post, rose on the edge of Ross Ice Shelf 30 miles from the buried sites of four previous bases. Little America I of 1929 lies under Little America II (1934). "L.A." III and IV were built in 1940 and 1947. The current station is a village-sized camp of shelters not only designed for 100-below-zero temperatures and 100-m.p.h. winds, but equipped with such comforts of home as daily movies, innerspring mattresses, hot and cold running water. There and at McMurdo Sound the 166 "overnighters" work and await the coming of next fall's big task force that will complete and staff the research stations and carry on the expedition's job for science's all-out Geophysical Year. By Christ- mas of 1957, Admiral Byrd esti- mates, the year-round population of Antarctica will be many hundreds, of which 15 will be Americans living and working at the geographic South Pole. EDITORIAL NOTES The Foundation Seed Potato Pro- ject at the University of Vlisconsin reports that use of improved and certified seed, along with better va- rieties, fertili'1.crs, fungicides, insec- ticides and irrigation, have boosted average potato yields in the state from RI) bushels per acre to 21.3 bushels in the past 20 years. 0 O O A Rutgers University scientist says that rapid advances in anti- blotics will make 100th bu-tlidity anniversaries a normal expectation - ..... K 0 Q7 E Z-(ye fz:o-- , SAY AU REVOIR, BUT NOT GOODBYE J ('lllilN0 l'oiiiInuiiist troops rc- pnrlcd moving into blll'lllil are operating in a country full of dif- ficiiltics Inr military action, The area. where liiirma. China and India nicet.-gels a southern spur of the :1I'c.il llunalaya v.-Ange, range. which there becomes a tumbled nmss of parallel ridges and valleys. lionc one of the lcast known reg- ions lll Also. the district achiev- ed sonic lame during Worl dwar II when the llnmia Road was built through it to carry supplies to China. TROOPS NIC.-IR l..-KSIIIO lied ('linu-se soldiers are report- ed to have advanced to within I00 miles of l.:isluo. a sleepy frontier town until ll became a bustling terniluus tor the Hurma Iload. The railway from Rangoon, Burmals capital. ends thci'e. The lcrriinry reported in "hin- ese hands is inhabited by two of the Hill 'l'ril)i-s of Burma, both re- nowned as fi-.'.litcI's. N-'ir liaslno the Wa trlbesmcn live on hills bordering the Salwcen llivcr. The most primitive people of Burma. the Wzis are suspicious and uutrwiully toward strangers. They are also liead-hunters. al- lll(lllL'll this activity -- practised as part of fertility rites at plant- mg time is "strongly discour- agc-d" by the Ilurnicse govern- nicnt. 'l'ht- Was are expert in the use of booby tray-as along jungle ll'llll'-' (inc of their favorite wea- pons is the pauji - a bamboo stick. 3 'neued and hardened in the tire, l'he sticks-are planted aslari in jungle and elephant grass in the hope that enemies Burmese Backlands National Geographic Society can be destroyed Into skewcring themselves. Some of these tribz- men have settled in more civil- imd regions. have given 'lp head- hunting and become known as "tame Was." KAFIIINS A WARLIKE RACE To the north of the Wa states. the Chinese are in the territory of the Kachins. a warlike people who plagued the Japanese invad- ers in World War II. Themselves invaders from Tib- rt some 50 or 60 generations ago, the Kachlns are short and stur- dy jungle fighters. Something of their temperament. religion and the dangers they face in their daily lives is revealed on one of their oaths: "If I lie," they say, holding their swords over their heads. "may the tiger eat me. may the Water Spirit swallow me up. may the lightening strike me and may I die a violent death," When the Chinese opened the frontier post of Wanting to serve the Burma Roads in 1937, the Ka- chins raided It. killing officials and destroying buildings. The boundary between China and Burma in the area has been a matter of dispute for many years. Where the line has been fixed, tn esmen often take up the marker stones to use in grind- ing grain. In the monsoon forests through which the Communist troops mov- ed toward Fort Hertz, or Putao, an outpost reportedly In thciri liands, travel is further menaced , by leeches. innumerable swarms lop along the ground and foliage t I awaiting a chance to fasten to 1 any animal or man that passes. Thc fluoridation experiineui in llranitnrd I5; mcr, indeed It ll.'Ik' not been. in lhe real sense. an tevpnriniciil” for some years. Ilthcii it began the period of trial was sci for seven years. This was exlendcrl. to remove any rliaucc of doubt. to ten years. The ten years are now over and fluor- itlniinli has lirotiy.'lit izrcnlly im- proved ilcutul health to tliouszanda of cluliircn and snietl expense to more llviiiisnmls of p.ir('nlsi 'l'hc lllI.'ll report of the Brant- lord l”l-.ioriiie Comnnltcc was pre- we III ll-,mrirl:ilioii ll slum-4 bcumrl the hrnverlilal by the end of the century. If the world keeps going from one crisis to another. with the ultimate one of nuclear-war a constant threat, will it be worth striving for? - O 9 I Among the many surveys con- ducted by UNESCO is one dealing with holiday arrangements of Nor- wegian women. It shows that 3,fi()tl of them received. a free two-weeks vacation in 1955. A relief organiza- tion, aided by the government, paid" the bills. Just what value this sort of information is to the United Na- tions UNESCO did not say. I O 0 It's a bit late for this season; but another year trout fishermen will have a brand new device for luring the big ones. It is called a "loitering minnow," and instead of dragging it through the water the angler winds ltup and drops it on 'tIlt,llrfa(1t, The spring then un- and lbcltall fin begins to spin. this is the answer Van: dream of fishermen. I cent In the ulinihcr nf decaycrl. teeth in the HIDIIIIW of llrnntforrl ('llilvlrr'n in lhc we bracket ranging from NY to sixteen years. The rlruinaiit improvement in dental lit-alth win he summariz- ed in this fun In I941 examin- iativ-ns showed that children here had on the average 42 dccaved. missing or filled teeth each. That was ht-ore fhmridcs were Intro- rlm-nd into the water supply. Now just over ten years later, this DVIF rate. as it is conveniently called. has drnnnrrl lo the gratifying low figure of 19 per child. .ll is not represented that fluor- lrlatinn is a run-all. or that It solves iv one easy stroke. all the it does nothing of the kind. Fluori- dation does not guarantee that there will he no more tooth Ile- cav among the vmintzstcrs of this community. There Is still I Knod ITNIIE.-H.THY JOB Of the I? Caesars who ruled Rome at various times. All were assas'lnated and two committed suicide. MAXIMS An expert in one w&.IlGIl more and more about 1 & bl. Blanlford Scores Again Brnntlbrd Expositor. scuti-d by lir, ll',l. Ilutlon. who iniated the proieil l)r. Hartllcy W, lilllsldlll. the school denial of- lm-r who has dune the 3f'llI'll, ('lll'L'lxllt" I'l almn-I t'tillnilrws' titlin- hers of teeth. .l'l'l Hr. Ilniialrl F. Willi:i:n llic Wntcr Works chom- ist l't'sli!Ill(llIlll fun the nucl.an- sliavluu of doubt llll(ll'ltl-'Ill0lI has , pnul nlf and will continue In pay ' off lll In-nllli and money. ' In the period of cxpcriinent - or. as more acturately describ- ed. -tnrly-lliere has been a re- duction of not low than 54 per- problems of preventive dentistry. I deal of It. But fluoridation has helped reduce the incidence of dental decay sub.-xtantllly and by all the evidence will continue to exert an important controlling In- fluent-r. This is now an old and familiar story in Brantford but the occas- ion is opportune to offer the citi- 7cns' tzratltude to Dr. Hutton. Dr. Linscott, Mr. Williams and their associates past and present. in- cluding the "founding fathers" of the experiment Ithe Council and Board of llpallh of 1944-451 and of course the longtime chairman of the Fluorine commllleo, Mr. George T. Grndon. MPP. in Canada fluoridation is anoth- I rr public health "first" for Brant- I ford, adding to the list of those . also due to the lnlatlvc of Dr. Hul- ttm, chief of which, of course, was the loxni dlreatmeni which has long since brought Bi-anlford world-wide medical fame as ”.'xo- Dlphthcria Town." The Age Old Story He:-ven and earth shall pass away; but my words shall not pass away. EIGHT PIGEONS I do not know why pigeons flew About a sky of listless gray As if it were exulant blue, As if this were a golden day. I know they swept around. around With swift co-ordinaled ease. I do not know what joy they found Above the tops of barren trees. I know that I shall never know Wlfilat lifting impulse made them 3'. But having seen them doing so I have no need of knowing why. -Jane Merchant in the Christian Science Monitor. Coming In Time (Montreal Star) Canadian public opinion on the fluoridation of public drinking- waler supplies is a long way from being unanimous, either for or Illllnst. In the first place-be Ieive lr or not- 23 per cent or those questioned by Gallup poll lnvestagatora had never even heard of fluoridation. How they I would decide when or if they did hear of it is anybody's guess. Those who had heard about it were di- vided between 41 percent who fa- vored it, 18 percent who oppos- Ored ii. 13 Per cent who oppos- ed it and the same number who had no opinion, one way or the other. Accordingly, the percent- age of those favoring it out nf the hundred Gallup "samples" is not high enough yet to give undue en- couragement. The reason: given fnr wanting fluoridation are decidedly more definite and Informed than those opposing It. The former are bas- ed on well-established data, taken from observation over some years; prevention of tooth decay with its effect on public health; benefits pmven in test areas; lower dental bills. etc. Objections are notably vague and In some instances dis- proved: may not be necessary; might be detrimental: would cost too much;nffccts taste of water, etc. The poll reports that many objections came from rural areas where fluoridation is not practi- cal. Objection, while It should not be discounted. should not he elghter too surprising or too disappoint. Inn. in greater or less degrees it has appeared In all cases of new medical and surgical treat- ments of mass application. Not a century has passed since there was the strongest opposition in the use of anaesthesia in child- birth. There were riots within liv- lng memory In our own city op- posing mass vaccinatloif against smallpox. now accepted an a nec- essary preventive before any child enters a public school. Fluor- Idatlnn will be in time accepted generally. from Gamble's Corner to proved for construction. following members: RURAL ELECTRIFICATION , NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the proposed rural electrical extension, to serve the County Line Road Residents in this area who have completed con- tracts with the Maritime Electric Company Limited are hereby advised to wire their premises. Any complaints or disputes regard ng the plac-' ing of poles on private property or otherwise, or the cutting of trees necessary for line construction. must be referred to this Commission through the local committee at the earliest posslble date. . The local committee In this area comprises the Stanley Mayhew William Matheson Ernest Duffy THE PUBLIC U'l'l:'.I1'lES COMMISSION Shamrock, has been ap- l-I -i,".llAecllcally T .1 V. , Speaking I! n N. Bandeau. M. n.- . ml CONDITIONING ISN'T AN UNQUALIFIED BLESSIG AIR CONDITIONING m I k e e these hot summer days and nights much more comfortable for many of us. It is a great help to asthma and hay-fever suffer- ers too. But it may also present a problem In certain Instances. It may feel wonderful to enter I cool home, office or railroad coach after a walk under the. brolllng sun. But this sudden need for readjustment upon entering a cool area from a warm one can place a strain on your body. The strain is even greater If you are hot and persplring. CHILLS THE BODY The cooler air rapidly evaP0' rates the perspiration from your body's surface. This in turn may cause chilling. It might be especially notice- able among you t-ommul.e-rs who .run for a train and work up a sweat. Then, sitting in an air- work or en route home, you may become chllled. Sitting directly in front of an electric fan. of course, may have the same effect. Actuallly going from an alr- con- ditioned train or building into ex- tremely lint weather might help to bring on a common cold. While you may easily adjust to an air. conditioned atmosphere and spend several comfortable hours there, yttur nose may give you trouble. COLD GERMS It might be chilled sufficiently so that it is difficult to adjust to the high outside temperature, And noses that have I hard time ad. justing to temperature hanges offer ready prey fllr cold germs. Frequently a sudden change from cold air to hot air brings on I smothering sensation and nasal congestion. It is very Important that you don't ovcrexert yourself just be- fore entering an air-conditioned room or conveyance. Don't over- exert yourself at any time, for that mattter. 31" "'3 Especially important to guard against it in warm weather. Any strenuous acltvlty you must perform during lint weather should. lspossible. be reserved for air-conditioned aurrmmdlngg, QUESTION AND ANSWER O.C.: I have had asthma for I number of years. would air travel be harmful in my case? Answer: Unless there is accom- panying heart failure, I see no reason, why air travel should prove harmful or bring on an at- tack of asthma. AVAILABLE POWER Available waterpower on var- ious Manitoba river: has been estimated at more than 5,000,000 horsepower. RAISE SUNKEN UB VENICE, Italy (AP)-An Ital. Ian submarine sunk by a German U boat in the First World War was brought to the surface by scrap Iron salvagers Saturday, Al years after it went down. Inside were the bodies of the captain and 8) crew members. Underwood 7Zx,beWrx'fer.(t hs?t&; unognwooo u'5ou NEW UNDERWOOD obligation. Underwood llmlted 147 Hollis Strcct, Call 3-6828 conditioned coach on the way to , HALIFAX, N. 8. TO IIITISH PORTS: Hnl Class from 3200 , Tourist Class from 3145 "N01-'ES'hY' ms The mystery of how a woman's strapless evening gown stay: up has been explained as pan-unal magnetism offsetting, the force of ggvlty.-Kitchener-Waterloo Rec- 0 ' Rural roads which were once so narrow vehicles could hardly pass without colliding are new super- highway: where six or more vo- hlcles can pile up in one unuh.- Sarnla Observer . The official report of debates in the House of Commons for the current session to last Saturday runs lo.7.48l pages- and for the same perid the senate puts its dellberationrin 1,043 pages. It's at least a striking contrast.-Oh fawn Journal - .Eleven students at Moscow Uni- versity have been expelled for cooking up a comic strip treat- ment of l(hrushebev's anti-Stalin' oration. This is nothing. Wait till the day somebody does a comic strip on Khrushchev'l behavior at diplomatic functions. Detroit Free Press The trouble Is that too few tour- ist: (in Nova Scotlal can get good seafood dinners. There are some eating establishments w h I e h leave patrons departing with that sense'of satisfaction, but they are In the minority. It is difficult to understand why it is easier to get a delicious dish of lobsters or some other Atlantic fish In New York or even inland Chicago than In Nova Scotia.-Halifax Chronicle- Herald : This business of making verbs from nouns is ofttimes distress ing enough. Now it has moved another step when one of the lar- ger provincial dailies turn: I prop- er noun into a verb. The paper carries a heading: "Young Thief Bur-washed." Let's hope we do not get a rash of such things as:”Mr. and Mrs. So-and So Torontoed at the weekend." Or "The newly- weds Quebecked for their honey- moon trip."-North Bay Nugget . . .. . 71 -- cnuirc inudhih 5-! American dollars are now close to two bit. lion. Another asset that could im. prove In value if held for tho right time.-Port Arthur News. Chronicle A dcolor bringing back a rectum, hand skeleton from the U.S., pro. vlded custom officers with a pm. blem. He could have declared I; u used business equipment.-To. ronto Star ' A somewhat famous ball play. or is engaged In a feud with the reporters. without whose aid he never would have attained his pry, sent high salary rating.-Port Arthur News-Chronicle Odd. Isn't it. that the friend who lives two blocks away but w horn you never see suddenly sends 3 postcard from half-way around the world, wishing that you Ilttrg there?-Stratford Beacon-Herald In Waterloo the price of a gun, in Mount Hope cemetery is 330. In neighboring Kitchener the ('t'lll. etery fee is 560. As a result time is a decided inclination anumg Kitchener folk to choose walvrlnn as their last resting place.-Loud. on Free Press Three scientists have IlIIlllill:t'(I to tell the 35.10 of the iceberg, They took chips of ice from llie glassy floating mountains lllllth drift off the coast of Labrador and examined them in their lahorat. orlss. The analysis of the cases contained In the ice led savants to conclude several icebergs were more than a million ears old... La Voz de Espana t paint it would seem quite evident that these marathon swims are fast falling into disrepute across thQ country. Toronto's evening news- papers, the principal insligatm-3 of a number of these swims. shuuId.L-onsider the responsibilty, of sponsorship of these ordeal: from an ethical point of view as well as from a commercial point of view.-Brockvillle Recorder Money on terms ygy select a When a customer borrows from HFC, he is shown what we call a payment table. This table (sample below) shows exactly how much you may borrow, how many months you may take to repay, and the exact amount you pay each month. You select your own repayment plan, to make repaying your loan as convenient as possible. This dependable service is-available to you whenever a prompt loan is needed for any worthwhile purpose. is nus rnu uuu aouvuu sum or m mun mum uounu sinus slam ll sous some is mun sun 24 run duo :4 Borrow with eonllilcnco from Canada's tint and foremost consumer finance company A p llllllsllllllll lllllllllll W. 1. Wheeler, Manner I50 Crud George 89.. who I, phone I517 OIAIIOTIITOWN. P.l.l. 1 IOIXIUIIOIAIUHIIAI Cllllllltll TO EUROPE LATE SUMMER AND FALI. SAILINGS -Alfhrffl-Souohlalu YO FIBWCH POITSo flnl Class from 5207.50 Tourist Chm N50 VBQ fltlflill IICHIVKI UCVTWIA f'Wo4.AUO. I I SAXONIA OWL AUG. 3 I lV!INlA in. mo. in . a ASCANIA W01. AUG. I5 , Q cnmnu nu. mo. 17 is SAXWA Ill. A00. 2! . I7 scmu -wutauo. zv . l7 mm; H. Auto. II It cnsmu M. am. 7 n .w:'.' :2 W3: wuuu m mi '2: ; cuamu 7-'L”'w" 4 wtovu M. 5 We .v.-we :2 ll "1. M. 333 to o W .&”a I van M. 2 Menu ; 1 saxona I, 35333 if ' I3 ovum n It Ga has I