. C l I .r In .5; 3' '2 "mm: - hnn! ink-I. un- IIIIC Cnlndhhl Dull) Veij Pnblinlnn Aunculnd Inning: no no tnnadiu Pn- Ienhn: Annll Bureau at l'in-ulnncu Dana -meu nl Suruluerude Iluiuu and Al-9 uinumrln-nllnuirtnolndula lhunnnu utuwn Q Guru: Lurk-tuinwn sunununoo Iiau pa 9 Efnwwhen ll Plfl tan-.v (new Hajj I! I ltsw DH Insan- ”Thc strongest memory In wnhn tin the rented lnlt " Tue: 4 Em 'l'l'l-ZSDAY. Al'Gl'ST 21. 1:51 New Prospecting Thanks to a iuiuilnir of interested financiers. iucludint: Iilr. Cyrus S. Eaton, prospct-tors are heading for Baffin Island ncar thc Arctic Circle in searcli of ll'ttll on-. 'l'hc team is led ti)" Rtlxn 'illv.t.;r.-3 a Ncwfouiid- lander who has done a lot of pros- pecting in t..ilu'.iviur and who is credited with til-I-oxci-iii;.; ore and oil fields on the l'l'..ll'iIlCl'll slopes of Ungaxa Bay. Illr. Tlionis is lu-glily optimistic over the now venture. "We're not fooling around with anything small," he told rcpoitcizx ill Montreal, "we're after big tliiu'.;.-. Baffin will be the next big name ill iron. The day isn't far off when well see towns going up right inside the Arctic Circle." The ”Coaslal Queen”, a convert- ed submarine cha.-cr. is already en- route to Ii0pe's Advance Inlet in Ungava Bay carryiiig supplies and equipment. Mr. Thoms and his crew -and Mr. Ealonawill be flying there in a few days to meet the ship. From there they will go on to their destination and. or so they hope, to new richcs. The project is planned to extend over three sum- mers. It is expected to cost 51.600 each day the ship is away from her home port. Montreal. In addition to iron ore, the pros- pectors expect to find new deposits of nickle. copper. oil and uranium. All Canadians will wish prospector Thoms and his liarriy associates and, of cotiiise, his financial back- ers every success in their under- taking. Hospital Accreditation During the year under review It Edmonton, Canada moved appreci- ably nearer to having her own body of hospital accredi'.ation, and in fact this goal may be said to be within sight, states the Canadian Doctor. A purely Canadian nr;.:ani7.ation of medical mcn. to assess the standards of can in (laiiariutii hospitals, is to he set up and is I-xpcctcd to go into opr-ration Jaiuiary l. 1939. This is the result of procrcssive cfforts which have been undertaken since 1931 under the lcadership of the Canadian Ilicdical Association. Oricinally all hospital accredita- tion in the I'nitcd States and Canada was carricrl out by thc American College of Stii-goons. Canadian medi- cine has had representation since 1932 when the work was undertaken by a joint body of rcprcscntatives of both l'iiilcri States and Canadian medical bodics. "The time has now comcs." notcs the rcport of the Committee on llmpital Accredita- tion. ”wlivii tlic national status of Canada. its lantruazc and racial factors, and its cliantziiitz economics In hospital scrvice call for the estab- lishment of a purely Canadian pro- gram for ihospital accreditation”. Working on t h 0 all -Canadian plan since I032 have liccn the Can- adian Hospital Association, the Canadian Nlcdical Association. the Royal Collngo of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and l'Associ.1- tlon dcs Medccins dc Lanizue Fran- chise du Canada. These groups will be represented on the new commis- lion. It is officially hoped that the ap- pointment of a new all-('anadian organization may result in the speed- ig up the work of inspecting .;ICIlIldhn hospitals for accreditation. H3 ill! the 346 Canadian hospitals. ;.'.Q,”.7 per cent of those eligible. ?-'grhcnlnennxrveyodslncetheuo- I 1, Q42; per cent. received coin- Timltlml. while 258 have , nprovnl and 34 one-year !nnllnegol:lntionstnthlsendCnn- ndinn medicine has received t he wnrniest sympathy and heartiest co- operation from its counterpart on the other side of the border. The National Debt There is one debt shared by every citizen to which, oddly enough, very few outside of financial circles of Government ever give a serious thought. That is the national debt which in this country at the present time, annual surpluses notwithstand- ing, amounts to about S600 per head of the population. However, it may be interesting to some to note how this debt has developed in proportion to the growth in population. in lilil, '.-rhcn war expenditures were just licgiiiiiiiig to make themselves felt. (lanadals debt stood at about Kill, billion or 33317 per head. Five years later it had reached the per capita rate of nearly S2900. But in lflll the popu- lation was only 11 million. In llllti it had risen to about Ill: llllIIl(i'l. The debt was rouchly 1.". billion. By 1932. it. had fallen to a little ovcr 3311 billion: and the population had risen to 14', million. That manic the per capita debt something like N773. Since then, surpluses have re- duced the overall dclit sliizlitly. Meanwhile, the population has :.:rown by another 2': million. which lcav--s the per capita dcht at the present time a little less than Stittfl. This means that, although the ricbt is roughly 3'; times what it was I5 years ago, the per capita liurclcn is less than twice what it was then. In the meantime. the economy has grown by leaps and bounds: so that, all things considcrcd, the Canadian debt is one of the less burdensome of all the national dcbts in the free world. Even so, it is good for us all ' to remember that we cacti owe Si600 in behalf of Canada. More bothersome. by far. are the Provincial debts. cspcrially in these Provinces which, like our ow n, do not have rapid growth in either population or resources. EDITORIAL NOTES The inscription "In (hid We Trust”, which long has been carried on United Statcs' coins will now be carried on 51 bills. Some will call it a commendable move. Others, equally anxious to stress the powcr of faith, will have their doubts. I I I It was typical of (Taiiada's great explorer-geologist .loscph Burr Tyr- rell, who has died at the ace of 99, that he should have written the life of another, although a more simple yet colourful explorer, David Thomp- son. Of Tyrrcll it might well be said that Canada is his monument. I I J The Giants will lie Ieaiing New York next year and taking up head- quarters in San Francisco. lt's n heavy blow to Gotham, but not an irreparable one. That will come if and when the I)od;.:crs pull up stakes, as they have threatened to do. u 4 I A member of the American As- sociation of Women Ministers told her colleagues at the annual as- sembly of the group that "some congregations call a woman ministcr because they do not want to pay her as much as a man." Now, there's a woman with shrewd psyclinloizical insight. whatever she may be like as n preacher. a Is I Drunken driving is a despicable thing. It should be punished to the full extent of the law. It is not always, however. the main cause of traffic accidents. In New York State. it has just been disclosed, Rt) per cent of July traffic deaths were caused by violation of traffic mles Nine per cent were attributed to drunken driving and five per cent to defects in vehicles. 9 o . Wedgeport, N.S., had better look to its tuna-hunting laurcls. In Portugal Cove, Nfld.. where the sport is only just beginning, 8 had been landed at last report, while only 3 had been taken at Wedge- port. Tourist Director 0. L. Vardy of Newfoundland caught the biggest one so far. It weighed 871 pounds. only I few pounds lea than the world record. American sportsmen Ill & IO PC&l Can I! fut a they can fhid transportation. A Q kw in WoQprt for the an In-t. l I " tlrat -Avttfaat "does: girl get: t Iver. Mountiefe WHILE THE BAND PLAYS ON 5 if Stingray Bites You ly hem: N. lnnluu. MD. 'l'huI's I new trut- Tho procedure. developed by three Galveston lthyllcinna. in simple and , ” coinpleu ro- lief from pain. in most instances. in from 10 to It minutes. Now.I know that ldnllvdy low of you will become vtctlnu of gungnyg. But these nuty ernaturu present n constant hazard to flnhermen and sea banners from the middle of July to early September. During July and August. particularly. Itin- xrnys come into shallow water. Since stingray wounds nro among the nmstpexcrucintinuly pnlnful that any animal on in- flict upon man. I think it's n good idea for you vncntioiiists to know how to treat them. RECOMMENDED TREATMENT Drs. J. Fred Mullins. Charles J. Wilson and William C, Best I!- commended treating the wound by immersing it. in ice water. Since the foot or ankle general- ly in the site of the wound, thin in easy to do. Temperature of the w n t e 1' should be about zero degrees can- tiarade. The foot or other ex- tremity should be dunked until the wound is about six inches un- der the water. .Vlnst cast.-s require that the foot be submerged for about one' and one-hall hours. This is not u very comfortable method of bait- ing pain. I admit. MARKED DISCOMFORT For the first five minutes or so. there will be rather marked discomfort from the cold water. But the bent of your extremity soon will boost the temperature to about five degrees ccntilzrade and. as a result. the pain from the wound is usually reduced 4 hly PUBLIC i:oRuM :Whot Is Wholesome Water? Dr. Gordon Batu. Health Mngnxine tin: column in upen to the discus lliill bx P(iI'TP5ptl'.1Il(I of question of mt.-fut The (iumd-nu does not new unit) cndnru uu opinion of corn- poiidcntlp GROWING RYE Dear Sir.- in I recent Issue of your paper. you have on he- count of the growing of rye on P.li:. island for the manufac- lure of rye whiskey, and I am surprised to learn that so many prominent citizens. farmers. business I men. farm organiza- otficials are apparently glvlnn tlu- projcct Ihclr sanction and lilcsiuniz. I wonder if this rye nrown here is of such a super- ior quality or is this just another st-hcme of "Mr. John Barley- coi'n"lo further tighten his izrlp on the people by getting them intcrcslctl in the production end of the liquor business, no that hv the time the next generation comes up. no one will dare even to raise a voice of protest against the entrenched evil "The love of money is the root of all evil" and the liquor trnffic has ever taken ndvuitnize of m:m'ii cupidity to promote its interests and the present situa- tion Is no exception. It is disturb- lniz to use so many men In nicer to zrasp the ball offered in the shape of ii few dollars to be matte by the izrowlng of rye. i would that all those who have visions of prosperity by the grow- Inc, of rye inr the manufacture of whiskey would realize that III is as true today as It has nlwnyl hccn in the past that "They eh- slave their children's children who make compromise with sin". and that they will resolve to touch not the "unclean thing." Inm. Sir. elc.. R. LOUIS CAIRNS Freetown, P.E.l. SACRED HEART HOME SIr.- The prospect that the building known as the Sacred Heart. Home will be demolished ann 3 new fire proof structure erected on the same site call: forth the following observations. This Hnviland Street properly once formed part of Fort St. Gt-ornc. in 1891 the Sisters of Charity lmmvn as the Grey Nuns of Quebec had built part of the huildiniz now used Is the Sacred ll:-art Home on land adjoining the Victorian mansion of Mrs. Owen Connolly. the Church's nrcnl bcncfnclreiui. which wnli located on the Dundas Esplan- ndc. added thus making the Char- lnuctowii Hospital one of the but in the province at that time. when in 1921 the Charlotte- tnun Hospital wll damaged by fire, the unused military Hoo- pital an the grounds of Govern- ment House was offered the Grey Nuns and they moved there in the meantime the (lhnrlotlt-town llnspluil wu mov- ed across Haviland Street. also the Connolly House, and made into the Sacred Heart Home. I am. Sir, etc. Kl-INN!-'.TH BRUCE STEWART Bedeque. BTANDIY Sir.- Last winter when Mrs. Robert Nicholson. of 15 Fitzroy Street. was visiting Boston. in introduced me to the Old IOIO Newstand where the onus. is cold. flow fortunate this was for dur- ing the days of our Boston news- paper strike I am purv-h--'00! the Guardian and l particular- ly enjoyed rendill about and Home Week. Eleven years no I vllltd the Charlottetown llnul II I stranger to the island but have in 1905 a new wing want To the chemist the definition to! water is simple. its formula gin H20. To the ordinary citizen I without 1 knowledge crystal clear fluid which he drinks com- i monly to quench his thirst. This is the wholesome pure water spo- ken of in legal documents, it is not the H20 of the chemist but it is H20 mixcd with n great many chcmicnls coming: from the beds of rivers and lakes iwhich make it palatable Pure H20, a combination of hydrogen and oxygen in specific propor- ltloiis. is good to replenish stor- 'size batteries but it is not suit- able for human consumption. It has been discovered in re- ,ccnl years that when ordiiiaryl drinking water with all of its chemicals is deficient in fluor- rine, children who drink it are likely to have decayed teeth because their teeth as 1 result are deficient in fluorine. It has been proven that fluorine will prevent cnrics. Caries may and does damage human teeth dur-i in: the whole of human life. without fluorine. in the percen- tage of l to 1.000.000 parts of water, water is not. in the opin- ion of competent scientists. pure drinking water because it it not conductive to health. People with decayed teeth are not healthy. Flourine is a normal constitu- ent of the purest drinking water. How the addition of fluorine, which is n normal constituent of drinking water. can be com- pared to the addition of orange Juice which is not a normal con- stituent of drinking water we are unable to comprehend. it is an unfair argument. This is the opinion of this journal. not- withstanding the fact that sich 'an argument has been used to 'try to prove that the addition of fluorine to drinking water is med- ication. ln our opinion, if there is an obligation on the part of ,municipalities to provide pure and wholesome water to their llcltizens. than municipalities are remiss in their duties and obli- llznttons if they fail to see to it tthnl the drinking water they supply to their citizens contains I sufficent fluorine to ensure heal- Vthy teeth. Seymour Topping. The withdrawn iihngxy-browed man in the green fatigues hard- ly glanced up when the Russilll soldier seized his arm. Slum- Iblinz, he was half lcd. half- draizged to the vegetable patch. I Then, as be but done for the - Inst 10 years behind the towering . red walls of Berlin's Spnndnu prison. the man stooped and be- an to pull weeds. In 1957 this is Rudolf llesii. once deputy fuehrer of Nnxl Germany I I innd the dreaded ”shndow" ofl Adolf Hitler. lieu. at 63. is n haggard hollow- eyed remnant of the handsome uturnine Nazi fanatic whom Hit- I let named as his successor after A Hermann Gocrlnn. Despite his physical deterioration. Hess has lost none of his air of mystery. To his jailer: in the four-power Spnndnu war crimes prison Hess I remain: the enigma, the star iuzer, the strange one carrying behind his dark broodinl eye: Ill- K swers to question: that still tune I historians. 1 On the night of May 10, INT- I as Hitler's triumphant nrrnles , stood pulled on the French coast tlooltlng toward England - Hen ulounded the world by parachut- lna out of I Mesaerschmitt into Scotland. Allied leaders found the visitation no less mystifying than did the Scottish fnnner who rounded up Hess in his meadow. According to the official Brit- lali version, lieu. who learned to fly in the First World War. said he had come over on 1 "mission of humanity." He wanted to con- vince the British people they had loll the war and should make peace immediately. Prime Minister Churchill ac- cepted Hess' statement that he made the flight on his own inl- llntlve. He wrote of lg later on an "escnpode" of no lrnportnhce to the course of the war. Josef Stalin dinareed. The "nanny, ItOfHIIlu'. ..-. & . . s 'HitIer's Shadow Auoclnlhd Press from sentenclnl him to life Im- prisonment. Today within Spandau'l secre- tive walls. A prilon source who observes Hes: nearly every day says the former Nnzi lender liven , In a morose dream world. in politics. I believe he wants to tforgct the past. He won't read 1 newspnpe . or books. except i those on astrology which he I reads avidly. "Hess is very superltltloul. He refused to no to the weekly "He no longer takes an interest , u . The Texas physicians say that neither ice packs nor moderate doses of opiates have given such satisfactory results as quickly II i this immersion method. it might be I good thing to re- member. QUESTION AND ANSWER What would case per- -" vomiting in I three- month-old baby? Answer: Vomiting may be due to the formation of habit. In wrong feedings. or to some di- gestive disorder or infection. OUR YESTERDAYS TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (August 27. I93!) The Illlh reputation of Prince Edward island dairy cattle was enhanced this week by the splen- did showing .of the Bunbury Farm liolstein Herd at the Ot- tawn Exhibition, Mr. J. Walter Jones. owner of the herd, re- ceived the news last eveninj that his showing of nineteen chl- tle had won the Reserve Junior Champion. 1 firsts. 4 seconds. 1 thirds. and 3 fifths. Visiting the Province at the, present time is one of III most illustrious mns. Rt. Rev. Fran- cis C. Kelly, D.D.. Ph.l')., Lift. D.. Bishop of Oklahoma. who arrived in the city on Saturday by car. Bishop Kelly last visit- ed the Province in 1929 on tho, loccniiion of the scvcnlv-fifth nn- I niversary of the founding of St. I Dunslnn'l College. (August 27. 1947) No report us to why work on construction of the New Prince County Hospital had been stop- : Perl or when it would be recom- menced was given out following ,I tpeclal meeting of the Board :of Trustee: of the Hospital int 1 evangelical church services with I r the other prisoners." For more than n decade Hen has declined visits by his wife. son or other relatives". The prison rules allow him one an - mlnuln . visit a month by a relative. I "My family shall see me again 1 only under it o r In I l clrcum - stances." Hess once told A guard l pllowever. Hen does not conceal I his affection or longing to mom which so through censorship. Whooper Boom New Orleans llern Somc-thin: has suddenly come over the whooping crane popu- lation. For your: the whooping crnn haven't appeared to give I whoop whether they became ex- tinct or not. So nonchnlnnt have they been about perpetuating the specie. that there were only about 25 of them left in this world I year or so :30. Two of these rare birds reside ln'Audubon Park and have re- ceived almost as much publicity gs Grace Kelly and Prince Rain- ier concerning their prospects in progeny. At present the mo is tras- Ilflnl two whooping chicks. the an; to survive this long in cap- it . But now comes the news thd -li chicks are hnnllnc olt Tin! his family when he write: letters ' night. Mr. M. L. Bradshaw, vice- chnirmnn of the Board. iinld there had been "no decision." The Railway Wharf prolect which was hoped to be finished by the in of September. is like- ly to take another six weeks. a government engineer llld yes- terday. Although the main part . of the work is completed, there . mains a portion of the cement wall at the extreme end, tou- ther with surfacing the wharf and filling. IIIYLLA PALMIFEKA Under the arch of Life. when love and death. Terror and mystery, gun-4 her shrine. I new lennty enlhroned; and though ! dh:.r'1;u. struck. awe. n as am i u breath. In W Hers Are the eyes which. over nth. TD! III! and sent bend on the - which can draw, Iy sen or ally or woman. to one no allotted bondmu of nu palm and wreath. nununuqyng, -on ruunu-nu-nnq. non-dune-....U buulllllnhuhushhhhwntutnupnnehhthriglnu hoennrnlnHIn&wIhnd&Id.IhIThIonnt.lvuceq.-d. BID.-IIIIK IO 8 XIC---Kllchlot-Water bland lsnlcuhnpudbnlxn oftnoeni-niudaeuvupd caidnnoo-alan--tin. oi-nbneklolutnn.-qlnlhinylowclicrdtnnfel-lniinn1u.aru. union! hntnulnlhnkud-hnsyoalnlncuadnlnl-:q, star Imnnnoldorlynsulnotas; Mh&I'jVh0H)Edu nndhuuy.Nnwltlnt.hout coma that really ninturn and is the net income of Ilrleultuu that pollciel and pmgrnnunlu should be duluod to lznnnnvo. OFnrn:er's Advocate E -E -2 E E E in 1910. According to the now memoir: of the widow of the one- time ltnlinn dictator. Benito considered accepting n job as editor of an lt.nllnn-lu- guage socialist newspaper in New York. The former dictator reluctantly turned the offer down she has written. because their first child was on tho wny.-Ot- tawa Citlul ls Risk of Cancer Reduced By New Cigarette Filters? when you buy n peeling of cigarette: there In no way of telling, from the package. how much tar and nicotine will be in the smoke. Latent laboratory findings. in September Rude:-'I Digest, give you this internu- tlon about ll of the popular Cniudinn h A This article makes Iultinl -uvi hopeful-reading. one filter-tip clurotto now offers I .'l0'tw improvement in tor filtra- lion - - - and 4096 Ion nicotine in the smoke! other improved filters are on the way. This Render”: Dluut article will be talked about from Cont to Cont. At your nownntnnd today. Donit mlu ll! egggggf 15 in the titles and on the IT'S GOOD POLICY To Be Adoqunuly Insured HYNDMAN 8: CO. LTD. turned Ilnoo ll?! our experience of over three-quarters of n century. as insurance Undrwrltll, I 1 you dlmnul. omm; CHARIDHETOVN. IUIMERIIDI. MONTAGUE. ALll:l.'l'0N Agent: throughout the Province. All lines of I-urluo effected. A lnlllc lruh cup of bitch. I uch vou have become Ic- ovcr the years. Young. from the net of seven and t to lull teens are throwing uinb signals to motorists both high. -Fort. William Tinu-.x . LABOR DAY HOLIDAY LOW WEEK-Ellll FIRES ooh: ton Noon. Friday. nnti I pa. Innlny. leturn Jo-In to commence not Ii in SHIN. Monday. nun:-nuor IOUI I'll! Post Office Ch arlottetown, for nendunilc excellent opportunl iitnndlu or a land clpnl. ENROLL NOW I MARITIME CORRESPONDENCE COLLEGE Mnrlunio Correspondence colleu will be recolviu Air p(llc;(tlonn until August It for home ltudav courses in UlinUI'. . I all phases of COMMERCIAL EDUCATION. single subject are permlted in all undue. Student: may write nomination- set by the Atlantic Provinces Inmlnlng ty to obtain GRADE Xll tJu . Matricm COMM YIGOII expert instruction at inlnlmuln coat. For complete Infor- mation nddnn your inquiry to: A. L. Huhley, B.A.. Prm Box403 P. E.l u lot: courses in Board. This in an ERCIAL DIPLO A. Enin) INIOLL NOW ! It Hlyllltlllltt Wtlllblentinn frnnlthe Hltlyforunntnth uuhul-Ihnthn 1Cf. - The P. Department of Agriculture h spin sponsoring The Provincial Harvest Exhibition ” tobeheld mivmiuaaiuniilqaon-as sqnawu-z1.m1 ClnuulnVoptnhIu,FI'IIltI.InodPotnwa. Table stockPotntnu. Hold CroplIadI,l1old Roots. Prlaolistsnndcntryfornl ninyheobuined tItn.Itiu1tID.Oinrlntnuwn. I'M barman: at Asriwli ui-nuuaunpost-