3 8 ‘ | . ' he on ee on At AAA i OBS Bee 8 ably remember 12 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Sept. 25, 1959 Atom Smasher Grant Is Refused By Ottawa By JOHN E. BIRD Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — The govern- ment has rejected a Second‘ pro- posal for federal funds to help build a powerful machine to study matter and the origin of the uni- verse. The new proposal, placed before cabinet recently by the physics department of the University of British Columbia, sought a fed- eral grant for a $15,000,000 atom smasher capable of dev: ng an energy output of 7,000,000,000 elec- tran volts. The university in a memoran-| dum to cabinet suggested that the | huge machine be built on the) UBC campus by the end of 1964. Is said ‘Canadian scientists re quire such a machine to nuclear physics and keep abreast of other countries in research) into strange “new sources of | energy indicated by cosmic ray studies ANOTHER REJECTED The government in March also turned down a proposal by Canadian Association of Physic- ists that federal funds be used to} help build a more powerful $25.- 000,000 machine at Kingston, Ont.. near Queen's University. study | It would have been built as a co-operative effort, with several Canadian universities and the government providing the funds. The association was told by Trade Minister Churchill the gov- ernment tad decided on econ- in the project. A government spokesman said Wednesday the i UBC proposal was turned down for the same reason. MAJOR ADDITION _ “The university's memorandum, | association, the machine would “be a fruitful | major addition to the world’s physics research tools.” The energies it would study lie ‘at the heart of our understand- | ing of tlle universe.” The memorandum said ad- vances will not take place in Canada in this field of science without a high-energy accelera- | tor. “This fact_is recognized all the ever the world,” the association | Countries tee announced a. plan to recruit | drop in potato prics. jtold the government. such as Holland, Italy and | Sweden . have already started | the construction of such accelera- lors." e THOUGHTS FOR OUR TIME, BY HIS EMINENCE ‘CARDINAL McGUIGAN | REVIEWING AND CLASSIFICATION OF MOVIES It was almost 25 years ago, 19 to be exact, bishops of Onta signate the second Sunday _ of} September Legion of Decency) Sunday. At this time the legion was quite new. though it was al- ready a powerful force for good in the United Stat es where i had its origin during the prev ious r. Some of our readers will prob- those days of They will cer- the depression great distress the movement tainly remember which was causing t had} : ed to combat the moral dangers | movies. Hollywood coming from our Throughout the 1920s, and offensive entertainment. In answer to public indignation /many states had already passed censorship laws. HAYS OFFICE To avert threats of federal ac- tion in the United States and to) ‘improve public relations, the lar- | ger motion picture corporations |formed an association which ‘came popularly to be known as the Hays Office. Its head was. H. Hays. an outstanding Protes- omy grounds not to participate | published in a special edition of | Physics in Canada, bulletin of the said construction of : | Hane i 3 = P3 FF if i i i = e in Hil FREES i : ia purpose without outside support. In his eo Will Hays has dramatically related the be- ginning of the Legion of Decency In the summer of 1933, he writes, The situation was intolerable. It cculd only be remedied by united action in support of the Hays Office. In 1938, the new apostolic delegate to the United States, Archbishop Cicognani, ar- rived. In his first public address he criticized bitterly the low moral level: of the movies then being produced. In November of! that year, at their annual meeting in Washington, the American bi- shops set up an episcopal com- | mittee on motion pictures. 'LEGION ANSWER The following April, having con- ‘suited a number of clerical and lay leaders, the bishops’ commit- — a Legion of Decency. Every bi-| Shop was urged to secure men ‘bers who would pledge themsel- ves.to stay away from all offen- sive pictures. Mr. Hays was ex- tremely grateful for this turn of events, as can be seen in the set- | lowing quotation: | sedition “The Legion of Decency soon supplied the answer, long invited. It was not merely that too many bad pictures had \‘asked for it.” Our whole open door policy had always sought |honest . organizations. Humanly speaking, it was the moral force when the Catholic; had had a world-wide reputation! of the Catholic church that gave rio decided to de for being a source of immoral” the ‘coup de grace’ to code breakers. And it was the con- crete program of the Legion of Decency, quickly taken up by other groups that spearheaded the public demand for code en- | forcement.’ A very important part of the legion’s work is its reviewing and classification of movies, which is the responsibility of its executive ‘secretary. He is assisted by the Wj motion picture department of the International Federation of Ca- at the time Interestingly enough+tanttayman-—who had previously tholic Alumnae. The reviewers the depression was one of the fac- tors which occasioned the forma- tion of the lezion. Of course the legion was form- _ been postmaster general. Through the work of this as- sociation. all the major produc-! ers in 1930 subscribed to a pro- vision. 187 Gt. George, Charlottetown > Dial 5547 see the pictures, in preview room jin New York, and submit their reports privately and separately Any picture which raises seri- and one. . 7% . q in + idl yo ‘questions -emong them’ te ted for further considera- ’ #5 In recent years aap about one per cent. of American movies have be@n put in @lass C and The legion has proved itself to be of great assistance to people, enabling them to judge more easiy which pictures will, be mor- ally dangerous to themselves and their children. Statistics can be ‘brought forward too which show conclusively that the legion has made it much less profitable to produce or show objectionable movies. It is greatly to be hoped that it will continue to exert its good influence.. RIOTERS ON TRIAL NAPLES. Italy (Reuters)\— Eighty-four persons went on trial Monday on charges ranging from to attacking policemen' during riots three months ago by peasants complaining about a Prosperity Message By ALAN HARVEY cisadien Press Staff Writer MANCHESTER, England (CP) *| Prime Minister Macmillan Wed- *|mesday toured the critical cotton towns of Lancashire, where votes hang by a gossamer thread, and teld electors not to worry about _| going on the dole. An intellectual in a spruce grey’ overcoat, with white carnation in his lapel and a Grenadier Guards tie underneath, he took his cam- paign message to mill workers wearing shabby suits and over- alls. He told them “ample compen- sation’’ will be paid to employ- ees muscled out of the contract- ing cotton industry, threatened by technological fhange. POVERTY EVIDENT He spoke squares, abandoned air raid shelt-| ers and cintiered _ sites, framed | against a skyline of smoke-palled warehouses and tall chimneys. ‘Brought To Shabby and he appeared to get the mess- age across. The audiences listened aittenti- vely and there were few dissent- ing voices “Of course we all know it,” he said. “We are all better housed, better fed and better clothed than we have been in all our history. “I have been in politics 36 years. life and happiness than I have seen today.” TOUGH TOUR , With Lady Dorothy Macmillan, the prime minister* set off from Manchester Wednesday morning in a mauve convertible, visiting one after another the mill towns I have never seen more! It was the grassroots beginning of a 13-day, 2,000-mile campaign tour that ends in London Oct. 5, three days before the general election. Macmillan’s Conserva- tives are favored to win from the opposition Labor Party. The cotton-producing ~ constitu- encies are a sensitive political battleground. Lancashire once clothed the world. Now some mills, including one prohetically named Eclipse, are on the way out. In Oldham, Sir Winston Church- ill’s constituency in the early days of the century, workers pressed against the windows of a bedding factory and shouted jibes j at Macmillan—‘‘get off of it’ and “what about Suez?” But the crowds were for the most part docile. FOUNDER DIES MELBOURNE, Australia ‘Reu- ters)—Sir Richard Linton, 980, founder of the Big Brother Move- ment under which 8,000 young Britons migrated to Australian morth of here—Bury, Heywood, in - drab market Into this dispiriting setting, ap- | propriate to a lecture on the worst features of the industrial revolution, Macmillan carried the gospel of never-had-it-so-good, | Science Now Shrinks Piles Without Pain Or Discomfort Finds Healing Substance That Relieves Pain And Itching As It Shrinks Hemorrhoids Teronto, Ont. (Special)—For o first time science has found a ing substance with the ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve pain \and itching Thousands have been relieved with this imexpensive substance might im the privacy of their own dome without any discomfort or imconvenience In one hemorrhoid case alter another, “very striking improve- ment” was reported and verified by doctors’ observations Pajh was promptly relieved. And whilé'gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place And most amazing of all—ths fmprovement was maintained in eases where doctors’ ne were continued over a period of many months! that sufferers were able to make vsuch statements as “Piles have ceased to be a problem!” And among these sufierers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid con- ditions, some of even 10 vo 20 years’ standing All this, without the use of nar cotics, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. The secret is a new heab ing substance (Bio-Dyne) — the discovery of a famous.scientife im stitute. Already, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body This new healing substance ts offéred in supposilory~or ointment form called Preparation H- Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H Suppositories or Preparation H ointment with special applicator. Preparation H is.sold at all drug stores. In fact, results were so {horough A ‘first’ for the White Hunrer NEVER BEFORE No, never before have you been able to make a better eal than the one offered you now on Admiral TV’s by the White Hunter... . trade. . . swap any kind of deal, but by all means buy now while you can save up to $100.00. Then settle down for.a winter of enjoyment with a trouble-free Admiral tele- SAVE UP TO $100.00 Admiral i. SALE NO DOWN PAYMENT! * 2 YEARS TO PAY! Don'trmiss this fantabulous sale — CALL IN TODAY! FIRESTONE HOME & AUTO Company Limited ed @ We Trade Everything from potatoes te little pigs! Sausfaction guaranteed or money refunded. = « ... make 24 Central Summerside ‘ Dial 3200 | ‘ Robber Dies Inside Bank CLEVELAND — (AP) — A holdup man killed himself in a tear gas-filled bank Wednesday after an exchange of shots with police and the serious wounding of a bank teller. The gunman’s fantastic robbery plot involving a phoney time bomb had failed. While some 200 police officers FBI agents Jaid siege to the . firemen disarmed what proved to be a dud bomb which the gunman planted in the home of the bank manager, Herbert Fox. Fox's wife and two daugh- with the dud-bomb ticking ovsy, farms, died Monday. Shop and Save at li the gunman at the Four fled and still is at lange.” Before police broke into the bank, Fox and 14 other employ* ees were allowed .to leave. The gunman was found dead on the; floor He carried a driver's li- cencc with the name, Lee Cy; Terry. ond a fake New York ad+ dress. “i Rural Camera Scenes Sought Toroto, Ont., — Canadians whe make photcgraphy ‘he ~obby will have °a rare opportunity to display their prize photographs — and win cash awards in an uni- que competition which is. one om many features of the 1959 Royal Agricultural Winter Fair, to be held in the Coliseum, Toronto, from November 13 to 21. This competition is open to any resident of Canada. Subject mat- ter should be related to agricul- ture and of rural scenes in any season of the year. An entry fee of $1.00 must accompany the en- .|try and the closing date for alt entries is November 5. ‘ON'S. to choose. Sizes 36 SPECIAL, Each which to choose. Sizes SPECIAL, SPECIAL! _ MEN’S SPORT COATS Smart all wool tweeds in single breasted style with either 2 or 3 buttons. tractive selection of shades from which An at- to 44. 13. 93 For Fa Alpaca lin RANGE AND WIN ARE BE SMART FALL TOPCOATS All wool tweeds in both raglan and set-in sleeve stvles. Smartiv tailored for that wel] dressed look. A wide range of shades from ~ 99 38, to 44. ech 19. VISIT EATON’S MEN’S WEAR DEPARTMENT NOW FOR A COMPLETE NEW FALL CLOTHING. CHOOSE W SELECTIONS Men's Fall 4 wide assortment of tyles and colors in sizes % te 73s. ‘ 5° 7 1 500 ll and Winter ak ing. Chaice of grey, Each sy My ] OF : TER HILE ST. UIT ific satisfaction. 5 Poe Be * (coat and pants) 63.00 3 Pce. Suit ‘ * (eoat and 2 pairs panis) * 83.00 MEN’S Made - to - Continues until closing time Satur- suitable for all seasons. day, September 26. Choose from tic cloths in Sa will be tailored to your own spec- measurements EATON’S SPECIAL PRICES (coat, vest and pants) Measure MEN'S SUBURBAN COATS All wool and pslished cotton types with. warm quilted lining and charcoal, beige, blue, im sizes 35: to 46. Buy now while selections are bést. 19.95 SALE}; imported and domes- patterns and shades These suits for complete COMING TO YOUR DOOR MONDAY, SEPT. 28th WATCH FOR EATON’S Trans-Canada Sale Circular SALE STARTS . 3 Pce. Suit 70.00 Extra trousers MONDAY to THURSDAY STORE HOURS 9 a.m. to 5:45 p.m. FRIDAY 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. SATURDAY 9 a.m. to 5:45pm 20.00 CT.EATON.C2,