Not cver 35e per week by carrier. ~ x by mail or rural routes and areas met serviced by carriers. : , $34.00 a year off Island, U.K. and U.S.A. H Not ever fc per single copy. : Member Audit Bureau of Circulation PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30, 1959. a Another Hazardous Mission a The ways of the Communist ' world are peculiar. We learn from a P® Tokyo despatch that Red China is @ applauding the results of Premier Khruschev’s American tour, and |” predicting an easing of world ten- * sions. The Peking radio quotes Ta , Kung Pao, a newspaper reflecting of- | ficial, views, as expressing “immense /* delight” over the trip. ; 4 Yet while the trip was in progress, | Peking was busy in jamming radio reports from neighboring countries concerning Mr. Khruschev’s activi- | + K 4 , ties. The Red Chinese press played "the visit down very heavily too, and * reported only those statements and |. events which highlighted the differ- _- ences between the Soviet Union and ® the United States. » — Now Mr Khruschev-is in Peking for the celebration of the 10th an- 4 niversary of the Communist victory _ on the Chinese mainland. A good time will-be had by all. The Chinese * Premier’s delight in Mr. Khruschev’s 4 pilgrimage of peace to Washington will be equalled only by the Soviet Premier’s joy in noting the immense progress China is making and the ~* geal she is showing in furthering Communism’s peaceful aims in Tibet and other outlying parts. There will be feastings and festivals, toasts and | embracings and speeches to no end. Yet behind it all there will be suspicion on both sides that ‘some dirty work is under way. Another ten years of such “peaceful” pro- '- gress and China may well be the _ dominating Communist nation of the world, with Russia the satellite, or- biting round the still rising sun. And Mr. K., after all, didn’t succeed in getting Red China admitted to the United Nations and didn’t really do anything at all to advance Chinese interests on his American junket. What then did he go for? We shouldn’t be entertaining such feelings—it’s not Christian— ‘but the Old Adam in us keeps specul- ating hopefully on the prospect of these internal Communist tensions developing. We had thought, for a time, that the tensions were all on the Western side; but this was only because, in democratic countries, there is so much more freedom of expression. And psychologists tell us that the worst thing for tensions is to keep them bottled up, to suppress them and try_to make out that they ~ don’t exist. We have been sympathizing with President Eischower on his difficul- ‘ties in reconciling free-world views and translating them into statements acceptable to his allies in his talks with the Soviet leader. Perhaps we . should spare a little sympathy for ets Mr. Khiushchev as well, at this hazardous stage in his relations with his friends in the Orient. A Goad Word Lost In referring yesterday to the ill- advised campaign for eliminating the Union Jack from Canada’s national » flag, we neglected to refer to a sim- +, jlar drive which, unfortunately, has * “been more stfccessful in catering ‘to those whose fears. of British im- perialism keep them awake at nights. This has to do with the excellent word Dominion, as a description of Canada, which is lapsing into almost total oblivion. It survives in “Domin- ? don Bureau of Statistics” but in few , if any other official expressions. The Financial Post takes note of | : - . jal in Which it points out that when * adopted: in 1867, “Dominion” had nothing to do with our status under -. the Crown. It referred to the, hope, now fulfilled, that Canadians would: have “dominion from sea to sea.” It is a fine-sounding word; with plen- | ty of history, and very useful as a Bynomym for Canada. As The Post points out, other * eountries have a handy éxtra way- of referring to their geographical names. Britain. is also the United Kingdom. The U.S. is the Union or this regrettable change in an editor- * | + “e © to be, the Reich. Australia is the Commonwealth. , “Confederation” won’t do for Can- ada because, in our usage, confeder- ation means a particulor event of 1867. “Realm” won’t:do either; it has no history in Canada and sounds phony. Nobody is going to talk about the “Realm Government,” meaning Ottawa. “Federal Government”, the phrase most used currently, is ac- ‘curate enough but flat and undis- tinguished. It might mean the gov- ernment of Switzerland, Germany, Australia or any of ‘half-a-dozen oth- er places. “What’s the matter with ‘Domin- ion’?” asks The Post. Nothing at all, except that .we have allowed our- selves to be bamboozled by a few noisy demagogues and officious bureaucrats. We have been too in- different to the activities of these busybodies, and allowed this piece of our heritage to be lopped off without protest. “It ought to be re- vived,” says our Toronto contempor- ary; but how? It has gone, we are afraid, for good.Let us make sure that the same indifference doesn’t lose us more of the things we should ‘be setting value upon, The Last Survivors We used to hear a lot. about a “super-race” in Germany, but an ar- ticle in the current issue of Imperial Oil Review reports the discovery of a “Valley of the Giants” in the Swan Hills area of Alberta, 150 miles northeast of Edmonton, which pos- es an intriguing zoological riddle for natural scientists. The giants in this case are a super-race- of grizzly bears, believed to be the remnants of the plains grizzlies which once’ | moved with the buffalo herds across the prairies and were thought to be extinct before the turn of the cen- tury. abe Ak The bears measure up to 10 feet from nose to hind paws, and weigh up to half a ton. In the bear king- dom, only the Alaska Kodiak tops that. Fewer than 400 of the mon- sters ‘are believed to have survived in an 8,000-square-mile domain of woods, streams and small moun- tains: which, until recently, was one of -the continent’s few primeval spots. Today oil has been found in Swan Hills, and more than 100 dril- ling and seismic crews are operating - in the region. The Swan Hills grizzligs are not Rocky Mountain or coastal grizzlies, nor do they appear related to any other type of bear now living on the continent. Early. explorers reported seeing thousands of “big bears” roaming the prairies, and prior to 1850 Fort Walsh in southern Sas- katchewan was shipping as many as 600 bearskins a year. These grizzlies were described as longer than any other, with needle-sharp claws and colors ranging from chocolate to sil- ver brown. The Swan Hills grizzlies match this description. : Today’ the huge bears appear to be moving north again, as supply roads and clanking bulldozers enter their remote kingdom. This has pushed them closer to the settle- ments along Lesser Silver Lake, and there is concern about their surviv- al. Oil crews have been requested not to shoot them. The Canadian Petro- leum Association circularized the in- dustry, asking co-operation. Garbage dumps, always a magnet for bears, were moved farther from cookhous- es, and some camps banned rifles altogether. Now the Alberta. govern- ment has backed up the conserva- tion effort by placing Swan Hills off-limits to all bear-hunters. ; EDITORAL NOTES Both the major Canadian railway companies are going to make “an aggressive bid to get more people to travel on their trains. In makin own announcement, the CNR desterib. es the move.as “one of the biggest gambles in its passenger trafic his- tory,” and no doubt it is just that, because the plan involves sharply re- duced prices in the off-season and all-inclusive package deals. Success , will depend on volume. ” * * ; Owls, whom we were led to believe were grave, wise birds, are actually very stupid. That’s the opinion of Ro- ger S. Payne, biologist at Cornell University, who has been studying the creatures for some time. “They are even dumber than chickens, if that’s possible,” says this pundit. “An owl makes a hen look like a mental giant.” He maintains, in short, that these nocturnal birds—the sym- bols of Minerva, goddess of wisdom— are totally incapable of learning any- thing from experience and are en- dowed, in fact, with little more than the brains (if they may be called Americans have been infected with trichinosis at one time or another, the disease seldom gets much publicity. I have written a few columns about it in the past, but I'll bet most of you don’ know “PARDON MY GLOVE” by eating raw or uncooked meat, usually pork. It isn’t the meat itself which causes the trouble, but a small round worm known medically as Trichinella spiralis. These worms enter the diges- tive tract in tiny capsules which are dissolved in the stomach. The _|larvae are released into the in- testines and in about two days become mature. GET INTO BLOOD STREAM ‘The female Trichinella spiralis produce several hundred young Jarvae that find their way into the blood stream. They are then ,} carried into the muscles where they grow rapidly, eventually cal- | cify and die. The symptoms usually begin with gastro - intestinal distur- bances’ followed by severe pain in the muscles. The acute phase lasts anywhere from one to two weeks Fortunately, most victims recover. AFFLICTS HOGS, TOO Hogs contract the disease by eating infected raw pork scraps. If the animals are fed entirely on grain, of course, they do not develop trichinosis. Not all persons*who eat infect- ed mezt develop the sericus var- fety of the jllness. Just how much it will affect a person, depends upon how much of the infected portion is eaten and the person's own resistance to the disease. OUTBREAKS IN GERMANY As I said, we: don’t hear too much about trichinosis. here in America, ‘but in other parts of OTTAWA REPORT . tario early next * | expected to charge the. relative strenct#? of our parliamentary | Ontario Fecleral By-Elections By Patrick Nicholson Two federal by-elections in On-; salesman whose political exper- month are not! ience amounts to two electoral defeats. in this riding. . The split in political alleg- the world, particularly in~Ger- many, there have been several outbreaks. This probably is due to the German custom of eating Taw or partially cooked pork, especially in sausage.. The simplest way—to avoid trichinosis_ is to cook all park thoroughly. This means that each portion of the meat -must reach a temperature of 150 de- grees Fahrenhcit. . PUBLIC FORUM This column its open to the discus sion by correspondents of question c. interest. The Guardian does not reses sarily et ‘orse the opinion of corres pondents. POLITICAL OBJECTIVES Sir,—Now that, the land has al ieee re era ae artics PL | _ -In_ Hastings-Frontenac a—new | representative is iance in \ Russell is clean cut: oe gies French-Caredian Eastview... sol- to: be elected | igy Liberal, the Emglish-speak- oo anes Re toe eee a tery For ing housing —tevelopments simil- Pai Ride ara ee taseY arly Conservative. So Liberal Smith. This is a. co ans | strategy is to consolidate what in Old Ontario, historically _sol-| they have got, by the platform oo aera a A et stimulus customary with French- of th ale ‘toler b, 5 com | ee an crowds. The Conser- ortavle imaiccity cf 8419 Even | V2tves: sure that their English. fortasle majority cf 8,419. Ever! sneaking candidate can hold the Libers’s concene that the) the English-specMing districts, execervenyes: | #2 uid have 9 are concentrating their efforts probiem to hold that — ee lupon a massive assault in Ja Russell See witra the} strength on Eastview. No less Liberal stronghold of = Greeter | than fifteen Quebec M.Ps form | the door-to-door ‘canvassing team race in the election of a succet:- or to the !ate “Joe’’ Gour, French etore. and speaking panels under the direction of Associate Defence anadi a i e . . s Canadian owner of a general | minister Pierre Sevigay, who not merely kmpws the whole book on Russell starts at the east bank | potitical campaigning, but has of the Ridegu River, which vis-| added two or three tactical ap- itors to Ottawa will remember | pendices of his own. as flowing within sight of Gov- ernment House and ‘almost pass-| GOOD CLEAN FIGHT ing the ‘Prime Minister's resid-| Mr. Sevigny seems to have ence, Thus Russell contains the | set the tone of cleanliness even eas‘ern cuburbs of Ottawa, as! if it has grown into a very ac- we'! @s a huge tract of farm-| tive campaign. I think he faces lard. and bush east cf the city! an insuperable handicap in an including several small commun-| uninspiring and tail<down cand- changed political leaders end y ami better results are ex- Socted if not impossible to ac- complish—this may be the time to open the conversation on other topics, re misuse of human energy and fundamen‘al powers in pcl- ities, which are reflected in the community life. First, no one will gain by beat- ing down a politician because he représents a group of heelers, bribers and emotionally wound- ed idealists. Let us not concen- trate on the man in the front because of lack ‘of strength and ability to withstand inhuman re- quests. Secand, this is the starting matter which party you voted for. We have all met up with things which should be done, but few of us have stopped to realize whose responsibility it is to do somethirsg about it. There are thousands of smell matters to be straightened out for the good of not only Canada ‘as a nation, or for the Island as lines but upon the facts he omits | COOKING TEMPERATURE Pork roasts, for example, should be kept at 375 degrees Fahrenheit for at least 25 to 40 minutes per pound cf meat. Steaks and pork chops should be cocked by braising for 45 minut- es to an hour. As for frozen pork, we gener- ally consider it safe if it has been kept at 5 degrees Fahrenheit for 21 days cr 22 degrees below zero for 24 hours. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. H. K.: What is angina pectoris? |; Answer: Angina pectoris is a - The Age Old Story Thy father which ret himself shall reward thee openly : ises to give the Program this wintér, ‘ TEN YEARS AGO . (Sept. 30, 1949) Fifty - seven registered de- legates from New _ Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Isiand are at present holding the 47th annual meeting of the Mar- itime Board of Trade at Char- lottetown. It was expected that all business would be completed by 10 o'clock, stated President Carl Burke, before the Regional meeting of the Canadian Cham- ber of Commerce began. A large number of friends and relatives mtet at the home of Mr. and = Mrs. E: B. MacLaren, Georgetown, to celebrate their fiftieth wedding anniversary. Pi- |per Bruce MacLaren played a | number of pipe selections. A suit- ' able address. was read by Doug- |las MacLaren, Montague, after which a handsome gift was pre- | sented to the happy couple. a good Probing Archeologists are using ingen- jous new techniques to explore —ttembs of the ancicht Etruscans, who ruled Italy for centuries be- fore the Romans rose to power. Remains of the mighty Etrus- can civilization are scattered in profusion through central Italy. Scientists estimate that at least 10,000 Etruscan tombs are buried |at a sibgle-site, Tarquinia. But i because they were not easy to locate and excavators frequent- ly found them looted of their con- tents. ; Now science has answers to these problems, geophysicist Car- ficient, honest and loyal civil ser- vice. By the same token we all are dependent on those three es- sentials for a competent civil which is not humdrum ficiency, honesty, and loyalty. The three are the qualities, in act the essence, of nobility. Yet, we may say that civil servants are the last people entitled to live dangerously. They owe the public much for the security of both their jobs and their event- ual retirement.—Cape Breton Post ; = MAXIMS The safest principle through life, instead of reforming others, is to set about perfecting your- self. | studying them was frustrating, | disease marked by pain in the|!o M. Lerici, vice president of- heart region, usually’ accompan- | Milan Polytechnic’s Lerici Foun- time for individualistic work, no | ied by symptoms of suffocation | dation, reports in the September and faintness. | National Geographic Magazine. ! Proper treatment usually re- | | lieves the pain and yoqr physi- | cian. is' in the best position to | prescribe ‘it for you. GUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Sept. 30, 1934) its ities. Its backbone has long been the solidly French - Canadien! town Eastview, separated | from Ottawa proper only by the width of the Rideau River. i FAST GROWING CAPITAL In recent\ years huge new sub- | urbs have’ grown up on the farmlands adjoining peels and these are 2@s -solidly English- sp¢ -g. This whole complex is a bunk .cily for a large section of Ottawa's civil servants. is traditionally a safe | of Liberal sect. It-hes not return- ed a conservative M.P. since 1882. But im tae Dzefenbsixer | sween of last year, the Liberal | policd’a bere 150 votes in ex-} eess of half these cast, while | abortive C.C.F. and Sccred can- didates hived eff 1,200 of the| ti-Liberal voters, | Pau] Tardi, an ian politician years of rough activ- ity in Ottawa municipal politics, is running under the Liberal ben- ner. The Con:ervative cand:date is once again a real estate experienced You ean pick out two clear re- sults .of Khrushchev’s visit to America: - 1. He and Eisenhower agreed to go on talking —:rather than fighting—about Berlin and “all outstanding. international ques- fons 2. Both men came to believe that one is just as afraid of a nuclear war as the other. On the second point, we have Khrushchev’ word for it that the | president is sincere in his desire | for peace. American officials are reported to have come to the be- lief that the Russian‘ dictator is | similarly sincere. This is quite a step forward.\ Only a few months ago, such ad- missions from either side would +-have been almost unbelievable. And the only reason they now appear believable is because un- til this summer hardly anyone would have. thought it possible for * a Communist dessot to get him- self invited for a circus-like whirl through the United States, a din- cosy tete-a-tete with the’ pres- ident at a weekend lodge. GAIN TIME The biggest gain is one of time. Althoygh the big two have been. vague-on detnié, they “agreed that the question of general dis- armament is the mest important one facing the world tcday.” It is apparent that- both Russia and the United States rozlize that ner at the White House and a, idate. But after a lazy start born of smug confidence, the Liberals gre now working so hard te coun- r the Sevigny drive that even Liberal Leader Lester B. Pear- son is taking the unusual step of participating, making two speaking forays into. Ottawa's | frenchiest -suburb. As he does not readily under- i stand the patois, especially when uttered in the Lo-Fi Yerbal Nia- gata which is lecal campaign- practice, his blushes are saved while his supporters warp history, hog-tie themselves with semantic ropes, and advecate pelicies which would ruin us_ ail. Of thase; the.chief is the loc- ally popular theme ‘that the Can- adian taxpayers owe the civil servants an even lusher living then they now have—a g vote- catcher in that civil service ing whg| community, but a policy which only the Opposition Party, can advocate unrestrainedly. ' Polling next Monday, should yield a 1-1 tie at Hastings-Fron- tenac and Russell. Quite A Step Forward Canadian Press Stall Writer and hydroger® bom®s. The lead- ers pledged to “make every ef- fort” to solve the disarmament problem. But there is another side to the Khrushchev visit. Khrushchev’s performance in a highly publicity-conscious _ coun- try—in which he made-it appear that he was not entirely the vil- lain he had been depicted—over- shadowed the fact that many So- vict policies have not changed at all, For example, in his heated ex- change with a group of labor leaders in San Francisco, he was asked why the Russians inter- fered in Hungary in 1956. Khrush- chev's reply: “There was no_ interference. There was a counter-revolution. Thugs and hooligans who re- ceived arms from outside took power in Budapest. And the gov- ernment asced us for aid and we gave it, and we're proud of it. We are proud of it as a feat. There would be fascism there if we had not.”’ . so AHEAD ON POINTS : Oniy the day after his talk’ on disarmament to the UN, Khrush- chev lost his temper—one of sev- eral outbursts that some observ- ers say thay have been planned —and told an audience: - “If you want to-go on Wwith.the arms race, very well, We accept the challenge. As for the output of rockets—-well, they are on the assembly line.” part of the nation, but for the} Mr. and Mrs. L.P. Tanton, good of the whole world influenc- | their dagghter’ Doris and son ed by the action by a single lone | Willard and wife, -returhed last = ree stop dzad and | Weck -from an extended motor = are’ va Seok te snemEM | trip through the provinces and a“ ae ke oxen | the New England States. Their his chunk roken | . s Willi i Riettle Grom the highway or wot | daughter, Mrs. William H, Sing- Sit inet tas es He i leton returned with them to her was the only person who saw the | home in Wayéfield, Mass., with pring lees He did as sat iad the | Bet two gMildren, after having broken piece “a ins éisina a | spent a/pleasant holiday here. accident involving the death of - : : 7 ne A business deal which will be his dearest friend. s This is ¢ Fe and : | popular with the sporting public _ this Is to say, do not put over was closed Saturday forenoon, oe aciey idual respomD | when Mr. A.E. Harris leased the es on somebody else's shoul< Crystal Rink -from the- owner luman scavengers have Le ee ae > Mr. J. Henry Gaudet. This will > h ale: > : — ae be good news for the sporting BIRGIT ‘ORNFEI pt public as Mr. Harris is known as Murray River. ® Keen epettemen and Be prom: cc i LOOMING OF AUTUMN | : Thou comest, Autumn, heralded | by the rain, With banners, by great cessant fanned, ; Brighter than brightest silks of gales in- | é Samarcand, And stately oxen harnessed | thy wain! se Thous standest, like imperial || ° Charlemagne, Upon thy bridge of gold; thy | royal hand | Outstretched with benedictions o'er the land, Blessing the farms through all thy vast domain! | Thy shield is the red harvest | moon, suspended So long beneath the heaven's o’erhanging eaves; . Thy steps ars~by the farmer's prayers attended;. w+ Like flames upon an altar shine. the sheaves; And, following thee, in thy ovat- fon splendid, Thine almoner, the wind, scat- ters the golden leaves! —H.W.: Lengfellow (1807-1882) \ Saturday. U.S. while he still held a threat against West Berlin, while he continued to refuse to allow free elections in East Germany, and after he had forced the Western foreign ministers in Geneva to have {he officially - unrecognized }East German government in at- |- ‘N tendance—all “these were impor- tant tactical victories for Khrush- | a chev. . —- = ‘The smell of success must have been even swoeter when the state |, department passed the word to American officials he was meet- ing not to needic the tubby dicta- have been invited to the tor teo much about these things. AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS Crypts can be located through aerial photography, which reveals | telltale scattering of stones and variations in the texture of gras- ses. Under favorable conditions | the photographs afford almost an | X-ray view of features invisible from the ground, | To pinpoint a tomb, once aer- ial photography has revealed its | hiding place, scientists have test- ed another technique, based on ;the fact that the earth conducts | electricity in varying degree, de- | pending on the nature of the soil | and underground irregularities. The location of hidden rocks, } Walls, terraces, roads, and tombs 'ean be determined by sending 'an electrical current through the ground to measure its resistivity. But one problem remained: |}how to determine whether a itomb was worth excavating or ; not? Too often archeologists la- | bored long and hard only to be fae by an empty crypt. hye y they hit upon the notion of #fing a specially made power Etruscan Secrets National Geographic Society drill to bore a small test hole 15 to 20 feet deep. They could then lower a tiny camera and electric flash to photograph the interior of the tomb. They improved further on this technique by making an earth — Periscope equipped with a pow- * . | erful light. With this they can inspect a tomb without waiting © to have pictures developed. With these new methods, ar cheologists have investigated 850 tombs at Tarquinia and 500 at Cerveteri, another Etruscan site. “They were disheartened at the way tombs have been rifled by clandestine diggers in both an- cient and recent times. The ear- ly tomb robbers sought only jew- elry and precious metals. Pres- ent-day plunderers take almost anything. Despite vandals, art works of unusual beauty have survived. One newly discovered fresco, ex- ecuted during the second half of the 6th century B.C., shows charioteers whipping up wild- eyed horses. Athletes run, jump, and hurl the discus. The unknown artist is considered one of the best Etruria ever produced. FROM PO TO POMPEII The Etruscans flourished from about the 8th century B.C. un- til the Romans overwhelmed them sometime between the Ath century B.C. and the beginning of the Christian Era, At the height of their power, 12 Etrus- can city-states ruled much of It- aly from south of Pompeii to the Po Valley. With powerful fleets, Etrus-- cans dominated the Tyrrhenian Sea for centuries against Greeks and Carthaginians. They antici- pated the modern philosophy of giving equal status to women— a custom § considered and barbaric by the Greeks and Romans. ~ ANNOUNCEMENT THE ROGERS HARDWARE = CO. LTD. Return To Winter Store Hours - | Monday to Friday 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. 8 A.M.to12.30P.M. . ‘ \ Yours sincerely, ~ The Rogers Hardware Co. Ltd. ‘ | \ "We would like to thank our many friends and custom: ers for their kind co-operation . . .. which allowed our staff to enjoy longer summer daylight hours. re \ immoral ~ ~ oe