Stealtae ‘| while __|innumerable tiny stones, many ‘ino‘larger than a grain of sand -| Sack Full . oo Of Stones “By Dri Theodore R. Van Dellen | If a ‘barre! of gallstones were ‘thrown ona pebbly beach, most of us could not tell the man- ‘made varieties from nature's product. The calculi come in se veral sizes’ and shapes. Those composed of cholesterol ‘and ¢al- citim’ often - have still soft and also have many. facets (polyhedral), with smooth, edges and corn- . ers. : : The gallbladder. may contain In contrast is the single, large rough stone of pure crystalline cholesterol. This ‘‘solitaire’’ may become so big it forms a cast of be. as troublesome as the 25 to 100 round, pea-sized pebbles made from calcium and bile When these little ‘stones wan- der away from home, especial- ly at night, they cause colic on getting stuck in the ‘bile pas- Sageway leading to the inres- ~Hine>-The-sufferer-is~seized~ sud-- denly with severe agonizing pain | in the upper abdomen, -near the. right rib border, which = aiso ‘!s felt in-the back and the region lof the right shoulder. Removal of the organ is the only guarantee that another at- tack will not occur. The initial- colic usually lasts a. féw— min- utes to an hour or two, but in a’) matter of months or years a se- cond, third,-and fourth bout will be encountered. Between atiacks the victim complains of indiges- tion and gaseous distention. Eli- long periods of time However, there is'more to gall ducements it has had to offer | |stones-than- colic. In most in-— were scholarships for top Grade stances, infection of the gall- bladder co-exists, leading to di- gestive disturbances...When_ the infection flares up, the organ be- comes as red and angry looking | as an acutely inflamed. appendix or sore throat. The temperature skyr,ckets, the pulse quickens, and the individual. is~ ill. The siege seldom lasts longer than a week and, with modern drugs,- inflammation generally subsides within a few days. Surgery offers the best solution of this. problem. APOPLEXY _ “K:M:: writes: What are the symptoms of a stroke? “ -.- REPLY Symptoms In- strokes, the victim becomes diz- zy. and may suffer from -head- ache, .nausea, vomiting, _and ‘a_ -‘momentary blackout; this may vary. been molded | the gall sac but is less likely to | ay . ”, | The English are taught frown birth ahout. the importance of losing gracefully, about the ab- isolute necessity for maintaiuing /a stiff upper lip in times of ad- versity, about the virtues of -nptl: mism when the portents-of doom fare thickly strewn about them, ‘and about the need for courage |when a national crisis threatens. | It is not just because’of tradi- tion and training that the Eng- lish excel in these worthy quall- ties of character: unhappily, it is also because of the regularity with which they are obliged to’ call_upon them to the hilt. No -_|nation_with weather like theirs. should, in all justice, be requir- alas, there are many others. Economic tranquility continues to elude them, industrial protec- tion growth is turgid, the pound |sterling has recurting bouts at janemia, diplomatic’ initiatives: step unerringly- on—banana— peel, -and,’ in recent times,.there has ‘been the damaging shipping ‘strike — enough, one ’ would ‘think, to reduce any nation to | complete despair. : a |. Why then, were! the reserved and undemonstrative English | thronging the streets of their ci- | ties, towns and villages, singing, /drinking, dancing and laughing? | Had they all been granted tax re- | | bates? Had Prime Minister Har- old Wilson retracted his austere: measures for wage and: price ed to support other burdens but, ot ACs Happy And Glorious . _ Globe and Mall freezing? Had weather forecast ers predicted two concurrent days of. uninterrupted sunshine? ‘No, the celebration was a mans ifestation of that other remark- able English characteristie/~— the capacity to pull something unexpected out of the hat to re- scue national morale just when the weight of their troubles was had just won the World Soccer Championship for the first time by beating a West German team by four goals to two. a It was a thoroughly satisfac- tory win in many, respects. The ful and dangerous ~and~ ; the game into extra time befote superiority. But soccer. ts Eng- land's game — exported to a world which, ungratefully re- turned again and again. the old master. The award of the Stanley Cup produces a brief spasm of -cele- 4bration_an.ong-Canadians ( to sip intoxicating liquors from the trophy itself) but we’ have io_sporting event capable of comparable to that enjoyed by the English at the weekend. It is good to know that, ia spite of the regularity with which they are obliged to lose grace- fully, the English can still find occasion to demonstrate _ that |they are. essentially a happy | breed = | ~Cavg | hein The Middle. Moncton Transcript ‘ : For. the past three years the special consideration {s given ‘tt . gh school graduates. Among the in- 13. students, supplied out of the operating- grants provided ‘by the Ontario. Government. - The university had iniended to | of the sch:-! award more than 400. olarships this year — some cov- ering the costs of tuition and fees for an. entire course -— but the Ontario Government: stepped in-~ to -rule— that —its- -operating- grants must..not be j1sed in this way. If they -were,. the Govern- ment- warned, a corresponding amount would be deducted from peg year's grants to the univer- | sity. , There may well be some justi fication for the attitude of -the | minor Government. It- has established ; eighty three. chains.to land late- ‘its own -student aid -program, ‘(the Ontario Student Awards Program) -and naturally sees lit- jtle point in supplying Waterloo. -In - Tokyg, bookworms with be followed by faulty memory with the funds to_go into compe- jears can browse and-buy in and personality changes. In se- tition. ‘The university's attitude The new highway, ruler — | writer of this communication de- | | serves better than anonymity, if | only for a happy turn of phrase. * There js | cently mous letter arguing the compli- | cated ins and outs of.a dispute i vere cases of apoplexy the face vy, and the sufferer becomes un- conscious; ~ the extremities on one side and the face on the oth- er are paralyzed.. : SPEECH DEFECT : H.G.: writes: I have been stut- tering just about all of my_ life: but lately it is worse than ever. I am_47 years old.-t have a cyst could Ae any chance. that this the cause of my speech difficul- biee ; -REPLY-— no_ relationship -“be- tween the two. Stuttering is dif- ed many decades. OCEAN WATER AND : ARTERIES L.M.W. writes: Will seven or ter taken daily cause the arter- ies to harden faster? REPLY Ocean water has’ no effect upon the. arteries. Why be a fish and fall for this hokum? ODAY'S HEALTH HINT — Keep unused lures in the tack- le: box when fishing in a boat (Note: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be ad- dressed to: Dr. Dellen, c-o Chicago Chicago, Illinois.) Tribune, Vocabulary — Gains One Windsor Star From Manitoulin Island. re- there came an anony- over schools on the island. Anonymous tetters ° deserve ‘only to be thrown away. But the “Discussing one. type of —stu- dent, the writer refers to ‘‘drop- “A handy phrase, that ‘‘push- outs,’’ and one that should be ” ee ? 4 i. ‘ Bs : ae ‘ i : : ’ ee t <a po & em __*)_~policy of non-alignment with either _- : fe. @: dian Moscow or Peking, and the Yugo | | oS ; iiike: wierd bank the Qe bow -slavia of Tito also declines to take 4 __W. J. Hancox, Publisher | orders from the Russians or the tdecpte bates Frenk Walker Chinese. Cuba has broken with China, . Published every week day morning (except sur . but this is counterbalanced in part-by | 4 oe eh te af 165 a ore the adherence of the Communist coe et Summerside, Montague, Alberton Party of India to Peking. What is is. : . io EOC ree heceeaiiad nationally by Thomson Newspapers, Amportant 8s that so many Communist ising Services: Toronto 425 Un'versity Ave. countries or ‘strong C ommunist ire i feet ees See as parties within non-Communist states jeet Vancouver MA 7037. . are showing: an. independence of & Member Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishers iri it i ; : ciation and The Canadian Press. The Canadien oP Part of it is no doubt due to an x * 4 j is exclusively entitled to the use for repub unw illingness to take sides in the cur- | ation’ of all news dispatches in thi ir nfli e4 ; ; ited to it or fo the Assoriated Sree S aun is _Fent conflict between the two kinds | eee peed on / , also the loca!’ news published herein.’ AN of Communism, the Russian and the’ “| = # of republication ‘of special dismatches here | Chinese. Noa , Ww ‘to! 3 . also reserved. Subscriptich: rate: } _— obody wants ‘to ‘take . A it ius We: par souak by. sarttor. chance and back the nonm-winner in - & § $1007 year by mail on rural routes and ares = the duel. ? y : serviced by carrier. —- ous : : ¢ - $815.00 @ year off. Island and U.K. $20.06 per * ‘ ee, i in U.S., and elsewhere: outside Bitsh Com Help From Above : Ith. . : : i r) Pitot over ee: __It is not new to hear that Canadian _| g i a Member Audit Bureau of Circulation, et airmen have distinguished them- | WAGE 4 SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1966 selves. As a matter of fact they show- | : : : L D | ed they are outstanding as early asin | £0 Voucette | the 1914-1918 war through the ex- |: : : Charlottetown citizens will deeply ploits of such world figures of the} regret the news of the death of Leo | time as Bishop. Baker. Collishaw and - | SS Doucette, one of the .most popular |. MacLebd. It is none ae less agree- | pharmacists in the province. _ able, however, to hear them ppaised << : : " . i —_ j Mr. Doucette was almost the last | on an international scale as—good | Ke ‘of the old time druggists in this city | Samaritans. = aN ind his experience dated from_ Ae, agra of. Canada’s crews like the - days from the apothecary-shop of a~ ones who fly out of Summerside base | a ee ‘Past era. More than juSt’a business- “on Atlantic patrol was directly con- | TU CT CT TT ‘man, he was a friend and counsellor | cerned. This crew was from Green- a HTT . all his customers and carried that | wood, N.S., and one day while several © ' ly [ fr (I | ae irit of friendliness-into all his other ' hundred miles out over the Atlantic ty [ KH f | ° ages Etfairs. a ___: 1 between Newfoundland end Scotland, | ht : © Highly esteemed as a-citizen, he the aircraft spotted a 34-foot sailing / Tr 7 Eh A - og. = | : , wir . “Jong remembered. for. the © sloop heading eastward on-the.ocean. t LET 5 SE TLE FOR COMMON WEAPON ANYWAY ~ Yeeenly active part he played in past The aircraft crew” were unable to) et emma AML wk eee ee | years’ as president of the Gyro Club | alse the little boat by radio. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC = — and_as a valued member of the Lea- | 10 4 thoughtful gesture. they took ego ce a are Ses : gtie of the Cross Band. His interest- | ‘* i on Be nena of the sailing | Drive-Ins Thrive Across America 3 4 in his city’s welfare and that of its 7 STa"t-wrote It dowr;- enclosed--the/-—-— (ON .= reent of their business al 4 : : ar he ASHINGTON .— Twentieth- percent of their business at rform the “marriage cere people was too well known to need: | paper in a package weighted down by century America may go down /drive-in: teller windows. 2 x . recalling- : : | four rosy apples, and dropped it in a = ae -as. the Age .of the} A Phoenix, Arizona, bank | ‘The drive-in seems tobe a na Tamas akaas : ar : ToRanry men cinteaa a Or : Fatt oe 41+ Drive-in Suto a ae POORSS a Liv in faciity..aD 8 Ort ty devele: a Aaa) - ‘A great.many of our people will | Waterproof container alongside the ["yotorists in a hurry, can-g6 io | Lauderdale: Florida. # bank with ek Me ieee at remeraber the pleasure it was to-drop |, Sloop witha smoke. float. They watch- | church nowadays, get a haircut, a_drive - in -dock advertises: come car-borne. Pp = {nto his store and be greeted by Leo | €d a the saifors picked up the mes- | Pay their taxes, post their. mail, Bh dando Boat afd Beat the tradition - loving Britishers rit . fe y e : ‘Traffic Jam?" |: . 3 + | with a big smile and a-bigger-hello; | sage and then resumed-their patrol. |. leaving the car. | In Washington, D.C. 0a the /¥20 | i Aneta eee =. to be made welcome as-a person and Now a letter has come from one of | The shortage of parking | ee ee oe eaeeg ace now. basily converting : = ‘ fee , , a ; spaces _in many. fétropolitan Gants, a e main pest office ; : ; not just as a customer. He will be | the yachtsmen saying they reached aréak bas) GanGrtaied 9 ‘the’iserve motorcades of last-minute tiaiahed oy coaching inns into greatly missed-in the community in Scotland safely: The four New York- - spreading - popularity of many |taxpayers. ; : ae Tees te te Staaiine al sch he made such a place for him, | €F¥ board the sloop sailed from | Dev pet W drivedns the Ne | Perhae the mos sarting o& (ty “Pallont ice Me ah _ - > igelf. : : . | Barnstable, Mass. on their ocean *| The drive-in movie. a pheomen- iences is. the. drive-in church. : peaciiar gry wit ecg Rear | eee ee : - voyage. They inte d we on of the 1940's, retains its pop- |Some warmer sections of the na F : Lab c t 4 te 8 he’ had run inte bad a ularity. _~- ae : OP | United “States,-a few ministers = arm or Costs. _ ther and had been unable to. fix their |, REPLACEGROCERY CARTS — conduct “park and worship” ser- : and. While farm-cash income is up this Position by the stars, and since their."|_F i o don’t- want Newel oe motorists hurrying to See nine-story, drive-in book = : a er adi Pe ee ; © push supermarket carts, there |the -beach or gold course. (Shop. = year compared with previous vears, | Tadio ite eho had been un- | are: drive-in markets. House- | Catering to’ nation on wheels Although the ‘boom in drive — the Dominion Bureau of Statistics success ul trying to get a radio fix. So | wives” need_only attach baskets |apparently has no limits. |ins is new, the idea is as old as ‘now reports that the hired hel | they were overjoved to get such un- 7-22,the sides of. ‘theircars, and || In Canada, there's a drive-in ithe chariot. Ancient Romans ‘now reports that the hired help on -| et ee i, I; | drive’ through wide lanes stack- barbershop with the barber clip- loved to take weekend™trips, and farms costs considerably more this | expected. assistance from above them | ed high with merchandise. Walk- i tee ae Seat. G ok aCecat, stopped for the i a Q | in “a wonder a : z ing attendants drop the groceries In Lovelady, Texas; an objig- ‘night -at roadside mansiones es- 5 Season than in the past. - | ti a nderful example of interna- _ into the basket: - "ing justice of _the peace will pecially designed for the chariot Oldtimers will recall the days when | "0nal co-operation,” as the letter-de- 4 pegiatrician_in Atlanta, climb right info your car and set. Ae a hired man cost $40 a month and his |. Scribes the generous act. re a oe a ee tee Bee oe . . 3 y i would appreciate not ‘hav- | ~, : “~ ; - keep. The average monthly pay scale | _ Residents near the’ Summerside | ing to dress up to bring thetr | 11-Month School Year. on Canadian farms is now $174 with | ase will be proud to know that their | children downtown to’ the doctor. fe eee tices . board, says the Bureau in Ottawa. | es neighbors are. of this sanie fine . | ine eenieiitae fame ka ae an ee SS hss breed as the Greenwood crew er drives up spots a Vacant 1 rhe idea=won't-be-popular-withsince—theyhave not— wanted to This figure represents an increase of | “" iiss Greenwood COR | Soe eS ed aoa lecuatt fry, but economy-minded lose their three months of sum- $20 a month over 1965. What the re- | Meat Pri Ri | flips.a switch to signal their ar- ‘@XPavers in the U.S. are push- ‘mer,vacation. f port does not point out, is that there | Aue : FFICeS RISE | rival. Special diagnostic equip- 126 hard for the 1l-month school In Canada neither ] : : de o. |. "The prices, of meat ee one a ment is wheeled from room to Ye. They are urging it on ‘nor pupils get three months. is an additional hidden increase, and (| | © {°_BIICES,Q: on fave g P | room: It wasn't his purpose, but S¢hool boards in all parts of the Another point pertinent in this | that is the higher cost: ofthe food | Since the. beginning of the Canada the doctor reports that the drive- he et Se ee ae ae : . : fue - ae = iu ss : lint rith —built-i ; igh head. of steam. o not holiday all the while. that the hired help eat. This applies, — -ackers stirke = Juls 20 and will erm oredr ee Actually the proposal wouldn't schools are closed. -~of course, to even the food produced | continue-to go vu» until the strike is - Despite their conservative ‘im- %€ a8 hard on pupils as it Many attend summer classes | on the home farm, for the cost of -| OV€F, says a vice-president of a large 4 cites. foew “basis, to. 7S divided inte tou equal quarters, |thetr jesnees OF vaeraly keep a : meet ae ore itors. n 0 , equipment has*gone up along with | Sa ket. chain in Toronto. a pak ee in ich each pupil would at- abreast of their profession. ara : : er sources* not inrli ~ | "tend three. . : : People, whether teachers or __ the price of fertilizer and everything. | i S.are not inclined to | PUBLIC FORU M Proponents ‘reckon {t- would “students, can only do so much, —~“lse the farmer requires to see seed !aY the blame directly on the strike. . FUDLIG FOR /Shave present teaching staffs by’ and it would-be no good to try to | through to harvest time. |, Some. packers sav there isa “sea- : nis column te ce se dace ae pet cent, = nee ane ‘push them into unreatistic—seh——** : : se - . os Saes i ‘ vy 20 per cent at the most. | edules. : The Ottawa report says that the | ae an ts daearede that is send- ica whe Goardion as aa soeas They also say it would save But the same objection does : 3 ; i meat prices up from ten to- fifteen ~ S27! endorse the opinion of corres. building space, since only three not hold in relation to school avarage national wage of a ‘army hand | per cent. They claim the rise j - | Week to editing ead) Conte eton et’. out-of four children would be in buildings. It does seem wasteful = is $224 a month without board, an in- | ae ., | tne Tise IS NOU | ‘secessary.. The Guardian is.uuabie tc. | School at. once. ‘that such costly facilities shauld créase of $26 a month over last year | exorbitant. Somebody else in the —— any correspondence regaré- A few schools now have an li- only be used for one shift. and ‘oa : . | meat busi * <a @s do j ? ‘month year, but none have em- only for 190 days per vear. when the figure was $198 a month. | th ee noe at this time of year } braced a plan to stagger the stu- Any manufacturer who bought Computed on an annual wage. basis, | SA go up for certain 5a THE ISLAND” _ dent body. ae machinery for such limited .use we _cuts off the hog. : Sir,—Reference was made re- Teachers naturally t, | might feel the pinch. ae costs bie an SL he fil . fap aninatei a cently in Neil Matheson’s col- | ; a vear for a farm hand if he beef ply .... umn, “‘Across the Island” of my } ' . a | : . ; < United States and that theref version of the history of Buffalo | h | d provides bed and board, and*if the Canmliai efoutes Hos crore | Bill, In 1997 your correspondent T e€ Byway Revisite man eats out and sleeps out the salary - hank th § : ah Shipping more | was told’by Mrs. William Calla- New York Times : : i ; ; ei:than usual to the U.S: in ord ghan of Ebbsfleet (born Ellen : a pee i : is er The 1965 figures ee to take full advantage of the premi a Pendergast at Hope River, , There was a time when it led | pouch - nests in elms thal over- | me $1,670 with board and $2,340 without |—"- : ; > premium PEI. in 1833) that Buffalo Bill from farm to village,-not direct- | hung the brook. Deer came _ . board. : prices obtainable there right now. , was born in Hope. ~ River, | ly but passing other farms along down to feed and drink at dusk. | i ; Some blame- for’ the higher meat | P-E-L., about. 1850. | the way. It wandered, following | Foxes taught their kits to ‘hunt | Ss N rth K : D f t j b : : A Cody family, who lived on | the valleys, avoiding the hills, | mice in the roadside tarféle. | SS . oO orea Verecis | hal tags IS laid at the door of the or near the (Leo) Reid farm because teamsters chose the | [ ; oh Sina wholesalers. - about that time emigrafed ‘o longer, easier way for their draft | straight, cutting through “hills In seme parts of the world, Com fn the Middle oF ait iy ie Maine in the 1850's. There were animals — first oxen and later | and striding across valleys, took | munists-are beginning to think for ed Packineh Work nis. the Unit- three boys in the fafnily:? Their | horses. It once crossed the brook | its traffic. It became a byway | e . ; acKkinghouse Workers union an- 2¢Xt move was to Wallaceburg,’ at a shallow ford, later on a whose upkeep was debated. But | themselves. Inthe long ae this could | ounces it ig going to launch an i Ont., and from there to Ohio. | wooden bridge. It was a dirt | some insisted that we need the | outs and push-outs."’ ppell the end of “Marxism; but in the | See 4 ee 1 an. “Twitter” Johnson of Pictou. road; grass-grown between the | byways too, so it was not aban- | oN meantime it is bound ta slow the pro- | vestigation of its own into‘the increas- told the writer that he was told | wagon tracks and with overhang- | doned. And there it is today, like. | |e and see whether the -strike its indicated it embers have embarked upon is a | factor. 4 EDITORIAL NOTES | After seventeen devaluations of the currency, the French france had lost “\._ letariat world revolution: “North Korea has just \s going to shape and practise its own ronception.of Communist ideology Instead of worshipping at the shrines | of either Moscow eae “S._ There is a trace of ingratitude. per- ‘Naps. in this development. Only about fifteen years ago, when the North ing power of the Canadian-dollar has not slipped nearly: as much. But: it a Koreans “tried to overrun Souths could. \. Korea, China Sent a million “volun | “S i : , teers” to fight alongside the North A’railroad man said that remote \ ‘Koreans against «the South Koreans | station in“Qttawa is not entirely. the “and the Cnited Nations forces. in- | fault of the Palroads. The commis- Bee — the Canadians. The Chinese. sion running Ottatrats beautification losses.in soldiers ‘were heavy, and\ and expansion wanted the old tinion they als st a great Many aircraft. depot in the heart of the “City. ‘The tanks and oties vehicles in awar that _ site Dray out the rhubarbs™ Was. never won. ~ to chosen as The 5} ot for the trains. _ 98 per cent of its buying power. Buy- | by McPherson, who belonged to Buffalo Bill's circus that Buffalo _ Bill nad said he was born in P.EI. This-bears dut. the state- ment of the ‘Charlottetown Ex- | aminer’: in 1877, (referred to by your columnist) and there is no ‘record of’ any contradiction. _ When Cody's circus operated in Boston in 1902, the writer manoeuvred to get a very close | Jook at the famous Buffalo Bill, _ having in mind Mrs. Callaghan’s information also that he would be a first cousin to William H. “Hogan of Hope River, a well known man of his time on the Island.~Cody’s steel blue eyes and hair tinged with silver, and . Cal to Mr. Hogan*s, and Van Dyke beards were worn by both. _. Mr. Matheson’s. sociable~ en- quiries and research into P.Ev. . history mav bring in other -infor- _ Mation from readers on the fa- ‘mily history of famous Island- ° pT rs. Mr. Laird is also making a -his_-aquiline features_were identi-—- | ing: trees, and later it was gra- | -Velled in the boggy places. | But still it was a narrow, wind- | demanded caution and old trees | that veri hazard to careless drivers. But partridges nested | nearby and orioles hung their Beauty Seen i, : Grass includes the important ; food crops of our planet: Rice, | corn, wheat, millet, sugar cane. | barley and oats. But to most of | us, grass means those: slender- | stemmed,;—short plants that pro-| duce hay for animals and cov- ering for lawns. To those brought up on farms, grass _means timothy, June grass and Glovers, an Grasses are Earth's most im- portant plants. All grasses have stems with solid, joints and two- iranked leaves, one-at each joint. flowers are beauty, in | miniature. They .have no~petals |tiny tree. The two outside leaves | ‘ iw af oe ; ‘ the Korean COraynunists haves A trouble imQttawa is transportat- | P2m* for’ himself’ as an histor. | : i. towards Peking. “One country | “Yen to and from the.station! It is a |~ “Lite is\short and time ts |oias os of thes y“cannot serve ‘as. the long Way out: That is expensive. And. aw : eas AE ee ne : ee. ana ‘ ae : . i hat Neil -Mathesdn, era S Nentre.of tagyorltcevolution or the. | for peoplexho tray.el by bus, "there is MP., was the, spark plug vaste “leading party-ofGonimunism,” says Sug bus. “Sof the “immeiise catisewax_pra- ne: : Sa Wy wes Uae ThA mL: . ject. ‘He’ seems to have a great Ney an editorial in thes ital North %: Fayever the netsatation conforms acity. for ‘innovations . Korean new r > “\ to the idea_of making Idifficult for | he Boba Romania has" ae fe oe ~~ j Darnley, dig j ~ a ™~ ¥ t ‘ Rm ; ee ! are called, glumes; -ahove.{hése,¢————————_———— jare the flowering glumes: Above | J. PENDERGAST |andsthree stamens. Grasses are | best-selling non-fiction wind-pollinated, and on the right tday at thé“hour when the: flow- other byways here and there, a | place to know and visit when one would ease the tensions and | being as well as going; > that [there are times when -the by- ways are more important than | the highways of this world. | | | ing back road with curves that | the tempo. To know that life is | In Miniature Saint John Telegraph-Journal er opens, a strong wing may lift | clouds of ripe pollen grains. A | grass flower opens just once in | its life-time and then for only a brief-time. et One doesnot need to- know the ‘technicalities to appreciate the \beauty of the .-grasses. If you would enjoy a new Nature ex- | perience, go forth on a sunny | day and examine grass flowers | beneath a hand !ens. Grasses } are the humble plants of Earth; | |but as meek plants taey_ have in- | |herited it. We live in ai-age” of | ithe spectacular, but for him | blend befor? that al across the fields. SPOCK TAKES PRIZE “each flowering flume is a pistil | . Next to the-Bible,, the ‘world's book is [in Charlottetown. Dr. Benjamin ..Spock's. manual of. bahv eare : fg added to every educator’s tech- nical vocabulary. ; P.E.1. Makes . A Change Montreal Gazette That sturdy old Conservative Premier. Shaw of Prince. E d- ward Island, is premier no long- er. The winds of change blew from Kings First over the Gar-, den of the Gulf, which has now | equipped itself with probably the youngest premier ever in Can- ada's history —- 33 - year - old Alex Campbell. Voting patterns are not-rigid on the Island. Seats do change hands and_ voters change, sides, but politics are perhaps more stylized than in some other parts of the world. ’ We have no- private sources of information about Mr. Shaws overthrow. Any government daring.to go to the p-- ve these days seems to take its iife in its | who sees, there is beauty in the | hands. . One possible’, evplana- ce | grasses jand no sepals. One thinks of -8 breeze and ripple like waves | tion may be: that, -with the fa- mous causeway to the jclond der.way and a Liber; ove ment in power in Ot! + 7a, pro- gress might he faster if , theré were also a‘ Liberal government > Bread and butter politics have their place. Theodore Van | .,South + Vietnamese; is that this places Waterloo at. -lished universities which have numerous endowment funds with. which to attract the best stu- dents. ae ~The establishment= of who ts | or wrong in this affair | right must be-a matter-of meré aca-_ demic interest to the 400 or more students who have just received letters from the university in- lat the base of my spine.Is there forming them that the scholar- ‘| ships were no longer available. They are the innocent victims /of what looks like a demarcation -dispute- " ee oh Perhaps the university author- ities were warned on an earlier scholarship award could not con- tinue indefinitely, but it would ‘seem that a great deal.of incon- - venience, and possibly injustice, to the students could have been ‘eight tablespaonsful of ocean-wa- avoided if a specific ruling to this effect has been made long before the end of the last--sehool year. | It was scarcely enough for Education Minister William. Da- vis to indicate last February that the scheme—was-—not-favor- ably regarded by saying that the torrid race among universities for the best students was a ; ‘questionable’ venture.” : As it is, only a few weeks re- main for the more than 400 stu- ‘dents to scramble for alterna- | jtives to the scholarships they they had been offered. Their in- |terests, which should have been | ‘of prime concern to both the ‘university and the department, ‘seem to have been given scant ‘attention. The least the Govern- iment can do {is to ensure that Our Yesterdays (From.The Guardian Files) .TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO : (August 13, 1947°-"*** Indications that some momen- tous development is ‘impending | in Anglo-American _ relations strengthened the belief in Wash- ington that President Roosevelt and Prime ° Minister” Churchill have reached: vital decisions in |a -personal meeting somewhere on the Atlantic. | Britain’s new aerial. .weapon, the American-made Flying For- \tress bomber, is spreading fear and contributing to an awaken- ed spirit of revolt in Germany }and occupied Europe, say. dis- patches reaching important quar- ters in London by devious ‘means. ea ilies jase : x TEN YEARS AG (August 13, 1956) ; 1956 will be remembered” by CFCY Station Manager} ‘Bob’ Large for two reasons. First, it marks the institution of televi- ‘sion on Prince Edward “Island, and secondly, it is Mr. Large’s 20th anniversary in the broad- casting industry. \ +p" ‘ A busy man‘at. the exhibition | was W.R. Shaw, former. deputy minister of Agriculture, who the large number of judged horse entries. ANNOUNCE CANDIDATES SAIGON (Reuters) - government fannounced Friday 554 candi- ‘dates are registered to contest ithe. général electior Sept. 11— about ‘five for every seat in the future “‘constituent assembly.” Twenty of the candidates are women. ° - ’ ’ a is flushed, the breathing is hea- ‘iSadvantage with older, estab- | -| Tands . “The*) |Mination of certain foods such University of Waterloo has been | assisting those top-ranking stu: jas fried and_fatty dishes..may ‘competing with.»other universi- |dents who’ have been placed in free the sufferer of symptoms for “ties for the cream of the hi } la difficult’ position through ne ‘fault of their own. | STATUTE EXECUTION | |" TO SELL LAND | °To be Sold by public auction in. front of the Law Courts Build- ing in Charlottetown in Queens ‘County, on the 3rd. day of Sep-, tember A.D., 1966: at the hour | of twelve o'clock noon, ALL, THAT tract, piece and parcel ‘of | land situate, lying and being on~ “Lot 21 in-Queens County Prince Edward Island, bounded and des- F cribed as follows: Commencing | on the west shore of “New - Lon- becoming intolerable. (England © the English side could assert its —— mee ea to beat eet of the players have been know <= West German“ teamwas- power-—-——-—- forced =f +-don- Bay at>the-southeast-angle——--— of land of Lucy. Ferguson. ,now . or formerly) Thence south-eighty. : six degrees thirty minutes west ly owned by: George ‘and: Donald Johnston, then south three de- grees thirty minutes east twelve chains and fifty links to Francis rnard’s land, thence -north eighty six degrees thirty- min-" utes east seven chains to the | northwardly and northeastwafd- | ly along the various<courses of | the said shore to the place -of | commencement -containing - 100 acres of land more or less and reserving thereout and there- | from a lot—of land in possession” | of Marie MaéPonnell, being. the | land described in a Deed under er of -sale from Eliza Mac- to.C. Allison MacLeod date ed June 211940 and registered | in_the.office of. the Registrar of | Deeds“for Queens County in: : Liber 103, Folio 468 ~And alsa ‘all that tract described a& com- mencing on the east side of the , | northern boundary ‘of land for- | merly owned by John N. Adams and now in possession of James | Gillespie, intersects the road | Thence east—and -following the - + Said northerly boundary last- mentioned to lands owned by , Leland Ferguson, thence north to an arigle in the said lands, | the said lands, Thence north to ; the.south boundary-of lands con- | veyed by Robert A Johnston and | Others to George M. Johnston | the distance of ten chains and | thirteen links at right ancles | horth’ of the said James Gilles- pie’s north boundary Thence west and following the south i boundary last mentioned to the | said new road and thence south | along the east side of the said new road to the place of begin- ning, containing 43 1/3 acres of | land a little more or less, and | being the southern one third part | Of the lands of the said Robert | Johnston, deceased, and -also that tract described as com- mencing at a pdint at the east side of the said new road ata distance of sixty one feet north from the north boundary of the héreinbefore described, thence east one hundred - and: ; twenty four feet, thence north one hundred and twenty four feet, thence west. the distance of one hundred and twenty four feet or to the said new. road, thence south along the said new Toad the distance of one hundred and twenty four feet to the’ Place of beginning as described in a deed from Pridham John- ston et all to the Director The Veterans’ Land Act, dated March Ist 1945 and recorded in Liber 115 Folio 104 of the Queens County Records as No. 1543. The above sale is made pur- aa co renee and Exe rution Ae apter 78 Secti 27. RSPEI 1951. cee WHEREAS the Irving Oil Company Limited, -a body. -corp- orate duly incorporated under the laws of the Province of New Brunswick, Plaintiff, -has ob- tained Judgment Against — the Defendant, Alvin MacLeod, Exe: cutor of the last Wil] and Testa- oe of the it pares Allison Leod_ on aed A.D., 1966, ae WHEREAS. Execution was signed on the Ist day of August A.D., 1966 in the amount of One thousand thirteen ( ONOW THEREFORE, this I EREFORE this Pub- lic sale is. to be held at the aforementioned time ‘and place by virtue’ of the Judgment and Execution Act Chapter 78, See. tion 27 of the RSPEI, 1951,.__ For particulars apply at the office of Campbell & Campbell Barristers & Solivi‘ors, 2 Grane wane Gor fe, Pm. 1. y s ‘ith dav of | ust A.D, 1986 : ig -KEITH MYERS, Sheriff, Queens County, aisle d | mew road dividing Townships. teachers ficult to correct after it has last- Occasion that their methods of |.numbers 20 and 21 where the “shore of the said bay and-thenea. Jt | Thence east to another angle in ° he. pot