Washes everything washable New, better than ever sunlight in .all pm-e,extrs soapy. Makes more suds faster. Nothing else can take its place. Get New Sunlight Soap. CANADA'S FAVOURITE! The original and by far the in at mutual investment fund in anadals EASTERN SECURITIES eouiuuv uunso I46 llehsnenl 31.. Cliarleiietewse STIRLING. Ont (CP)--Haetinss county council is sponsoring a competition to determine the owner of the best-manarzed woodlots on county farms. The first prize is 550 and entries are expected from all residents who have five acres j .Mod"ern.;: ' theeverurgaulsedinaeoedawas set up here this week during the annual convention ol'the 3. O. cal Association. The seed is to be the fore- runnar and pilot plan for a fed- eral orgsnlutlon for qusllnel gen- eral practitioners. sapeetedto be established in two orlthree years. at the inaugural meeting. at- tended. by 160 T A . decision wse taken "to undertake respons- ibility fcr complete medical. and surgical care of all munbce of the family, obtaining help of ac- cessible consultants when indica- ted." ' ' "It is hoped the provineial soa- damy will be the forerunnc of e. natldial mganintion," Dr. J. 1!. Black of Vancouver, one of the organisers o( the academy, said Inna. ."we aim to have be ideal! fgaiiy physician as a ll! doctors. 4 ' The academy will in give eon-.7 tin post-graduate with faeil ties to be provided and eeril- iicstes issued. The oertinceteerwill be renewed every three years and a membc will not be permitted to remain in the academy -unless graduate work is done in that period. The academy will be monsored by the Canadian Medical Associa- tion. but will operate independent; Organlaation plans will be di- rected by Dr. J.L. Coltart of Van-, couver, who was elected presidmt of the gen 1 practise section of the 3.0. Medical Association. By DON UTAITNBBY LONDON; (Reuters)-A poll of Britain's 11.000 family doctors re- vealed a deep difference of opin- -ion on the merits of socialized medicine. Forty-two per cent said they were less satisfied with their work since the system began five years ago. Thirty-seven per cent said they were more eatlsned. The re- mainder refrained from expressing an opinion. But 45 per cent of the general practitioners, even including those who dislike socialized medicine. admitted they were doing all they could for their patients now and said they are no longer hampered in recommending treatments by considerations of a. person's in- come. Results Amouneed Results of the poll were re- leased Thursday night. Conducted by a committee of the British Medical Association, it covered doctors in cities, towns and vii- lages throughout Britain. The as- sociation mailed detailed question- naires to all 17,000 practitioners and received 12,000 replies. In addition, Stephen Hadfleld, assistant secretary of the associa- tion and a doctor himself, con- or more of woodlands. , 7:30 to 9 Royal Ban ducted a field survey of 188 rep- CLASSES BEGIN SCHOOL TUESDAY. ocronnn 13 :30 P.M. Typewrliing, -,-Jliookkeeping - shorthand UNION COMMERCIAL COLLEGE k Building LAllIES' EXTRA SPECIAL- WEIJNESDAY MORNING SPECIALS I 0IlIi.iIiiEII'S Corduroy -IUMPERS and Wool SUITS, reg. to t69-50- nlumsjgs, ,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,, 52.49 to 55,95 now ...... .................... .. S25-00 Ind S35-00 BLOUSES-Crlskay, Nylon andsl 96 - V - V 0 tt ........................................ .. . .. Nylon rand Cm!” ' i sivrixrains ..... ........ ..,. 31.49 to 5:355 BLOUSES ..................... .. tl-95 and t2-95 Navy nnoomms - ........... ,, 59c up . smnrnns .................... .. 251.29 to sum irggarggstzgrafiroy ixmrs gig; g3.l?&.;gl'oxzCs:lrlt3lLLs .d..m.;6ye2.49 up ................ .:mm"m"" , ren S 0 SNUGGIES .. OVERALLS, size 3 to 6 ..... 351.95 590 to SL50 Ludies' PLASTIC RAINCOATS - plain checked . 5 Use our Lay-Away Plan. A deposit will hold any garment until needed. The LAIIIES' GREEIIIJAL STORE 150 GREAT GEORGE ET. British Doctors Split On Health Plan Merits without '70 per one orthe encum- resentative practices. "The ultimate question to which the committee has sought an an- swer is whether the general prac- titioner of today is able to Dflvct tics good medicine," the associa- tion report said. "It believes on the evidence it has collected that an unau-dined anirmative answer cannot be given." 1-ladfield said the most favorable argument given by the doctors for the health service was their free- dom from money considerations in treating patients. "They speak with relief of being able to prescribe what the patient needs and to visit him as often as the oondition requires, free from the inhibitivo consideration of the patient's purse." 1-Iaddleid tesid. On Debit side But on the debit side, 42 per cent of the doctors said the health ser- vice had an adverse effect on their nests necessitated by crowded surgeries onlces was said to induce mental fatigue and strain, diminish alertness of mind and cloud clinical Jud-grnent." the cbmmittee report said. "One doctor had 40 patients in his surgery on the day he replied to the questionnaire and had been able to devote not more than three minutes to each." One doctor admitted he had been forced to "jump to conclusions" on A. patientls ailment and made er- rors because he was too rushed. Nearly one-third of the doctors said they have been subjected to an excessive number of unreason- able demands on their services- many from patients with "trivial" complaints. reported a. "normal wait" of at least six months for patients re- qulrlng non-urgent hospital treat- ment. The delay stretched to two years and more for tonsil and L95 8. 52.95 z'..4.w-trrt 800 :2 Inever room could be so easy and , quick until I discovered . ting! the or-med iussnbsr of the that night. and whllr considerable advance had been made in the en- gine-room by return of day. the awful rain of ashes from over-head continued and fighting it on deck began to -grow downfall. of the conflagration loomed within five-and-twenty miles. all altered. No familiar features find a place of nfetjgin ahurry. i' "Due can't know of. too many safe hiding talking to himself. knows. the safer he is; I'm not General Staff, Major General H. A to the 27 Brigade in Germany. Ont., and Pie. Gordon Bellman of cooks with the 1st Photo). Cpl. Leon MacDonald of 4.... . K Dressed ih their working clothes of their profession thesd two healthy looking cook! enioy a Ihortxchai: with tho Vlcs Chief of the . Sparling, during his recent visit ,l-lamilton, Charlottetown, P. E. I., are both Canadian Rifle Battalion.-(National Defence Table Top by Ideas Phillpotts CHAPTER. XIV Continued No man on the Iguana slept those who were exhausted before the persistent when day dawned the huge mass The contours of Table Top were remained and the mass, itself could only be fitfuily seen through a. roar- ing body of smoke and flame that engulfed it. Terrific explosions fol- lowed upon each other, and an al- ectric atorm raged above with ceaseless lightning flashes that tore their way through the smoke. The aspect of the sky was changed and -the risen sun blotted out. A big sea ran and fitful winds blew fiercely and aimlessly. now from one quarter, then dying and leap- Jing up again r,quLanather..-i . Jane with a other travellers sat in the little saloon while they rested awhile and tended their burned feet before returning to the battle on deck. All waited and yearned for the sound of the screw and the knowledge that the ship was escaping. Costa Joined them presently. His voice was gone and he could only whlsper.'1lis face had turned black as e eoal-heave:-'s and his eyes were red-rimmed and in- flamed. . "In half an hour we shall be mov- ing again." he said "and by night- fail beyond the worst of the ashes. They fall, but they are growing smaller. The fear was that 'they would set the ahipjon fire, and the deck is indeed burned, but by ones- less flooding we have escaped that danger." . He did not stay long but drank much coffee and having made some effort to clean himself. sought Car- los Paz. Twenty minutes later they heard the enginee and knew the ship would quickly be on her way. Ayl- nrer and Maine retimied to work and Jane presently faced t e dril- sis of ashes from above an went on deck. The engine were quicken- ing and a wake of foam began to widen aatern as the Iguariaggained speed. - j Then the terrific .thing happen- -sunesss storm: Continued froiispogl re) ' know about them, in didn't,pees my hole in the beak, or under the roots of trees. 5. hout looking into it. It might ecease ,- to places, said Jerry. to hurry, I'n1P3oinl to take ime." "What are youdo iv” downhere!" asked a sharp voice. Ml person in -For s. moment it glared like ed. while the little steamer was as yet too near the island to say whether its destruction would en- tall her own. They were perhaps thirty miles from Tabletop, when. like the curtain at a theatre, the cloud which enfolded it rose to the sky and the muse became visible. a mighty bonfire spouting flame to the aenith, then. convulsed to the note, it moved, was lifted. as it seemed. upward and immediately sank into the see. one moment its towers and ram.- parta beetled blazing on the hori- son and the next it toppled in a huge welter of fire and foam leav- ing s mighty whirlpool and tide- race to mark its descent and creat- ing a volume of immense sound, that after the passage of some see- onds. crashed upon their cars. It was then that Costa set about to save his ship and took the only course to do it. Maine had quickly guessed at what must quickly core '. .... 1 arts and literature, Mrs. ; Donald: health and social welfare. v.-butthecaptainwass: . Hahdknewthatitwouldbe soul on the ship shared his knowl- ; an ocean. and the same will hap- VIIAIII W. I. ........ A meeting was held in rsakes school on Sept. zlihforvthi D0501: o 1-porgayiiaing e ofnen's - stituta of Psakee school -district. Miss Mary Robin. assisted by Hrs. R. llannlnl of the .Women's Institute staff. Charlottetown, out- lined the objectives and any of the organization, after hich the following officers were elect- ed: President, Mrs. Rsgg Donald; vice-president, Mrs. ban adley: secretary. Miss Isa- bel acDoneld; convsners-agrb culture, Miss Noreen Mooney; Ralph Gillan; citiaenship, Mrs. Earl Mao- of him inevita able. I-fe also believed that no other edge. Therefore. with rare presence of mind he addressed his crew and explained a coming. manoeuvre that in their ignorance they might think madness. . He could not talk aloud. but make to his mm. Ricardo Palms. "When you fling a. stone into a pond there rises a wave," he said. "and that wave will speed on untu it . aches the banks of the pond. Now God has flung an island into pen. A wave is coming-auoh a wave as few have seen and lived to tell about. No man can say how high that wave will he. or how far it will go; but it will reach us very quickly and we cannot escape it. There is no way of so doing. but there is one hope for us in our small ship. A cork will ride where a big vessel would founder and if we were a big ship. our chancel would be far smaller than they are. But we can- not run before" the wave. To do that would be to get pooped without a. doubt, for the wave will come like a wall 'of water, reaching as ' high above us as a. tree reaches abovo the grass at its bolei We shall face it and steam astern. and if we are not swamped but climb safely to the crest of the wave. as a cork would climb. than we shall keep the ship afloat if it be God's will." This purpose Palms communi- Iguana. came round. then went steadily astern with her bows point- ing north io the danger point. The men still fought with the falling ashes and costs. descending to the engine room, explained the situa- tion to Carlos and his staff. They understood. "If we top the wave. there re- mains the laat danger of the trough beyond." he said. "I've seen her climb big seas like a cat before to-day. You'll know what's doing by the feel of her and hang on to the throttle valve like grim death when she heads down. There rill be a tremendous sea after the big wave passes. but if we weather that. cated to the crew, and. IInderItand- . ing it, they did not fear when the - SEPTEMBER 30, 1953 T In. 'l'IIesnas Duh”; heme econ- Mrs, Thomas Dunphy invited 9, ethics. lira. lasuretta Devine. members to her home for the 0.3 It was decided that Mrs. Man- tober meeting. Roll call will b hing would return on Sept. 30 to answered by paying or mm,,m' form A Junior sewing club. ship fees. ” ' - rue carsr. cnrsr mass wmr run: base, near FLAVOR Trillione of corn flakes a o. W. K. Kellogg explained the popularityo the original Corn Flakes in these words: "They won their favor through their devor." That's a quick way of saying this: Kellogg's Corn Makes became first choice of the whole wide eh:-id because an exclusive recipe (it's still a secret) and ' " ep-toasting give them a ESII R0 we're saved alive." To be continued -til? .411-mt ( But only goupoeg fiiesh-baked goodness no other com flake names -, c oso to. I ' Ei.aIes But the really quick way to get this fresh, flavorful at is to open a ackage of Kellogg's o....,i....m 5... ;. g,.4g' Corn Flakes or breakfast. eybe tomorrow? iliesiory) .h1m, x,. T. 'CIiy and Provincial Taxes ealre In sores emu. A-40 somrnsrr I .3esi,dea; n ti1eedgeof' Thei delivered price of the Austin A-A0 Somerset is an honest price. That low figure buys you a complete new car. There arena extras to buy. Tiiequoted price includes such fshturcs (usually priced extra) is foam-rubber cushion- insmer-dc!irlns.ooi1.miaens . gTeI-iulne leather upholstery and an 'alr-condltgloning heater that will give you living-room l warmth all winter. It also includes directional signals, non-stall electric windshield wipers, plus a powerful l2-volt electrical system. 1 But that's only half the stay; o ' ,The other-ghalf is the satisfy- ing. able way your Austin per- ' forms-of savrjnge as high as 50! on each operating dollar: gsosrurrnsat. Auswsa ro rush uiolr, cost or raoroamo; su Try an Austin on the road. You can see through thdt wide, nothing-in-your-way wind- shield. You can match traiiic at its toughest-and cruise smoothly at highway speeds in day-long comfort. And you can be sure of Austin service wherever you go. These are reasons why more than 80,000 Canadians new drive Austin. N-SUI DIAL 7215