in Guardian A I -count-nuns-suusuunpn-nor .".-. ruansussvu-yuan-eusnssissssiasrnsusuen asrlottetewa. P.E.I.htIo 'l1su&nen7 Ul- ulhllt.I..'l-use Iesituo on-. S Dismiss Tees: 1. X3.h'Il.IWII3I' General Illegal. Inn A. Iunoil uemoucusoin Dsll! new-vssu Pu usods . l Irueh offices at Iumsnenids. Ilnulle no Athena Autbortsod as Second Class Isl! he he & (Ila Dsnertmuu. Ottawa. By Lerner: Charlottetown. summetldo u.'i.N pet ID sum. Elsewhere in P. L. l. 3.00. Olin Prnvluu and -, I U. L ll1.00 per ann- "Ths strongest memory 5 wed-i III: the weakest Ink.” ssruimav. DEC. 3. 1555 Religion Ancl Peace For the second year top-ranking government, military, education, business, and labour leaders have met together in Washington, D.C.. under the auspices of the found- ation for Religious Action in the So- cial and Civil Order to discuss the comprehensive subject "World Re- ligion and World Peace". This year's conference w s s different from the previous one in that it was concerned with international prob lems. whereas last. year the em- phasis was on the spiritual bases of Western democracy. Another inno- vation this year was the presence of representatives of European and '. Asiatic embassies on the same plat- form. Israelis and Egyptians sat , side by side discussing the religious foundations of their respective na- tional cultures; representatives of India and Pakistan searched in like manner for common grounds on which to work for peace. The conference was opened by Mr. Richard M. Nixon, Vice-Presi- dent of the United States, who said in part: "We read of a revival of faith everywhere. Yet the world is tense with many little wars and it fears that one great war may break out. Somehow, religious faith is not having sufficient impact on man's political life. It is a harsh fact that religious truth is not yet a controlling force in world affairs." Prominent among the speakerfwas the famed Moslem jurist and mem- ber of the International Court of Justice, Sir Muhammed Zafrulia Khan of Pakistan. "The end of the Second World War in Europe and Asia". he said, "did not bring peace or establish security. In fact, the very means through which the sur- render of Japan was enforced has sipce filled the hearts of men with new fears and fresh anxieties. We have pierced the supersonic bai- rier; the task now is to pierce the barriers set up by our past concepts of life and mortality. We must ad- year in September" hordes of the attractive little insects leave Can- ada and the Northeastern States, where they were born the ,previous spring, for warmer climes in Vir- ginia and points farther south. Most of them, it is thought, spend the winter in the Gulf States reg- ion. They return to their northern homes with the coming of spring and seek out milkweed on which the female lays her eggs-all 400 of them. Within afew days she dies. This means that the young go on only one return trip, and they have no experienced mother to guide them. Yet, they travel hundreds of miles across land and sea in all kinds of weather straight for their winter quarters. Many of them, of course. perish on the way; but those which survive go to the same places that were visited by their mothers the year before. More remarkable still, they return to the place of their birth to complete the cycle-- and to die. What force is it that guides them back and forth" For that question the scientists have no answer. ' l How (10 Dr. i'rqtth:irt and his associates know all this? By baud- ing the butterflies. So far they have attached tiny gum labels to the wings of .'i3.00(l and hope to band 40,000 more during the course of the survey which has another year to go. Only a small proportion of the tagged flies is reported, enough to reveal the pattern of the migra- tion. a pattern which thus far has not varied in any important par- ticular. It is interestingeyes, and edifying. too-to reflect that on this December day a little butterfl) that first saw the light on an island field last June is now resting in a warm Southern plantation a nd that. if all goes well, it will return six months from now to fulfil the last rites of its shortabut by no means useless - life. Incidentally, the monarch does no harm to any plant. EDITORIAL NOTES Lady Norah Docker, a British peeress, has resigned from her television assignment because gos- sip columnists persisted in referring to her talent as ”Lady D's dazzle". Any fainninded person would say that was reason enough. 0 O C Joe Strawberry, the Albertan Indian who celebrated his 105th birthday recently gives the follow- ing recipe for longevity: don't eat too much. don't drink too much liquor, don't work too hard, sleep plenty. He might have added an- other bit. of advice: don't worry just. our' thinking to new dimen- sions: ifumanity, universe, eter- nity." Other speakers, all of whom mnphasized the place that religion should have in political and eco- nomic affairs, were Admiral Arthur W. Radford, Chairman of the Un- ited States joint chiefs of staff. Lewis L. Strauss, Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, Clem- ent D. Johnson. Chairman of the Board of the U. S. Chamber of Com- merce. and Arthur J. Goldberg, general counselor for the C.I.O., who expressed the hope that the forthcoming merger of the (31.0. and the A.F.L. would reach new heights of moral and spiritual re- sponsibility because the leaders of the people who make up the move- ment do believe in these values. l An official of the sponsoring Foundation summed up his reaction this way: "The fact that such a rep- resentative group could sit down to- gather to discuss civilization, re- ligion, and the various major activi- ties of man is very significant. It ought to have an impact in many fields.” Without being over-optim- lstic about this sort of thing, and iwithout expecting it to solve any of , 'the 'great problems now pressing ' on humanity, one feels that his was .1 "a reasonable appraisal. 3 Migrating Flies Remember the old song "Where do the flies go in the wintertime?" - Well. the question has been answ- ered, at least as far as one species is concerned. by Dr. Fred Urquhart, tar-lo Museum. For nearly four years Dr. Urquhart has been lead- ing s 200-member research team in - A of the migratory habits of neural: Butterfbt. This is the director of zoology at the Royal On- p about the improbability of living to be 105. ' The concern expressed by the British press over the serious ill- ness of Bernard Cardinal Griffin, Archbishop of Westminster and leading Roman Catholic prelate, represents more than a formal act of courtesy to an ecclesiastical per- sonage. Cardinal Griffin is held in much esteem by Britishers of all classes and creeds. O The s3o0.ooo.ooo spent-by for- Plgn tourists-mostly Americans- in Canada thislpast season added greatly to the country's business. It must not be thought, however, that it represents a one-sided financial transaction. Canadians, according to Resources Minister Lesage, spent considerably more than that sum in their travels abroad. 0 Foreign Minister Molotov has informed Iran that the latt.er's membership in the Baghdad Pact "is Traught with danger for the frontiers of the Soviet Union". It reminds one of the fable in which the tiger ate up the bare which, according to the tiger's testimony in court. had been behaving danger- ously to other denizens of the for- est. 0 Atlantic Gypsum Limited was one of the three original industries sponsored by the Newfoundland Smallwood Government. During its I existence it has had an annual de- flclt which the Government had to make good. Now it is being taken over by a British concern which hopes to make it pay. To that end it will erect 15 small plants for the manufacture of a new type of build- lng material based entirely on gyp- sum. The purchase price will come ioutdfprofits. 8o,psrhspsthe ven- Vdarswss not as short:-sightsg, as the PUBLIC FORUM this ssusms In span so the non by nne-ponsuu. If sf Interest. The Gnudlu on not necessarily endorse the noun: el urrrannslsdrlll. FORGOTTEN ROAD Sir,CPermit me space in your paper in call the aiteniuou of the party or parties responsible for the upkeep of izhe roads in the 3rd District of King's tForest Hill areal. I refer particularly to the For- gotten Road (once called the Big Lot Roadi which connects the Upton Road at Bett.on's Corner and the Forest Hill Road in Stuart McLaren's, s distance of about a mile and s half. During the past summer this road was so rough that anyone driving over it with a car or Lruck had to use extreme cauiiion. In sev- eral places the ditdh is higher than the road. Tm. mm is travelled by the mail courier from St. Peter's Bay, also the mail courier from Dundas and by the milk truck that hauls milk daily to Char- lottetowvn. Since the snow storm on Nov. soul the mail courier has to so in the fields in order to deliver the mail on this part of his route. On Iihe Dundas. Strathcons Route, tihe courier has to detour in order to deliver Ilhe mail on his route. The driver of the milk truck has to detour nearly three miles off his route in order to soliect the milk. all because the road was not ploughed, All tabs other roads were ploughed shortly after the storm. If this road was widened and put in good travelling condition. and kept ploughed in winter. it would be a credit to the parties great help to all who travel on this road. I am. Sir. etc. FAIR PLAY have to r Forest Hill . 7)oed6mu, WHAT WILL REMAIN What will remain When the vampire bird That hatched desoai Is no longer heard? Where is the gain If the split-atom flare Must murder the brain That discovered its law, Then vanish like Cain C And leave Eden bare? Will a savage emerge With an undersiung jaw, From a dark cave door, With his stone eollth And wars old urge. And peace a myth The same as before? Or helring God's call. A ursph-like soul From suffer-lng's psll, Rise to conirol- . Or nothing. . . . . Nothllll at all? New York Herald Tribune. -Msdy Ethel Walton in The Age Old Story Their Redeemer Is strong; the DUI! WENT IIIY IDNDON (AP) - The Duke of himself s Mi." an lone:-mutt. &I I5! Gk Isa-s." responsible. and it would be a , Lord of hosts is Ills name; He shall iii-sully plead their sense. "sorry. I can't let you .. .. My . MINOR .hriYpSTlE"RlE . . A .....t.l. . Russia And We live in an age of globe-lrot- ting diplomats. and are quite ac- customed to foreign ministers and heads of state hopping ans and continents in the pursuit of diplo- matic advantage. Mr. John Foster Dulles has flown thousands of miles since he became secretary of state. Mr. Pearson has recently returned to Ottawa after confer- ences in South East Asia and in I number of places in the vast Sov- iet Republic. But even in our world of great mobility we have not seen the Russian chicftains take many trips beyond their own country. It was with the greatest reluctance that Stalin left Russia to go even as far as Teheran and Berlin to meet the British and American leaders. But today Premier Bulganin and party boss Krusciiev are many many miles from home. and we may he sure these gentleman at- tach great importance to the ex- cursion which they are currently taking. It is to India, powerful neutral and Asiatic leader. that the Russian bigwigs have gone. They expect to be away a month, visit- ing throughout the great Indian re- public and other countries in the area. The importance of their visit and its effect on Western diplom- acy cannot be uveremphasized if it is associated. as It should be. with recent events of more real significance than courtesy visits. A KEY COUNTRY India. a nation of nearly four hundred million and headed by one of the world's most influeiitial statesmen. has long been a key country in what was once called the East-West struggle. Under Prime Minister Nehruflndla has , resisted all efforts to bring her into Ihe orbit of the United States: membership in the SEATO pact Neulra By Heath Mncquarrle lism was promptly relectcd as here other measures of affiliation with the anti-Communist camp. At the same time, many American news- papers and politicians to the con- trary, notwithstanding--Nehru has never become either an ally or a pawn of Communism. and he has retained and strengthened his coun- iry's place in the British Common- wealth. India's neutrality has been careful. and correct but, under present circumstances, precarious to maintain. A worsening of re- lations with the United States, ac- companied by an improvement of the already good relations with Communist Chins. might have an adverse effect. Considering this point and at this precise time. the Russian visit comes into sharper focus. India's great need is for industrial develop- ment and the country's second five-year plan is to begin in April. It is widely expected that the Unit- ed Siaids will be asked for a loan of SI.500.000.000 lo asist in this great project of national develop- ment. But Washington has internal problems too. political as well as economic. PROMISE!) REDUCTIONSF The Republican administration has long promised budget reduct- ions and tax cuts. With an election months away such actions are much to be desired. and in pre- is to be cut by 20 per cent. The India, anation of nearly four paration for them all foreign aid meet something less than complete fulfilment, especially since It could not have any strings attached, as might be the case with old to countries willing to pledge thum- Nelves to fight Communism. An American rejection would be a Russian opportunity. The Indian Cockney Lingo By Eddy Gilmore Associated Press, London "ix-tls get the wind out of our mince pies and go across the frog and load to thef old rub-a- dub for a needle and pIn." the man said. "We've got. the bird line. you know." In the Queen's English the Cockney meant: "Let's get the wind out of our eyes and go acrou the road to the bar for a gin. We have the lime. you know." This is rhyming slang and it takes a real Cockney to speak it. A Cockney is a person born within sound of the bolls of old St. Mary-Ie-Bow church, near the l1l'aTl of this capital. Rugged In- dividualists and generally good humored. the Coclcneys' started meddling with the English langu- age as far back Is the first part of the 19th century. VII.l.lNG TO WOTE The Cockney characterized him- self in the first part of the 19th century by substituting v for w and vice varss: "Are you vtlllng to wote?" Later In the century the Cook- neys changed the sound to I. as in Artur for Arthur. Their greatest assault on the English sngusge sounds. They in day In absht for about a much much. Then came rhyming slang substitutilla one. two or words that vaguely Most of the rhyming slang is done with nouns and it is nearly always spoken and not written. And sometimes eyes become just mince rather than mince pies. Stand-to-attention, the full rhyme for pension. becomes stand - co. Grecnages. the rhyme for wages, may become just greens. ' Herels a short vocabulary: Mouth-north and south; nos&- I suppose: face - deuce and ace; stairs-apples and pairs: Shirt-dlckey dirt; shoes-fires and flues; trousers - round the houses; wifetrouble and strife; husband. old man-pot and pan; spoon-silvery moon; head waiter- hot potato: tea-rosey lee; dog- rosey lee; dog-sherry hog; sherry hos: money-bees and honey; csshosk sud ssh. VIRUS SPRAY POI! MOTIIS LONDON (Reuters) - Wool su- thorities today 'snnounc d the discovery of a disease which kills clothes moths. It is s virus produced by scion. lists of the agricultural research council at Cambridge. The virus can be sprayed or dusted into clothing, carpets and other wool- len material. It kills the grub but not the adult moth, the Interna- Medically 7 - Speaking IylennssN.Isslesu.I.I. Page 4 Gun main, NOTES of THE WAY DOES YOUR IIALTII . . rsnmrr an nevus Mxf ';.'y"th,:If"'w;";:'u with many of you planning to go home for the holidays. I think a few words of caution about air travel are in order. Most people can travel comfor- nbly. safely and without fear of air sickness in our modern pressurized airliners. But there are some of you who should not fly at all and others who should take certain precaut- ions. HEART PATIENTS - For some heart patients flying is okay- For others it is taboo. Writing in the New York Jour- nal of Medicine. Dr. K. L. Strltton lists those who should not fly as: Persons with s recent myocard- ical infarction or decompensstion. Persons with congestive failure Brandon Sun. had heard of it. to the so-called Oflzlnal user one better. ll". her went anything she likes. -c- Altor sconlnt old Indian reme- dies for years. medical science has acquired s new respect for thin. and with reason. The In- dians hsd s preventive for scurvy when our earliest European (:3. lllorers were dying of it. And they knew the virtues of quinine long 591011 Physicians of centinies ago Currently doctors at a New York medical centre are convinced an old Indian treatment for intestinal disorders is superim- "wonder-drugs." II is a herbal t.reatmeni,'snd has been reduced to tablet form .11: Hill Particular they have one the a prob- . world, Russia has great. in, and it is not surprising that the top men of the Kremlin wish or severe coronary insufficiency. Expectant more. Infants under ten clays old. Persons with active and bleed ing peptic ulcers. recent abdomi nal operations, draining sinuses epilepsy or osteomyelitis. months of the flight. at that time. h a ve providing your cardiogram is stabilized and excr the skin or labored breathing. of oxygen and a edical attendant on the flight. Since planes general- ly do not carry enough oxygen to keep an ill person supplied through- out an entire trip. you should rent a tank with a reduction valve and mask. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. G. 8.: I am so years old and am troubled with polyps in my mouth. What can be done to eli- minate them? Answer: In the majority of in- stances, polyps are removed sur- gically. A nose and throat special ist should be consulted as to the management of them in your par- ticular case. peasantry might find their hard lot improved and their nation enriched through courtesy of a Russian loan. The Soviet leaders have been giv- ing great attention to this kind of peaceful penetration in recent weeks. While Egypt gets arms from Czecho Slovakia. it also re- ceives from Russia a form of as- sistance which is perhaps far more significant. The building of the High Assuan dam is s u menduus irrigation project which the Rus- sians have offered to finance. Not long ago they advised Lebanon that their generosity would also be ex- tended to its important Litani River prolect. And so the story runs: a gradual extension of Russian influence in the Arab and Asian world. As s part of its program to strengthen its position in the Middle East, it is believed that certain Arab leaders were given s brosd hint that future trouble might find Mos- lems from the Russian state "vol- unteering" to aid the cause. SOVIET EXPECTATIONS At this stage it is not likely that the Soviet Union f mothers who have been pregnant eight months or Persons who have undergone ex- cision of a lung or lobe within three Air travel is hazardous for those suffering active I.ubeI"CI.ll0SIS. status asthmaticus. lung abscess or car- cinoma. bronchiectasis or pncu mothorax- You can fly even with hyper- tension, providing careful evalua- tion is made if your diastolic pres- sure is above lI0 mm. Hg. Symp- toms indicating the onset of asthma or a stroke mean you cannot fly You are able 0 fly even if you suffered coronary attacks last attack was more than six months ago, you can tolerate slight exercise, the electro- tion does not produce blueness of If youlve got a lung disease, make sure you take along a supply lbly had to gulp down his equiv- grgtigfsilflire (gm of svgoptlluus - e r . - ' Daily st". 8 cw in sor g Certainly the freely old bank- ' mg business has a new face The” 5 8 W?! and sprightly humor - lurking amid the castles of coin. After the city's this-d banl holdup of the month, eighth of the year, a girl teller admitted to a reporter Why she was a "wee bit scar " by the bandit but explained it was Only her first holdup. Then another bank was held up-fourth of the . month, ninth robbery of the year. This time s winsome girl in the cash case said she thought the bandit may have been a drug ad- dict because he had funny eyes. "But I don't know whether he was a drug addict. I come from Pent. icton and haven't been in Vancouv- er long enough to know what a drug addict looks like." Please, girls! -Vancouver Sun. Babies are not born with flat feet. X-ray films made of the feet of babies varying in age from twelve hours to fourteen days show that each of them has well formed arches. This contradicts a theory that the pedal arch comes into be- ing by action of the feet muscles after the baby starts walking. In- stead. English researchers insist, feet become flat. ankles turn In- ward or other foot troubles de- velop because of some abnormali- ty in the ligaments that connect muscles and bones. The scientists compare strong feet to a pair of roller skates. calling for little strain on the muscles-and weak feet to ice skates. which make mus- cles work harder than they may be able to do. For example, a child with ion narrow feet. is more likely to deve op flat feet than one with broad feet. However, the re- searchers report. most children are born with normal feet and If given proper care, they will escape troub- le later In life. Vscience Press. " 9 Wlnllllcd I) the World Health Ofikllllallon, Canada and the U ted states llau ing accounted for by trestmeutl rather than by absence.-Ottawa Citizen. Fl n on E 3'. The man who cared not .1. made his country's laws as long ;. SW83 to make a book of poetry, It is an anthology from which a senator or representative may in klwwn by the poetry he keep: handy for his own inspiration. so far as reports on the volume Show, there is nothing very unexpected in the choices of the leglslaturs, unless it be that such busy pm Dle find time to read and rememb- er anything outside committee 11' ports and constituents' letters --Christian Science Monitor. That one of the United Stairs "radar Islands" 130 miles off lllt Atlantic coast was battert.-d m fifty-foot waves in recent 5I.0i'IllS and its construction crew isolazct. by t a storm. is a reminder of tilt way in which the North American continent is gradually being t-lr cled by radar stations. At IIl'.sl our radar working system was to the north, and then in the cast. We can expect it to be created also in the west and south. for the new Soviet long-range jet aircraft are capable of flying around existing radar links and of attacking from the south. One day we shall all live within an immense. radar cngt protecting the industrial core of the free world.-London Fret Press. one day soon women may get perfumed cheques and compact.- with built-in cheque books, if U. S. bankers continue their efforts to woo feminine customers. it seems the bankers are really scr- ious about this drive to gismorlzc their business, ever since they discovered that outside the met- ropolitan centre omen do 85 per- cent of the family banking. Since it is mama who usually holds the family purse strings. does most of the spending and sashes the pay heques, it has dawned on the banking fraternity that she also is likely to patronize the bank that makes her feel most at home. So nowadays U. S. banks are tripping over each other in their efforts in make banking as much fun as shopping in the supermarket. - ROFESSIONAL CARDS North Bay Nugget. BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Boll. Msthesob 0 Foster iu luciunoas at. I. Elmer Blanchard, ILA. us Queen St. Phone all I. A. Farmer, Q.C.. LLB. Bank of Commerce Bldg. Allison M. Glllls. LLB. F. . V 53 Grafton St. OPTOMETRISTS G. F. liufoheson & Son ' G IIUTCHEBON. R.0. -Dlsl mi J. Carruthors. RD. 12: Ke st. Dial son 3 J. G 0.D. Ii Keyrntogt. nut. Dis! In A. at lites or even allies from among those countries now being cultiv- sled. If. however, the great are from India to the Balkans can be kept neutral. then a great -victory has been won. For years the United States has been tryins to build I defence cordon to link NATO with the newer and weaker SEATO pact. some sucess has been scam! in the Turkey-Irsq-Irsn-Pakistan alliance. But the Soviets are work- ing hard on India which stands at the Eastern end. and have been the centre. In the west there-are difficulties enough already with coldly hostile. Yugo Blsvis waver- ing and the French North African territories seething with discontent. In this vast strategic eras of the toseelnpersonsrsuonwhsss ihestsksssreso DIAMOND IN PUP Mrs. Joan do Costs's slsstisn tionsl wool secretariat said. CONSULT: Olllsesx CIAIIHHIIOVN - A a run voiin iiisiiiuiics iimis iiviinimi & co. i.tn.'I 4Ourexporlsnceofove't-Ilreeqisotleflolleilf-IIl'!Il3' sunncs Underwriters. is It you ' pg ,. . LN; M1. i.lgi,,-"f' x . . - Iomsous '- ' 1 sucessful in Egypt which is at Cyprus sflsme. Greece and Turkey opportunit- ll Richmond St. A l)Inl17l'I gjgggggigggg-g, A. wuth mud LLB. J. S. Taylor B.O. riiuup. my us Odisuu at. c3,"',lfc', ff; fni',.”"..,s5",'l Pshnor 5 Ensign II. I. Mabon. B-0- 3”; .1 N." 5,4. mu, Montague P. I2. I Mnthgion. P0130 3 CHIROPRACTOR choison '-"-r--r-""'T ;l7IAGnflee Sines an 3- 3- 015093” m . . Ohss. B. McQnold. B.A. 0- Keith PI Illnlehnoeslt. lllslgg MsoPheo8'rI-alnor mom-st, onion CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS B. Arch. M.B.A.I. u summerslde. P.E.I. Dial 1930 Charlottetown. Tuesdays ssd Fridays Dill Ill IIoDONALD. OUIIIIIE & 00. Charlottetown u , Peter. who post. her 93. iwapybriefly worth IN times thlt. ' NEWLY DICORATID. 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