'.5 Iuntuned eiuy week-Ally msrntu II no Prince Street tluirluttetnvm. Pl-Ll. by the Tlwmsmt Company Ltd.. "ns st. W.. Toronto. Mutllreqt Illtt m l'nivIrdty Tnwu klsin. "Covers rrtnu I-. Irl IIIIII Uh its list" Hduur. Frank walker Geneiat Manager. III A. Burnett Member ('anadill Dlllv Ne'rI'pIp& "tihltsllcrh ia.sm:ii.lion llcntbci oi the I" nadian'f'rcII HI'll!lIrr turlii lturt-an ul ntrttiaimtts .,.:....-n ullirfa It sttttinur-ute Alon "Lu! ...ui itiu-rum Auiltnr-n-rt as isecumt Fiass Mail by the Post office I)QNIl'lfIIi.'fIl. (ma-II. Hy ..illII'l ttuu.-t ..m.u. :. .:nct-..tie blmllll on Is- Ium HM where III P. I-2 I. ss.ou Jitter Provinces and l' s Sl2.tlIt pet an-tum "'l'lic strn .'cst tttctiiury is weaker than the wt-aki-.sl ink." FRIDAY. Al'Gl'ST 2.5. 1955 No Bull 'l'lliis'i' xi.-piics---atirl lltcrc wet-3 a t:I'”at lltilll) ol them-who main- tained that Pr:-sitlcttt FIisetiltotvei's proposal for .-knit-rii".tti-l-Itissian ex- cluiituc ut titililary ltlitcpriiils tilltl acrial itispccliott was in reality a "bluff". and that the President was stit'e it would llPH'l' be accepted lty the Rllsslillls, mu.-l be a little (lis- coitifitctl In lltc iii-its that the Pres- ldertt and his ;tdviscrs--with the knowledge and consent of all polit- I(”iI lcailcrs Ill (longicss---ai'e still piitsiitn: the Ilillll with cntltiisiastii Iilort-met; they seeitt to be ofl'ei'itt-: the Soviet IlllltI”l'S every inducctncnt they can think of to reconsi(Iet' the ll”'.'alIt'P atiilutlc arlopieri by Premiet Iltiltganin at Hcttevii. lit: Eiseitliow er himself is reported to be coiint- itu; on an evenliitil acceptance of tltc Itlwll as tangible evidence of the Sov- iet i'nionl: more conciliatory ap- pt-naclt in world problems. Whether tltis be wise or foolish. it does seem to eonfiivn the llt'--sirlent's reputation fl; a man wlto says what he means at all times. While on it lllltjlll not be out of place to observe that anyotte who has bccti reading the this ciiltiiwl, news in recent motitlts is aivare of the rrII'l that, thus far, tlte new Sov- i . let attprvutch has consisteti almost iilmlly of smiles. frienrlly hand- :I1.'JI(P's, and fine promises. There has Ill1”ll only one good deed. the sign- in: of the ,-ki.istt'ian pczice treaty. aittl it would be easy 0llOllE'.I1 to find evi- dence of other things besides disin- tei'esterine'ss in that. The co-oper- alion disnla) l'(I by Russian scientists al the atoms for peace conference was a good gesture; but, as yet. there is no assiirance that the polii T lcal and party letitlers will bari. them up wheti it comes right down V to international control of atomic energy. In fact, almost everything the latter have said on the subject would seem to point in the other di- rection. llcvltnns the fo"thcttmitti: meclim: of the llnltetl Nations sub- committee on disarmament in New Tork will izivc a good inkling of what to expect in that field; and the for- eicn inittisteis ttiectint: in Geneva in October may rcteal the real ports, as distinct from the pleasant promises. for the future. Uses In Peace A preview of l fitture world , where nuclear reactors will generate power to litzht homes and where tvtrlio-isotopes will help farmers to improve crops is offered in "Nuclear F.ttcr;;y and its I'ses in Peace”, an Illiistrnlerl ltnol.-let published by (In- esco in mttttm-tioti ivith the l'niterl Nations "Atouts-l'ot'-lteace” ('onfct'- eiice at t".cnev;t. Its author is (lerald Wendi. the well-known American sci- ence writer. In this Ititoklcl part of a .sct'ic.-. on ilnesco and its llllttgl'Ell'TlfTlftv-MT. Wendi warns that if all the peoples of the world were to attain the liv- ing siandarrls already enjoyed by Ilrtajn nations. the earth's known deposits of coal and oil would be ex- hausted within twenty years. On the other hand. known resources of uranium and thorium would serve for 500 to 1,000 years. ' New sources of energy to raise living standards are the fundamental reasons for the interest of the Uni- ud Nations in atomic power, Mr. lwendt writes, but the interest does not and there. He states: "The power to be generated is not merely electrical: it is economic and social power. The stream of electrons that will gush from the power stations , muld become the lifeblood of under- I privileged peoples. Nuclear power and its by-products may eventually --have as great an impact on the pur- Hits of peace as the atomic bomb bid on those of war. p "The challenge to mankind is to foresee and prepare that the conse- quences be for the good of nations. Ifnuclearpowerlsa weapon of I posoemstscticsareln the competent 'trInIn'ot Iclenthts. out It domandl '0'-fixwf pros- - I moments and of the international organizations." . In I preface to the booklet, Luther H. Evans, Director-Genera! of Unesco, commgnts: "The science of atomic materials and the engineer- ing uses of atomic energy will be shared by all thewot'ld. It becomes as important for the public to learn .ihe new facts as it has been to un- derstand the use of coal and steant." The West German Miracle Accurdiiig to certain facts figiires made public by the U. N. Economic Cottttnissiott. West Ger- tttein) "s rapitl recovci'y front the dex- asintion of war is the ntost amazittg feat of the last ten years. In ltl-1.3 the coiintry was broken economical- ly as well as militarily. Almost cv- cry city of intporlanre had been sltatteied by bombs. There was no IIl(lLlSill.l to speak of and. if there had him. there were no outside nt:tt'kels to sliniuhtte proditctiott. The tllltl ' ciit'i'ciic) of the i-ouit.i'y was worlh- less. Dett-at and political t'IlSllll0(.ZI"zl- lion had brought about 2.-ttet'ul de- titot'a'Tx:t:1'iit. The belief. -Vtill with- in auvl oirsirlc thc cottiilry. was that Ii'.'l'lll;lflV'i.S Iiis'iot'ic role as the Ill- tlus-rial hub of Eiiropc hurl emit-tl for all time. Yet, only ten )e:tt's after. there is - no nation in EIiii'o:,te as ccottoitticaliy strotig as West finrttitiny. In fact. it is the third laruest by the i'niterI States and tlte i'nitctI I(in':riont. Its ciirrcncy is stronrzcr than at any other time in its history. Flxports are five times what they were five years ago. and they are growing by leaps and boiintls. There is virtually no unemployment: in- deed. one report says that the aver- age worker in office or factory can have his choice of more than a doz- en jolts. There is scarcely a l'lllllI'l(I-- er of yr:-tr havoc anywhere in the re- public. What adverse Plft'('l-ll any-inc new military structure and internal (Ii-'niiies rezzirdinz ways aitd means of bringing aboitt the country's re- unification will have on all this econ omic progress remains to be seen But at the moment. the experts seem to be agtecti. West Germany is Illv "wonder-man" of Europe. EDITORIAL NOTES An impressive memorial to Lord Selkirk, who brought the fiist white settlers to the Red River valley in 1812. is to be erected in downtown Winnipeg by the Historic Sites and Monument Board of Canada. lli-I earlier aeltievement in bringing scl- tlers to the Belfast District in this 1 ,Province. which gets little recogni- tion in (Iannriian history textbooks. should at least be noted on the Win- nipeg memorial. 0 Approximate total of the world population in the latter ltalf of I934 was 2.328.0flfl.000 inhabitants. as compared with 2.49.'l.000,t)0fl in l953. according to a demotzraphic analysis published by the United Nations sta iistical office. The analysis shows tlte breakdown in the different areas as follows: Afria i3l6,0fl0.f)00, North America 2.'iZl,fl()0,(l()0, South Amet- ica l2l.lf)0.0tI0, Asia texcliirlinc USSR) l.323.00tl.(lf)0. Europe (ex. eluding USSR) 406.5()0.fl()f). Oceania l4.20i'l.O00. USSR 2l4,.')00,000. I I 0 lI'HfIIllE nation , in the world. being oiilcl."issed only . - t '--. K As Young As You Feel Darkest Globe and Mail. Il may It? in some SI'1IlIIl('.'lllCE that Saltit'it:j'.- ltl.t(i(iy riolii -. in l-it-ettch N-rilt Africa was iontiiicd to Morocco and Alceria, Ill boilv o' lhcsc tcrriiories. the French tttitiuttiy cnttstitule the real riilintz j)m'."I'. and have sliowti determi- ii-:t'tit to remain such. There was no itttttcitw in Tunisia, which is to hair a nlr”lt-lift” of Iiititie rule ttniler a plan approved bv the A. rmltly and Senate in Paris. and tliir to he l'.'lII.IPfl Ill Tunis aruuuri the curl of lltis monilt It does not follow front Ibis. huweter. tltat the .llvtruccaii and .tl':crian nationalists can orsltoiild be apueascd by tzrantiiil them What Tunisia has been zranted On the contrriry. the primitive s.aiacet'v of their behavior-typi- fit-rl by the Inns-'tei'e of hospital patients at Oiietl 7.cm -inaltcs it clear that home rule is at this time out of the question forthciu. While they may have I merited zririarice :t"ninsl their pasttreat irieni by Fmnce, their methods haic demonstrated that they are not capable of coterttinu them- :elves. and hate in fact set back the hands of the clock so far as autonomy is concerned. The ruth- lrrsness nccdcd to ptii down their own rlltllI”:Sll0SS can onlv widen the Itrcarh ltelw-eeti them attd tl'e Fvcrwlt. who must now rim lIl!”f' two territories with an iron hand. 0 I I The sIlll"tIOll In Freitt-It North Africa is ('('"l'VR'”0I)lP to that In Ix'cnva or iii M':lr.ya. British ;:t-tlilviilips. in the two l:zllercoun- are not Sltllllfbstin” a reas- uuable dc:-irc for democracy or . wet:-Av Y'00'f?l5l0””?.Il.l5-Rt?'9it't.. i A i rscnec as A 35':-tt.-ei-t;it;2H0,;t3-.?l",'-WW r-mass pays waste on rite ROADS ' LAQT c'oEEl,4;'i'f, Man And Ma.-sleiriplecle Rruce Hulchlson In the Resirle 9 ntouitiaitt lake I met an artist worl-ting with (.'aiiada's r-hie-:1 art form That is to say. he was ntcttdinil I canoe. And as he worked there on the tlivit-led his mind and speech equally between worship and blasphemy. As an artist be worshipped the canoe - a desiun so valid. funct- ional and perfect that it has lasted. iincltanged. for cuiiutless c.-tiuries. As I woodsmsn tie cursed the mosquito-swarm of speed boats that have lately turtia.-d this remote lake into I fair imi- tation of I holler factory. But alas. this artist and woodsman is now one of in small Canadian ' minority The speed boat majority Despite Wetlnesday's iinfai-orabln 1 weather, the two-day Prince (loumy l Exhibition at Alberton was highly successfiil. The quality of the ex- hibits was unsurpassed and there A was keen competition in the various 7 cl-asses. Agriculture Minister Cul- len was quite right in stating that there is nothing better than good livestock to encourage young people to stay on the farm. Throughout the years the Prince County Exhibi- tion has been an important factor in attaining this objective. I O 0 We strongly dispute the claim of Agriculture Department officials at Ottawa that the Soviet group of farm visitors to this country are be- ing shown "Canadian agriculture at its best". In the first place, the Rus- Ilsns are greatly interested in high- grsde swim production. and Prince Edward Island leads all Canada in this respect. In dalrylng too we are second to none, and in many other phases of agriculture our producers have Idiloved Canada-wide renown. Why won we,'Ilong with the other AtlInt.lc Provinces, tgnpred in this lttnersryf Because some bureau- crst In Mr. Gardiner": department at Ottawa so decided. Is everywhere replacins the. canoe Ind the mechanic is replacing the artist. The man on the beach was not. Is one might have supposed from his rsgaed clothes and pIinl-dItilt- Id hands. an ignorant or I poor man. In point of fact. he was In erudite man, and I rich man by world's reckoning. and richer still by his own. He said that in tbpprsctise of - his profession. the law. he was Iccustomed to charge I fee of 8100 I dsy. Thus be estimated con- servatively that It such I figure his lsbors on his canoe over tlit last forty years or so had been worth more than I hundred thou- ssnd dollars. 0 0 It seemed I subslsntlal sum to spend on I craft of doubtful ses- bcach he I worthiness but the owner said it i was the most profitable invest- ment he had ever made. For the canoe. he explained. was one of the few things that I man could Ictuslly own in this world. Warming to his subject. lie est l down on .1 log. glared It the mechanical mosquitoes on -the lake and announced as I self-evident truth that while I man might on s csnoe. he could never own I machine. A canoe. Is the Indians ltsd found long ago. became part of s man. almost an extension of his body. as the paddle was In l extension of his arm - in short. I fsitliful servsni. I loyal friend Ind I true possession. A machine. on the contrary. Ilwsys ended by owning the supposed owner. The youths II the mend boats im-Ilned that they were cmitrrh ling their espenstvs poncsslous I, SAND: Airic a Toronto sclf-government. 'l'ttey are putting down bloody lcri'oi'i.:tn. whirl alarms and cndantzcrs the coloret popui"fi'n quite as much as It does the while. So It is wltli Al- ecria Ind Moroccit. It is the clear duty of the French to re- establish order in these two ter- riln-tn.-,nobod,v else can do li-- and it the only way to do this is lay the burning of villagcs. tltrn tillazes will have to be burned. North Africa is. of course. pro- fitable in France. But France lt:s broivzltt many benefits to North Africa-law and order are not the least of them-Ind. given peace. could bring more. coming in due time to the point where self-go'N'nmelIi would be practic- able. What Saturday's uprising.- imp dmtc--rm Morocco and Al- geria. at least-is to push that point still further into the future Non-colonial nations may shake their heads. and sentimenialists point their fittcers. at the French procrsm of renrisais in North Africa. The fact rcmaiits that people do not establish thcirriiht to autonomy by bulcherinz W0- men and children. France. in turn. must consider to what extent she has ltrnuclil the North African crisis ilimll ltmuelf. A proper colonial system rrnnitres self-t'e'i:tnce. ll r-ncuur mes the native population to choose sound leaders and than brine.-4 them rlnne. This lies not been fI(”lr in North Afrids. Lead- pi-.)vitt there has etitlently fallen into the wrurii' IWMIS. and if I5 hard in gen how it will eicr get into the right ones. Winnipeg Free Press the touch of In scccleraior: aci- ually they were going nowhere and had become mcrcly prisoners in I moving and dangerous prison. The. old canuemsn was i 'i f to think. indeed. that the churning lake and its occupants in perpetual motion were an accurate micro- cusm of the modern world. where- in few men learned to own any- thing. since ownership could not be pur Ised with money but only with fol Ind partnership of owner and owned. fly such calculation, he tzuessed he had earned his canoe several times over, Ind he went on in outline in some detail the life statics of canoes and men. They began in shiny innocence. II III the power, Ind glory of human sinew and sound cedar planking. But the shine soon wore off under the attrition of life and water. and must be renewed with constant repair; with -trdlnsry varnish out of I can in the use of the canoe Ind. in the case of man. with In invisible varnish cal- led education. lpbor Ind exPCfI- once. Given such care. I cum would lIIt about as long as I man. which was not long. Their wrinkles. pstcltss Ind erocltots would deve- lop and deepen together. Together they would decline into feeble- scss Ind scnlllty until they could no longer put to III. That stale the canoe and III owner had now reacbod. Neither would IIII the lake Igalu. Both had Ittalnod. my informant in- ttmsted modestly, I maturity, I phIloIophy Ind lwell-curod con- tentment which the unconscious prisoners of the speed boIi.I could never hope to find in their erratic. circular pursuit of nothing mos-I than speed Ind Owned by I mschlne. he said. men were rapidly losing the only real sensations of life: the sensat- lons of mIn's primal power.,lhe sweet evening ache of muscle. the camp fire. wood smoke Ind lo! of healthy appetite. Deusturlng nature In vIiI parody and Impty . imitation of life. man Iur-ad rud- derleu Ind lost upol I clisrtlus ocean, with sound and fury. sign- ng . since In his passion C- fa; - 9-' - -. , . I '7 7" , ., . ' J: I 11-?.:':1 fr? Zea?! for -'(0”("-15”” ff-'7 ) Qitzcii . . .. ;,,.p ' Poetic toaom I this Iulismn II -mczsslnll l ....-...-. Sir.- -llavittg just I'9ll.lfIlf1tI lam; lsmllu ant-r at very Ulla) but iletigtittiil vacation to Prince rid- vtam Island I must write to you In express my gt-alctul apprecia- tiuit for the news coverage in thc Guardian of August 11th. re the to first airmail flight to Charlotte- town in l919. As I rcsull l ltatl many calls. and one of the most pleasant was that of our mutual friend .1. J. I-ltiman. Summcrsidc. who came down to your Summer- sitle office with some photos which I did not know existed. Those photos were pi'obIbl:' taken by Mr. Luiison who fo many years was I conlribiitor ii- The Guardian. In the photos are pictured several people from the city as well as Stevens. Barnltill and myself. Tltey were taken just before the takeoff fur the return TIIEIII to Truro. On the return flight Bariiliill went back with Stevens, be having came uver by train to join us. I remained in Charlottetown to endeavor to work up an interest in I propus ed company to operate an air roulc bclwcen the island and the nltlinlallfl anti Iitiattccil with cap- tlal from the lllai'iliincs. But If that time iaith in the future of aviation was at I low ebb. and as I result outside interests cam: along as aviation tlcvclnpcd Int took over. I often wonder how miiclt local capital is today in- vested in ctniittci'clal aviation. I am writing in the Canadian Geographical .Iouritnl advisint: them of the error in their account of the history of Can-'tria's earliest air mail. I have always bceti happy to have made it a positive part of the record that Prince Edwaril Island was represented in the first fliizht from the mainland. and with the first air mail. Thank you again for your part in sctlinq the record strwichl. I am. Sir. cit. JAMES WI" NER STEVENSON Wlllision Park. New York. y1u?'.;:c' him with his paint. his sandpaper and the hundred-thousand-dollar canoe which would never more feel the waves and the touch of gurgl- Ill," water on its aged flanks. No matter. the artist had got what he wanted. He fisd owned I Can- adian msslerpiuo. In DBOWNED VLIAYAVADA. II d l I (AFL- Slxty persons drowned in the River (FISH!!! Wednesday when I gov- I artist saemcf to be lspslng in blank vans. I Doubt it time to loIvI. rnment public works department steam lsunch capsized in mid- stream. First reports said the only survivors were three crew mem- bers who swam shore. V And the lonely stream. Illdllll -C Medically Speaking I: II N. Iudeui. M. I. BABY1 GETTING CEREAL The first solid food your bsby gets will probably be I cereal. ' Actually, of course, the food in these first feedings is far from solid; it's mostly liquid. Just the nine. it represents an importsnt step in progress. Begin feeding your lot by the time he is three months old, or even before. if your doctor I advises it. l THIN LIQUID The cereal should be so thin that it will easily pour off the end of the spoon. If it is too thick. add I little of your baby's milk mix- ure. Or if he is breast fed, thin It with boiled or specially pre- pared baby water. For the first day or two. offer him only one or two spoonfuls so that be can get used to it. If you give him any more. it may upset his idgestion. Here is a tip which might make these first feedings I little easier. If you give him his cereal before his regular milk feedings, he will be more apt to take it. As I .rule I baby looks forward to his regu- lar fcedituz because IIE likes the milk better. He will want to get the preliminaries over quickly. Increase the amount of cereal each day. for about two weeks, when he should be getting I full portion. DRY CEREALS cereal if you give him dry cereals like those especially prepared for bab- test. I portion is two ounces or one-quarter cupful of the cereal mixture after the milk and water h-we been added to it. If you use caitned cereal. give him about four ounces or one-half I ciiplul. It I feeding. After he eats his cereal. let him hate as much milk as he wishes. if you nurse him. this probably i will not take longer than 15 to 20 minutes. If he is bottle fed, he will usually drink anywhere from four to six ounces. QUESTION AND ANSWER A. M. A: What would dt'yttcss of the mouth? Answer: Dryitess in the mouth comes from various causes. Nervousness is the most com- mon cause. Excitement and worry may produce it. Some disturbance of the salivary glands may be responsible. Careful examination physician is required. clllle by your 6 fit: gang 3 DAB-LOCK-HYTHE In the time of wild roses As up Tltanies we travelled Where tmid water-weeds ravellcd The lily uncloscs. To his old shores the river A new song was singing. And young shoots were springing On old roots for ever. Dog-daisies were dancing. And llags flamed in cluster. On the dark stream I lustre Now blurred and now glancing. A tall reed down-weighing The sedge-warbler fluttered: One sweet note he uttered. Then left it soft-swaying. By the bank's sandy hollow My dipt oars went beating. And put our bows neeting Blue-backed shone the swallow. I High woods. licron-haunted. Ruse, changed, as we rounded Old hills grcenly mnunded. To meadows enchanted. I A dream ever moulded Afrcslt for our wonder. Still opening asunder For the stream many-folded: Till sunset was rimming The West with pale flushes: Behind the black rushes The last light was dimming: Shy birds. new more lonely. And with us was only. The noise of our gliding In cloud of gray weather The evening iferdarkened. In the stillness we hearkened: Our hearts sang together. -Laurence Binyon. iivcnskss IN rszrsossuss . OTTAWA (CF)-CInIdI's output of rcflned petroleum products in 1964 rose to 150335.000 hlmh from 116387.000 the prsvlous year. Out- put of refined products in the Mar- ltlmes Ind Quebec rose to 00.883.- :9: barrels from 51370.28! in 1953. FIRE ALARMS This is I warning to motorists and pedestrians concerning fire alarms. This alarm is sounded only for the benefit of your volunteer fire brigade. Un- authorized persons racing to the scene of I fire or interfering in any way with the efficient operation of the department will be liable to I fine. Kindly follow these rules when an alarm is sounded: - 1. Do not approach within 200 ysrds of I fire truck. Should you find yourself in front of I fire truck. 2. park your vehicle It the side of the street as quickly as possible. 3. Do not park within 200 yards of the fire. and do ' not double park. Remember the town I limit is 20 M.P.H. Refrain from caning I telephone operator; leave the circuits free for the use of firemen. if necessary. Your co-operation in observing these rules will he rireatly appreciated by members of the firs bri- gade. - Town Council. Town of Montague. 9'? I NOTES BY Mus evacuation of cities for civilian defence may not be an i issue I few years from now. The way things Ire going. American cities will soon consist of nothing prcssways, clover leafs and long concrete bridge approaches. - Plcilsdelpliia Bulletin The clerical profession puts , some of the others to shame in 'its encouragement of immigrant reinforcements. Here in the Peter- borough district there are half I dozen recent arrivals from Ulster and Britain. young men In pastor- ates with good Lancsshire. Irish -tr Scottish tongues and an ardent cnthuslasm for their new country as well as their religion. They Irc accepted wholeheartedly by their congregations. - Peterborough Examiner Human hair is one of the strong- est animal fibers. When each hair I Jl'S its equal load. it has it breaking strength of 355.000 to 40. 000 pounds per square inch. about half the breaking strength of steel. The hair on the head of one wo- man. when each hair bears its equal load. can support the equiv- alent of 5 tons without pulling from the roots. If the same hair were taken from the head and braided together, it would support 10 tons before the hair fibres themselves broke American Magazine A hurricane and I typhoon art- the same thing, but in different 3 parts of the world. The Atlantic storm got its name from the West IndiIns' cd of the storm -- Hurs- kan. The Pacific typhoon came from the Chinese word for ”big wind" - "tat fung" -- and the Japsnese. "tat-fu". They differ from tornadoes mostly in that the latter are narrower. usually on land. and have greater lifting pow- er. All of them are cyclones Ind ”twisters". rotating counterclock- wise north of the equator. clock- wise lo the south of it. -- New York Herald Tribune. More than ever before. people in great metropolitan centres are dependent on public parks and rec- reation areas for some taste of what an earlier generation knew as the ”countryside." The trouble is that far to little is being done to set aside more such areas be- fore they are swallowed up by ,new subdivisions and new urban- ization. Buffalo's lovely park acre- age serves us today only because an earlier gciieration had the win- dom Ind vision to preserve it. The same qualities in planning for future parks are men more needed l0d8.V as more and more of the ; countryside retreats under the in- I evitable suburban spread of it growing population. -Buffalo News ' next year. The Flower City's plans should serve as another reminder that Buffalo's own fine civic cen- Ire" It NiIgIrI Square is still in- complete. - Buffalo News Bob Wltorwooil. 61. of Hamilton. who was told 2.5 years ago that he was too old for I postmatfs job. has completed I walk of 840 miles from his native city of Pitts- burg. On his return doctors said he was in perfect condition. Part of the way he walked. part of the way he jogged or trotted. but all the way he felt well and enjoycd his jaunt. All of which shows that age is more than I mark on I calendar. and that if youth is in the arteries and in the heart I man may laugh at the years -- Ind at the whims Ind diclatcs of trite Civil Service. -- London Free res.- Whcn taxi-I lzcl too tiiglt. espe- cially on something that is pretty generally used. ways sttd means are devised by those whose con- science ls not too sensitive to evade payment. This was true of cigarels. In 1952 seizures of smug- gled clgsrels in Canada totalled 24,000,000. In 1953 Ind 1954 the Iovernment experimented and cut down the flow of smuggled cigar- Ils from the United States. In the budgets of those two years they cut the excise tax by seven cents. Last year seizures amounted to but 5.000.000 This is definite ev- idence lhst smuggling has drop- ped considerably. It also slioivs that there is I line of taxation br- yond which if is not sensible -to go. When that line is crossed busy brains get more active to evade payment. It merely shows again that there is I point of diminish- ing rctums. -- Kitchener-Waterloo Record i but parking lots, throL;,ltwIys. ex- I !aAgpeM4;Fhe Guardian. THE WAY Metropolitan Toronto has I bud. get for this year of 562,523,435 Three-fifths roughly comes from the 13 membe municipalities uul two-fifths in provincial grant. '...tt is more than all Ontario spent only I few years ago. -- oi tIwI Journal .Whether you are for ur ttgalii. fluoridation of drinking water it may interest you to know ll' Cleveland s joined Philadelphlgl Baltimore. ashington. San Fran cisco. Milwaukee and other largc U- S. cities in adopting it. Graml Rapids reports I reduction of 70 nor cent of dental caries Qlnnnp zchool children since the whip. was fluoridated. st. Thom,-.. Times-Journal People who are advocating en forced use of speed governors on automobiles Is I device to redun- highway accidents and fatalities. are undoubtedly sincere in um. intentions but obviously have mm no actual experience with such as vices. A speed governor on I cat engine automatically reduces if not removes one of the prime safe ty aids in the modern car namely maximum acceleration in time of emergency. - Brockville Record er and Times "The crow is I smart bird. btit he is also very superstitious" says Mr. Hitb hear of Winnsboro Lniiisisna. Working on that sitper stition. Mr. Dear claims SIICPPSK in keeping them away from his watermelon patches. He uses I very simple device. Stakes are drivcn in the field and string is stretched from stake to stake. Mr Dear s ys the crows look on the arrangement as some kind of trap and won't come near it. He ha: been using his string SClIrN'I'ltii since l9l7. Saint John Teh- graplt-Journal A British Labor M. P. luv: :4 plausible explanation for what he calls the "Ippalllngly low stand- Ird" of women drivers. It is. said Mr. E. W. Short, because they Ire taught to drive by their husbands. Anybody who has at tempted to leach his wife to drive is car would agree, he said. "that there is no more difficult. heart breaking and unrewarding task" Mr. Short's solution is I goiern- ment grant for the training of cat- divers. I sugzestinn which may have some merit. We cannot -tav as ntuch for the suggestion of I fellow M. P. that the grant sltn-ilrl be "for the physical training of pedestrians-" It seems I quitt- frivolous ides. They set exercise enough. - Toronto Star Lltterbugglng by motorists has been attacked in many areas ln different ways. Ons of the maxi effective is in the state across the border where I 3100 fine is im- posed for the first offense. In that state the highways and shuttl- ders are particularly clean front debris thrown from cars. for the fine is strictly imposed whenetet an offender is apprehended. Sonte thing similar. it would seem should be added to the Ontariu law. The fine in Ontario is not sufficiently heavy to prevent mn- torists from discarding anything and Iverythlng they do not re- quire out the car window. It is I peculiarly selfish offense. one which sltuws up the character of the motorist as does cutting in and out and violent horn blowing. St. Catharines Standard AUTHORIZED DEALER Licensed Wlrltlz contractors REFRIGERATION WI sell. install and ser- vice refrigerated counters. wslk-in coolers. also House- hold refrigerators. C. G F). Vacuum Cleaner and Polisher Rental Service MOTORS E APPLIANCES We sell and repair .all motors. washers and electrical spplisnccs. Storey Electric 175 Grafton Street PHONE 32.17 PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Bel. Mutlteson & Foster l.'lO Richmond st. J. Elmer Blanchard, n.a. l I OPTOMETRISTS l sTsTi r mrrcmzson. ILO. 106 Que: st. Phone an as GI'If?dII st. nmgz II. A. Former. Q.C., LLB. -I. .CIrruthcrI. R.O. Bunk of Conunggeg lklg. I13 Kent 81. Dill 56!! Byron J. Grant, 0. . in Kent st. p-"Dial Ian J. S. Taylor, R.0. Corner Kent I Queen Sts. Allison M. Glllis. LL.B. ll Richmond so. MI! 4147 A. Wlltholl Gludet, u..nC. Phillips Bldg. in Grafton sci mm ,m. "mm 4,5, -. C..- - 1.... Palmer & llsslam II. J. Msbon. R.0. lamb of Nova Booth mu. . .M-mt-m '- 5- '- M-the-o-. re-kc F5 cutkoeitkcioiz" ch in Graftglboslllteet - Dr. W. E. Carson :01 Prince St. Dial 0431 J. A. MIoGulgII ARCHITECT 6. Km Pickard. u I. Arch. M.lLA.l.C.. --j-m-m-- Iumtngrglde, lI.I-:.l. Dial 226' DlIcPIieo I Ti-Ilnor ct-arioiieuws. rue-om and us Coon ll. out an Irv!-vs. Dial Isis CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS. IIGDONALD. CUBRIE & 00. Charlottetown Clrrlo IIII. -Dill MM Outing: Ohu. B. Me-Qusltl. B.A. III llclnond BL Nil II Club IHJ. Dial 8735 llfli-III EIDOANIOOOMPANY 0oIvIIlI..osIrIIuIbwI Pbsuslll-III ' I. o. In W ABTIUI J. OABBEH Palmer cbaslsudovl uo"Ii2HuI.IIu 'tIsiIIII