THEYGUARDIAN Rilhlilhod ovtryiweek-day mo in: at 136 Prince Street Chuloltotowu. P.E.l. by the ammo Company Ltd.. King St. W.. Toronto. ) Iunuut Ofllcu.-Z15 University Tower Bldg. 'Cnen PHIII Edward Island Like tho Del” Editor. I-frank Walker General Manager. In A. Burnett Member Canadian Dally Newlpaper . T Association Mzmbel it the Canadian Preu Member Audit Bureau of Circulation: Inn... offices at surnmanide. Montague and Alberlon Authorized In Second Clan Mail by the Pun Ollie: Depamnenl. Ottawa. By Larriox C rlumwwn. suinmcrxidr 515.00 per an- Ium. Elsewhere in P. E. l. 89.00 other Province: and U. 5. 312.00 per annum "The strongest memory is weaker um- the weakest ink." MONDAY, SEPT. 12. 1955 Island Products Week It is a happy coincidence that with the annual meetings of the Maritime Provinces Board of Trade in Charlottetown this week, the im- portance of local enterprise in pro- cessing and canning Island-grown products is being highlighted in a campaign sponsored by our Junior Board of Trade. It is customary, in stressing the importance of our agriculture and fisheries, to f0l'gPl that we are also progressing indus- trially so far as these prime indus- tries are concerned. Today we have fifty-five canneries in addition to dairying, filleting, freezing and other plants handling Island products. and these industries are deserving of every support. Many of them are ex- porting to other Provinces and are establishing an enviable reputation on a quality basis. If our own Island people would patronize these indust- fries more, talk more about them and bring their activities to the at- tention of visitors, it would be an in- centive to further enterprise and pay rich dividends to our producers in stabilizing prices and expanding their markets. Some idea of the quality and variety of our Island processed foods will be given in the central display which is being arranged for this week in the lobby of the Charlotte- town Hotel. The display will be. shown in connection with a Prov- ince-wide publicity campaign. The visiting members of the Maritimcs Board of Trade will be presented with samples of some of our leading products, and other means will be taken to emphasize this important phase of Island industrial activities. The Junior Board of Trade is to be commended on its initiative in launching this campaign, and our producers and government officials in cooperating to make it a success. Cal Legislation Among all the strange and cour- ageous things that have been at- tempted by town councils, an ord- inance recently enactcd by West- bury. N. Y. must surely be given high place. 'It calls for a curfcw for cats. On and after a certain date it will be unlawful for any member of the feline community to be at large after .10 p. m. Even a single meow aflcr that hour will be enough to put the offender behind barseprovided, of course, it can be apprehended. The calls guardian will be fined so much. depending on the gravity of the offence. Unless the Wcstbury cats arc a lot different from thc sivcmgc spccimcn -if one may use that term without conveying any (iiSll(l.N'D(l('l-lllfl civic authorities of that town arc going to lmvo troubln on their hanrls, and plenty of it; and it will comc as no surprise to hour that tho mcmhcrs of the policc forr-c havc rt-signcrl in a hotly. For if llicrc is our animal above all others that is not amen- able to rcgimcnlatirm. that animal is the cut. Inrlcorl. it is that strcak of olvstinatc imlcpcntlcmr that makcs it. the charming animal it is. (ionic to think of it. who ever heard of a cat that would obey an nrdcr? it can be led-provided thc leading does not interfere with its own plans-but it can never be driven. This is the case even indoors, when- some measure of human discipline might be expected to have at least a token influence for good, even though it might signify nothing more than condescension on the cat's part; but outdoors it is doubly so, for there the cut lives and moves in an aura ' of complete mastery and of utter in- difference to any will but its own. "I am master of all Isurvey, my right there 1: none to dispute"; that is the great feline slogan, and it was so long, ago: before William Cowper. A Daniel Defoe. Roiinbon Cruooo or henrd, of. It . get it mm their heads now as later that their feline citizens will wander when and where and how they will, curfew or no curfew. The Scientists Disagree Meetings of nuclear experts are so conymon these days that very lit- tle attention is paid to them ordinar- ily. There is still plenty of mystery attached to their particular jargon. but it has not the fascination for the layman that it once had. Repetition has dulled wonderment. A recent meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, however, is of special interest because it revealed unusual disagreement among the physicists themselves on the oucstion of the possible effects of nuclear reaction. Sir Robert Robinson, president of the Association, wanted to know if there is 100"; proof that the earth's atmosphere could not be set on fire by an uncontrollable hydrogen ex- plosion. Even the tiniest fraction of a doubt, he declared, might conceiv- ably result in the destruction of the world. lie seemed to think that that fraction exists, despite all the precautions that have been institut- ed by the scientists. Other members of the Association ridiculed the sug- gestion. ”We know of no physical process whatever," said one of their number, ”from which an uncontrol- led chain reaction could possibly emerge." They may not know of any; but, as Sir Robert pointed out, that is -not proof that none exists. And until the entire scientific com- munity is certain that the danger is out of the question and can prove it by irrefutable evidence beyond the smallest fraction of a doubt, public confusion on the subject will con- tinue to grow. Come to think of it, no expert or group of experts has yet put forward any compelling rea- son for continuing experiments in hydrogen explosions on an ever in- creasing scale. EDITORIAL NOTES At last the scientific researchers nave got around to the lead pencil. A seven inch one, they report, can write exactly-45,000 words. It can be sharpened 17 times. 0 O 0 An astronomer has announced that, according to his calculations, the universe is expanding only one- third as fast as was thought four years ago. He added, however, that it will be ten or twelve years before he will be able to make exact meas- urements. In the meantime we shall have to try and get along with- out that bit of important knowledge. There is one picture of himself that Donald Cameron, :1 Maine fish- ery guide, is going to prize very high- ly, whether it looks like him or not. It was painted and presented by Prnsident Eisenhower whom Mr Cameron guided on a fishing trip this summer. The President not only painted it but framed it. I O I Here's one car driver, the only one we have heard of so far, who didn't blame the other fellow for the accidcnt. Appcaring in a New York court after his car ran into a milk truck, George Gulyas told the judge: ”You see I've only one good cyceno vision at all in my right. And he- sidcs. I'm not a very good driver anyway." 0 I 0 According to a rcport from the food and Agriculture Organization there is more meat in the world now than at any time since 1945. 1954 production was up 16"l in 23 coun- tries compared with the first post- war year. The supplies include beef. vcal. pork. mutton, and goat. Thr biggest gain has been in Western Europe. 25')? more than at the end of the war. 0 O 0 Every three hours of the day. notes an exchange, one Canadian dies in a traffic accident. Traffic fa- talities in Canada have climbed steadily since the war. There were 1,663 traffic deaths in 1946; 1,759 in . 1947; 1,976 in 1948; 2,276 in 1949: 2,270 in 1950; 2,412 in 1951; 2,701 in 1952; 2,906 in 1953; 2.967 in 1954. The postwar traffic death toll ex- ceeds the number of Canadians kill- ed in all the land battles in which Ca- nadian troops fought in the 1939-45 wpr and in the Korean conflict. And that doesn't take Into account the thousands of ponons Injured In the "poutkwdr, occidents or the hundreds dtmttuoni of dollars in property i mi aU' OTTAWA REPORT Profitable B. C. lnveslmenl Iy Pnblck Nlchollol Ottawa: Some newspapers have recently been pouring praise on Ray Lawson. Canada's Consul-Gem eral in New York City. for his energy and imagination in launch- ing the project to build the private- ly-financed Canada House in New York. Ontario": former Lieutenant-Gaw ernor is the father of this idea. But he may well have stolen the idea, in an even better form, from British Columbia. Further afield than New York, and with its very real light hidden modestly under a bushel, is a Brit- ish Columbia project which knocks this Ontarian's plan into the prov- erbial cocked hat. This is British Icolumbia House. In London Eng- and. Thai well known address, No. 1 Regent Street. costs its province nnt one nickel. The expenses of the salaries of the Agent-General for British Columbia and all his staff, their office expenses. and even their official entertaining are, i am told, all fully paid for out of the rents of the 70 other offices contained in British Columbia House. Canada House has no such grandiose ambition to save the taxpayers pocket. THE OLD (MACMDAM The Agent-General, Mr W.A. Mc Adam. completed last month what is probably a record. He has now held that post for 21 years, after being official secretary in the same department for 11 years. It looks as if he will be playing W11 K The chicks were yellow as puff- hall suns Fallon out of a summer sky, But the farm-wife viewed the shining ones With a cold and disapproving eye. For a hcn that hraves the hawk and owl Tn steal her must in a line-fence nnnk is written off as a wiilcss fowl in any proper farm-wife's book But one might doubt if it mattered much To thr little hcn, was she praised or not For she had hidden and hatched hcr clutch Vhcrc sccrct quuil and partridge go. lier night was a stillness pricked by small his! to 1 record number of visitors from BC this year. as the record flow of Canadian tourists to Brit- ain should busily break the 2.000 mark previously reported by 31!. Mr. McAdam says he would like to see touring made easy in the reverse direction. He wants a I many British-tourists as possible to visit British Columbia hi 1958. when his province will be celeb- rating the cement: y of its found- ation as I Crown Colony. HONORARY STIGMA The Ontario Government's in- tention to print the reinstated licen- ces of convicted drunk drivers on red paper will certainly stigma- tize thm. This move has been wei- comed as "an effective way to deal with the driver who doesn't drive safely." says the chairman of the Canadian Highway Safety Confer- ence, Mr. Brooke Claxton, the re- tired Llberal Cabinet Minister. In line with honored custom, it was suggested that the first of the new red licences should be issued complimen anly to Mr. Brooke "Road Safety” Claxton himself. On sober second thought, it was real- ized that this gesture might not be an unalloyed compliment. So if Mr. Claxton is to get a red license he will have to earn it himself the hard (liquor) way. THE COST OF DEFEAT It in said that there is no winner in a modern war. The Americans are learning that it is costly to have been a loser in an old war. One of the incidental of building the St. Lawrence Seaway has an unintended angle which twists the dagger in an old wound. Canada and the United States will share equally the cost of re- habilitation made neceuary by the raising of the river level along the International Rapids section of the St. Lawrence, west of Corn- wall. Ontario. Amongst the populations to be rehoused, the buildings to be mov- ed. and the amenities to be reloc- ated. there is an old memorial commemorating the victory of Can- adian troops over American troops at the Battle of Cryslei-'5 Farm in l8l2. Half the cost of moving and re- building this enduring record of their defeats will fell upon the American taxpayers. FACT 0R FANCY? A carrier pigeon flapping its hum- Id way from Parliament Building to the telegraph office paused to rest. awhile on a well-leafed mnple tree. giccj-Mcutsveta 19 ff PUBLIC FORUM III: ulunn I open In no 1101 by corrupundenlu of 1 nl lllnul. The Guardian Ion unuully uuru Ila opinion urrumudualu. I not or GLEN VALLEY ROAD Sir,-on opening your paper on the morning of Sept. 7 I came across I letter headed "No Place To Go" which was signed "Truth- ful Tory" from Fredericton. R.R. He tries to explain about the I0- called cow path from Fredericton to Glen Valley. In the first place it is used more as a cow path in the summer time, while in the winter our Trulhful Tory can't get anywhere because of the snowdrlfts; so while he and his Liberal neighbour: relax by in fire, in I nice warm room, the mailman breaks the road all by himself to bring them their mail as well as their 3-oceries and tobacco. H Mr. Large and Mr. Stewart would just close we oow-path and then follow the course on by the "l percent" Liberal commit- tee man's property it would serve more taxpayer: and our mail- man would have an improved road to travel over at all times. Our "Truthful Tory" could then join it n short distance from his own gateway and perhaps when "Reg" gains power he could have his lane bulldozed, loo, lice his Liberal friend across the field. ”Tnrthful Tory" tells us that the last election was compared to a ateamroller running the Con- servatives down, I wonder where our "Trutihful Tory" was at that time. or has it taken him the last six months to get dug out. from under the snow or maybe from under the Liberal ballots. I am. Sir. e6c., CROOKED LIBERAL ASSAULN NEW BRIDE GUELPH, Ont. (CP) - James Leeder, 17. was sentenced to six mobths in jail Friday for assault- ing his bride of three weeks. Leederls mother-in-law said he kept his wife in her nightdress all day to prevent her seeing her mother. Magistrate Fredeiic Walt called Leader a "coward" and said he regretted he couldn't order the lush. Medically. Speaking DON'T THINK OF SURGERY AS A DREADED ORDEAL i To many of you. an operation is a frightening and dreaded or- deal. While no one looks forward to surgery. you should not build up needless fears. Probably your main concern is about being anesthetized. You're afraid you will go to sleep and not wake up. Perhaps a discussion about anesthesia and just how safe it actually is will help you ease your fears. In one form or another we have hadianesthesia since the dawn of history. The ancient Incas dead- ened surgicar pain with coca leaves and by dripping cocaine-rich sal- iva on wounds. Assyrian and Egyptian surgeons compressed the carotid blood vessels in the neci of a patient to produce short-liver' artificial sleep. Modern method lure much better. The most widely employed in- halation anesthetic today is user either alone or in combination will nitrous oxide. But i h e r e arr others, including: ethylene. cy- clopropaue, divinyl ether (vine- th e in el and trichlorethylene (tri- lenel. INCREASINGLY POPULAR intravenous anesthesia has be- come increasingly popular and is currently used for more than one- fourth of all anesthesias. The most commonly employed agent is thiopcntal sodium. These nn- estliesias are far short of ideal. but surgeons have established an impressive safety record with their use. A recent survey by the Harvard Medical School in ten leading un- iversity hospitals showed that the overall death rate was one death per 1,560 ancsthcsias during a five- year period. This record is even more remarkable when you real- ize that many patieuts are already desperately ill and near death when anesthetized. When ether alone was used the death rate was only one for each 2,500 anestheslas. It was one per 5,300 anestheslas with cyclopro- pane and one per 14,600 with ethy- lane. Sometimes, however, these ax- lremely safe agents alone do not produce sufficient muscular relax- ation for easy surgery. Then. I muscle-relaxing agent like curare, the South American arrow poison must he used along with the prim- ary anesthetic drug. The danger is greater in such cases. but even so, the Harvard study showed one death for every 712 anesthesial. And use of 3 new muscle-relaxer, viadrll, promises even greater saf- ety. So you see, your ” of am 4.11.. emu... NOTES BY THE WAY A further evidence of cultural exchange is to he found in a Bri- tish Columbia company's plan to erect a vodka distillery on the West Coast. Establishment of lo- zanberry wineries In Russia and Poland would be, no doubt, a suit- : le act of reciprocity.-Ottawa Citizen. An efflclenw export claim: that more and more women are being employed in banks because they are natural lellers. Well, some of them give a good account of them- selves when it. comes to figures. -Vancouver Herald. Age, it would seem, In not a matter of years. We have known men who were old at thirty years others who were young at eighty. It's an individual proposition, as some business firms are beginning to realize. A man or woman who is physically and mentally fit to carry on his or her work should not be penalized because of the number of years he or she carries. For age gives "a stability and far- sighted apvroach to many prob- lems in this world, which nothing else will give. Nothing will ever take the place of experience.- Cleveland Plain I)ealer:. Without ever having seen the man, we've acquired a great lik- ing and admiration for Col. Lee J. Davis, who commands the anti- alrcraft defences in the Detroit area." Showing reporters over the uew Nike sites, Col. Davis told them that ”our defences are cap- able of destroying any airplane which can attack us today or in the next few years." We don't know whether this is so. But we're so eternally weary of hand-wrin- gers. breast-beaters and all the other gloomy characters who go around yelling that we're pawns in the hands of atomic fate-and probably destined to be pretty un- lucky onu. too-that when 1 man stands up and says. in effect that we can lick the bums any day in the week, we're all for him. -Detroit Free Press. Many married women collecl ut- employment insurance they're not entitled to. asserts the Vancouver Province, which apparently doesn't. mind stirring up a peck of trouble. The Vancouver comments are based on 1 recent brief in the Unemployment Insurance Com- mission. which Mrs. Falrclougb, M.P. for Hamilton West, has de- scribed as "slanderous." The brief contends that many women who leave their job: after marriage and claim benefit: on the ground they are seeking employment. do not really intend to return to work. "This contention is perfe true," lays the Vancouver news, paper. "The only women rm don't do it are those who havc-'i thought of it. or have morn .., jections against it.-Sydney rm. Record. 1 clly Finns show fatalltis-s 0.. u,, highways and i the water are far greater during he weekend (lav: than during the working week days ' By the time we have reduced lhc working week to four or possibly three days we shall all be able to kill ourselves off even more rapidly.-Brockville Recorder am Times. Don't think the new automobile, aren't causing the police trouble because -they are, according to 3, article in a daily paper. In the 01. days the police radio could crackle out a crisp description such 35- ”Four men and three blondes 1; a blue Essex.” Now they have tr say: "Four men and three blondes in a baby blue Sufferomnbilp, uh, uppc" part of which is chartreusc and the lower part of which 1. pea green. with whltr side up tire" and sort of a russet tone I the rims. which may be muse by rust, but we forget to tell ym that the middle part of the rat is sunburst yellow.”-Gait ileum- '01: The military wrrespondcut n The Times of London suggests that "ueneral Slmonds may s'll('('('(A( Field Marshal Montgomery as (top uty supreme commander of ill( Allied forces in Europe. Wlulp win the First Canadian Army during World war ii, General Slmond- galned experience in dealing will troops of various nationalitir-5, 1,, has also. since the war, iii-lti r-I4... relations with military coninian den of the two major NAN powers, the United States Inc France. These qualifications could carry weight when the decision rg. gm-ding Field Marshal Montgom ery': successor is made.-Otlawu Citizen. Again the cry is raised that then in I ant Ihortage of teacher: in Canada, and that too many who are teaching are either poorly qualified, or not even qualified at all. A: one peruses the examina- tion relulla of the classes in the press and notes the great number of subjects which students study the thought occurs that many oi them are taught things that will be of little or no use to them in after life. Might not some contri- bution to the teacher problem bu mode by eliminating some of (lieu subjects? -81. 'l'homu,'Plmel-Journal. surviving any operation today are excellent. QUESTION AND ANBWX D. 1.: What affect docs candy or too many sweets have on In tonsils? Answer: I know of no ovidmce that eating candy or too. many sweets would have any adverse effect on the tonsils. Of course. excessive lvvooh should be avoided to prevent h- terference with the appetite In other foods. The Age Old Story And be spake a parable unto them, saying, The ground of a cor lain rich man brought forth plenti- fully: and he thought within him- self snying. What shall I do. be- cause I have no room when to bestow my fruits? And he sold. Thll will I do; I will pull down my barns. and build greater, and there will I bestow all my fruit: and my goods. But he knew their thoughts ud said to the man which had In withered hand, Rise up. and stand forth in the midst. And he arose and stood forth. Then said Jelus unto them, I will ask you one thing: In it lawful on the Sabbath days to do good. or to do evil? to one life. or to destroy it? OLD INDUSTRY After four centuries, cod B Ilill the largest single catch on the Grand banks.off the Atlantic coast. FRUIT AREA The Annapolis and Cornwallis valleys, fruit-growing centre of Nova scotla. extend about 70 miles. Boll, Mulheson & Foster 150 Richmond St. I. Elmer Blanchard, B.A. PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS. Etc. OPTOMETRISTS G. F. llutcheson It Son F. G. mrrcl-msou S3 Grafton St. mouth; system, which uuiiiu ll ' II t" ' bl . ""'...:.:'.:..;-.:".:.':.” "it not oxpiflinet the homo heating held about you how to In your friend:-and yourself-in page: comfort this winur? Thank will lingo for you to have Lunnox i Flo tullod in bone to nature complete comfort moor family and guests when cold I-other urrivu. Come in today for details, or call us for 1 Inc, Hating expertly In! con: hut.-loco survey of your homo. Up to 5 years to pay Low interest rate Ibo answer to 5b ohm :ncmw ymxcf wunthllonloorhodliu. "ll g . I Soon it was joined by another Ill QIOGI BL Phone 4233 I81! ' Uncertain rusllmgs, warily heard; equally exhausted pigeon flying the And morning Camc with I Novel"! same route. They tweeted together I. A. Former Q.C. LL.B. '1' A' C3"'"the"' 3'0' calls I briefly. 3.-k ., Cmnaure. in". 18 Kent SC. Dill Kn ' To her as to any widiuu bird. "Well 1 mug; fume; aiongy "id ej--j-j--j T:'TT'"'TT'"TTTj" , -. , Allbon M. Glllls LL.B. Byron 3- Gr-It 0-D- Sllc came as liithtly as water r”,'lS- ::1lT'la'i1IiMmelId:Kr: m Phhm"'d 3- ' 0” "ff 3 KT” 3." mu uu , 98 Fitzroy Home from her rnvert. stepp no: intention to resign from 9., (;.b. ”"T'TTTTTTm-T""T ,3. S. hylof 3.0. )1” '9.-- -5 L. Wlltllell Gsudol LLB. cm.” Q" .3. t With Iiolllltl gold chicks like puft nT'tNo need In hurry," comforted nmlli 338- 111 G;'ln0' u Ollie: :l.:S.: Tlloltl 6': '..r ..'.'".i m-!..'.' b ll 8 . 111 d j . " ' n-yum Nile: nutuncff a summer sky. one offigilnll d:i1:l:imof ii mfrd1.n the '5h-0'' & Huh"? ll J' Mum"! 3' - .su...c. gm g.uo..,., Prime Minister": office." look of Non lull: mu. "IN" P- I '- . mm Ilntlluon. Peaks 8 oglnunuuuooooaunoooooooun-ItooooootonoouooaoooDI . . 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