. PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN :Authorizcd as Second Clue Mail Post Office K Department. Ottuvi. The Island Guardian Publishing Cot Editor and Managing Director. In A. Burnett. Associate Editor. Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward Inland like tho dow" "The strongest memory in weaker than the woo koot ink". CHARLOTTETOWN MONDAY. AUG. 1. 1053 itewfoundianders Abandoning Tito sea In a pamphlet entitled Employment Con- clusions in the Atlantic Region and issued by the Unemployment Insurance Commis- sion, it is noted that "the fishing schooner which has been decreasing in use in Nova Scotia for some time appears to be suffer- ing the same fate in Newfoundland. This season it is estimated that only about half the regular fleet will go to the banks. mainly because the fishermen have moved ashore to construction work." fortunately much more than Korea is in- volved. At a time when an awakening Asia is still feeling its way tentatively toward a permanent political! philosophy-and when it is not wholly unsympathetic to the blandishments of Communism-it would be tragedy if we were to fail to show the prin- creed, and thus lose the partnership of a third of the world by default. commission Favors Fluoridation The long delayed report of the Commis- sion appointed by the British Government to investigate the advisability of fluoridat- ing water supplies has been published. The British Commission of five, headed by Dr. H. H. Stones, Dean of the Dental School, University of Liverpool, carried out an in-l vestigation of the fluoridation of water supplies in the United States and Canada during the spring of 1953 and now have issued a report. The British experts are convinced that ciples and prove the strength of our own , E l i the practice of adding fluoride to drinking Another extract reads: "The Newfoundland Federation of La- bour states that there will be fewer men than fishing in Newfoundland this year ever before in its history. At the peak of the season last year. 10,000 men were em- ployed, but this year it is anticipated that not more than 6,00 will be so employed. The Labrador fishing fleet has dwindled to less than a dozen schooners. However, it is reported that. very few men are left unem- ployed as they have found employment either in woodswork or in construction work at Goose Bay and Seven Islands." Commenting on the above excerpts, the St. John's (Newfoundland) Evening Tele- gram says the desertion of the industry in the past eight years, and in particular in the past three years, has been largely flue to the inducements offered in other fields of labour. Uncertainty regarding the marketing of some of the products, the losses of sales in countries formerly among our best customers and falling prices have all tended to discourage the fishermen to remain in their occupation. ; "As Newloundlanders abandon the har-i vesting of they prolific seas washing the shores of the Province," says The Tele-l gram. "foreigners from distant lands are; increasingly crowding thpse waters. It SUl'-3". ly indicates complete incapacity to evolve! a fisheries policy on our part when, as? Ncwfoundlanders seek other occupations, foreign firms find it profitable to outfit ships for long voyages in order to prosecute the fisheries within close reach of these shores. It either means that we in this country have no one capable of devising means to enable the prosecutors to earn a livelihood from what is beyond question our major natural resource, or that the at- tention of those in authority is so deeply involved in transforming Newfoundland into an cl Dorado by the creation of secondary industries that they have neither the time nor the interest to apply their minds to the utilization of this wealth which a be-, nign Providence has made so readily avail-l able." ktirean Aitormatil L in a recent speech in Ontario, External Affairs Minister Pearson took time out: from politics to hammer home a diplomatic point which is all too easily overlooked.', water as a method of reducing tooth decay is beneficial, and they have recommended that the practice be adopted in Great Bri- ltain. As a result of their investigation in the United States the report states "among! children aged 12 to 14 years there was about 60 per cent less tooth decay, and about six times as many children had per- manent teeth that were free from caries (tooth decay)." Further it is stated that studies among adults, both in England and the U.- S., showed that the effects of.fluoride per- sisted up to about 40 years of age. It is not known, it is said, whether fluoride retards the progress of existing decay. but the Commission could not find any evidence that the treated water had any adverse effect on industrial processes such as bottling, brewing, baking. laundering. and chemical manufacturing. i:Dll'ORlAL NOTES This is Election Day for the Armed Forces and voting will continue the rest of the week. Sqdn. Ldr. E. E. Arnett, Sum- merside, was a member of the four-man inter-service committee which made the arrangements for taking the Service vote. 0 The late Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio was an isolationist, yet anything but narrow minded or small. l-lis very strength and astuteness, however, was reason for gratitude that he did not achieve his am- bition of being President. As things were, he gave the benefit of his great ability to loyally assisting the policies of President Eisenhower. A team of nine British cadets, drawn from the Combined Cadet force and the Army Cadet force, will compete in the Do- minion of Canada Rifle Association prize meeting at Connaught Ranges, near Ot- tawa, August 9-15. Before the war the tour was an annual event. This is the second tour since the war. The team sails July 28 in the "Empress of Scotland". Their itiner- ary includes visits to Quebec City, Three Rivers, Montreal, Toronto, Niagara Falls and Kingston; also visits to Canadian Army camps at Valcartier, Pelawawa and Barrie- field. O U D Rupert Brooke. English poet. was born rue GUARDAIAN. (1HARLO'FTETOWN The Chase Goes On. '1 .32...- . 5 THE PIONEERS Their deeds are written on the land -those men of lowly name; Theirs was the strong and faithful hand. unskilled to grasp at fame: Till Death's oblivion came. They sowed that. when they "fell on sleep." their children's children still might reap. Unused to scenes that stir and thrill. to conflllest's lurid glow, Their homely boast was strength and skill to lay the forest low; To tear the stubborn stump from earth, and burst. the pine tree's mighty girth With strong and steady blow. Those were the foes our fathers fought. in fields by bloodless battles bought. They rest. in peace. beneath the sod their toiling hands have won; These fruitful fields, so green and broad, proclaim their work well done. And we, who hear the lighter part, shall keep this legend in our hearts. Of these whose race is run:- "The Axe, the Bible, and the Flow, have made our nation mighty now." And there were wives. and mothers too. brave, patient, tender, kind.-- Whose hands were full. whose hearts were true: though crude, perchance. ,in mind. To deftly whirl the droning wheel. and on the antique sklening reel The homespun product wind: To sew. to weave-such was their boast: and who shall say "Twas labor lost!" ,Oh. dear departed, weary ones; our ancient honored dead! May reverence guard your bones. and love. your holy lowly bed; For us. 't.is all that we can do-- Conteut: to lead a simple life; un-1 ,vexed by discontent or atrife,' l r . , I. Notes B); I t Northern Manitoba's uranium staking rush is now building up around George W. Hal- loway, sixty-one-year-old roving prospector and a. former druggist of The Pas. who has located I rich find at Dion Lake. fourteen miles east of Herb Lake, believed to be lthe source of a rich sample found in a local hotel which precipitated a widespread search for its discov- le;ei1sl.- The Pas. Man., Northern a . in-goat No small part of gardening in sitting down. under a tree or on s. porch, and looking at '3 garden. through it and around it. and ig- noring as gracefully as possible the attentions of inquiring bees and irritable wrens who conside the garden to be their domain and none of the gardeners. And when the colored patterns of growing things are formed each year much the same, when the lilies and the stock and pinks now are pretty much where they were last year and the year before that, the eye moves easily from clump to clump, from flower to flower and from leaf to leaf. finding in the con- tinuation of patterns and in these friendly flower faces A basic sta- bility that is reassuring. - New York Times. The total passenger movement. on the world's airlines in 1952 was equivalent to transporting almost the whole of the population of Greater London or Greater New York, or about 1,000,000 persons from Montreal to Western Europe or to the valley of the Amazon. This movement was 15 per cent greater than that of 1951. I. little more than two and a half times that of 1946, and 1'? timds that of 1937. Incidentally. the world's air- lines set a new safety record in 1952. for the third successive year. one recalls a lot of crashes during l1952-many of them military. it is in-ue--and yet. the preliminary lfigures for airlines indicate I 1952 fatality rate one-third to one-half less than the average for 1946-48. Domestic U. airlines went through the last ten and a half months of the year without a single The Wax I. 'six. "but didn't get serious about it until I was nine." He built his dodecahedron planetarium in A year, and, on the side, taught him- self German. Many of the best as- tronomy books are written in that language.- Christian Science Mon- itor. The work didn't swoop down to visit very many Canadian homes during the depression thirties. Hence today's shortage of teen- agers and those approaching the marrying ages, the shortage of stenographers. the smaller enrol- ments at colleges. The marriage rate in already beginning to fall. And for several years a decline in the blrthrate any time now has been expected. The birthrate to- day is somewhere around twenty- seven per 1,000 population, only slightly below the 1947 peak .of 20.0 per 1,000. Ind it's not likely to fall by very much-certainly. not nearly as much as the decline in marriages would indicate. The reasons: The sire of Canadian families is growing. Enough peo- ple today are having a second. third. or fourth child to largely offset the effects of I. decline in the number of marriages. There is a second reason. Over half the im- migrants are in the age group twenty to forty years. And this age group produces ninety per cent. of all births.-Financial Post. One of the moat alarming devel- opments in science recently is the theory put forward by an American anthropologist that the Neander- thal man is still among us. Nean- derthal is the name given to a race of ape-like creatures who ranged over a large part. of Europe and Asia. 100,000 years or so ago. The Encyclopedia. Brittanica thus des- cribes their appearance. as recon- structed from skeletons found in caves at various places: "The nor- mal skull of this race was long. wide. and. though low. was capac- ious. The flattening affected the back part of the skull. so that the head must have appeared as set on 9. thick bull neck. The brow ridges were maulve. The chin was lack- ing." Who knows-any day now a loointed out for the Polly. They i had sailed after us. yet it turned 1803 When Lord Selkirk left Scotland with his emigrants for Prince Ed- ward Island in the midsummer-iof 1803, his intention was to arrive by the first boat. He came in the ”Dykes." which called I. few days before the "Polly" and the "Ough- ten." They seem to have had a fair passage over, and on August 3rd found themselves, north of Cape Pu"; and within the Gulf of St. Lawrence. soon they made Bird Islands, a little further on Brian or Cross I.:.':md. Early the follow- ing mornzng, August 4th, they saw the Magdalen Island: at a distance. and towards evening came near the North Cape of Cape Breton. Friday. Aug. 5th. the ship was beonlm-ed off Narth Cape, or rather :1 little to the southwest of Cape st. Lawrence. where they caught plenty of fish-ccdlish when the vessel was stat1onarv,'and mackerel when she was moving. 0 O I Monday. the 8th August, they made Prince Edward Island at 5 .am. at what they at first supposed lwas East Cape. but which proved ,m be the south side of the Is- l'and near Cape Bear. "The land." motes the Earl in his diary, "on ;Lot 82 had A forbidding appear- :-nce, the wood small and nothing out spruce and birch. scarcely ; ltrrc the size of a man's thigh. and great part of it quite young. I llearnt, on arriving at Charlotte- rtown, that all this coast had been ,.laid waste by a great fire, thirty lor forty years before." i Tuesday. the 9:h. August: "A lfavourable breeze bmught us into ,lllllsborough Bay. On passing Point .Prim, a vessel appeared lying in ;Orweil Bay. just at the situation out they had got the start of us. as we shortly learned from the Charlottetown boat. Losing thcvtide we anchored off the mouth of the harbour. Major Holland. Fort Major, came on board and conduct- ed me to the town. where we called on Governor Fanning, who asked us to remain. which we did. Dr. McAulay (Selkirk's agent) arrived a little after rather than before me. Owing to this circumstance the people are to land without an! preparation for their reception, on an uninhabited spot. Had I been 5 week sooner. some kind of bar- racks might have been ready. The people. however, are setting about hinting themselves: in wigwunaf August 10th. "I got comfortable lodging in Mr. Cambridge's new house (in Charlottetwn). On or- riving. as the 'Dykes' was long in getting up the harbour, I accepted the Governor's invitation to ate! all night and he pressed me to remain next day. which I thought- lessly did. This interfered consider- ably with business. The bonhom- me's politeness is rather burden- some, He is a man of no super- AUGUST 3, 1953 T. 1953 Lord Selkir is Arrival) ' native of the Kingdom (Ireland) and not deficient in the natural qualifications of enhancing his o'.'cn importance. and is 'hand and g1... with all great people. and being here only on an occasional rem... merit for his health.” etc. He nu how ver. ideas and clocks in ht; lies to hang inferences upon which d not seem to be the am; with the overnnr. Both of them spent: highly of Charles siewan, "In the course of yesterday the officers of the government and most of the principal ncoole ng Cheulottetown called at the Gem-. i:or's for me, of whom I saw Mr Desnrisav, former Lieutenant: Govcrifo-, new secretary. and Colonel Gray, who was Secretary to Governor Fanning when 9;. Canada . . . V o I I "We had another difficulty aha.-3 nrovisions. The oatmeal prcmlg.--1 has not arrived. The last hay.-M on the Island has been so poor thst it is stated that no slmolv cm be had here. The millcrs will app, promise a trifle, and as all .1... tradimr people here are noun;-m.,,. for taking advantages, Mr. Charles Stewart and others advised .-end. llllz fl schooner to Quebec or Hall- fay Mr it supply. "After harvest it is expected there will be abundance. but. the scarcity. was so much annrehended this spring that the Council laid in embargo on expor'ailon and opened the port: to American vessels. nnng ml which came. 'I'his'dlfrlr-ulIx- vanished on maklrn R ("ll”llltliinn of the quantity needed, which had been overrated. A schooner from Plctou was in the hm-bour's mouth with ninety barrels of flour bougln. on speculation, This was Tuirclmsed at ten dollars a barrel and would secure us till the arrival of the Boss from New York. I I 0 "Mr. C. Stewart went down. with Dr. McAulay to Orwell Bay to point out the situation. They had just arrived at the Polly when a mes- sage from me brought them back. Dr. McAuiay had misunderstood my instructions and was proceeding to fix the people in two or three iarlze village; instead of ten or iwclva smaller ones. This my arrival recti- fied. Dr. McAuiay was anxious in be back to the ship. as two or three country people had been on bond circulating ill reports of the country. "There are people who have not themselves down on the lands unri- er the idea that they would re- vert to the Crown, and then thrv would have a claim of preference by their occubancv. These are now sour at finding themselves llkelv to be turned out and would gladly disgust the newcomers. some orn- ple. also. on the neighboring mix, who have been in the habit of maklnghay on the marshes on Lot abundant head. The Chief Justice. Mr. Thorpe. dined with him. a 57. are said to be ill-disposed. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Chas. R. Mc9uald BA. BABBISTER. SOLICITOB. NOTARY. Em. Intern Trust Iluiiding 0HABLO'l'l'E'l'0WN Gander & I-luszurd GLLBl:!:T A. GAUDET. B.A.. LLB Barristers and Solicitors Money to noon Canadian Bank of Commons Bids .1. 5. Taylor OPTOMETBIBT Eye: Examined. Ginsu llttol Corner lions and Queen Its. Office Phone IBM-House ms A. Waithon Geudet. LLB. BAIIBISTEB. IOLICITOB, cu. Phillipa Jnlldlng lli Grafton Street Money to Loan Collection Matiieson. Pouito & J. A. McGulgun IAIBISTEB. SOLIOITOII. Eb. NOTARY. Etc. Currie Building ' L Palmer 8. Huslum - A. J. aasum. o.s.. Lnn. Barrister. Etc. Hank of Nova Scotia Chamber! Charlottetown. r. 3. L MONEY T0 was loll. Mal-iiloson & Foster Barristers. Solicitors. Etc. II. R. BELL, Q.C. 0. ll. FOSTER. LLB. Donna on City and Farm Properties lilo Richmond Street Charlottetown. P.E.l. F I .-redone A. Large. 0.6. Blrrlller. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Buildinl Charlottetown. P. E. I. Donna on City and Farm The problems of restoring peace.and unity; this date 1887 son of 8 housemaster at fatal accident. -Edmonton Jour- mu "edged Ne,,,d,,.th,,e,.' heme ,,m,",," to the unhappy land of Korea will be even, ' y b ' b "gal: "19 m”""d5 l0 Weilk M m'- brown and a1l.may move in next Nicholson T more difficult than was the negotiation of Rugby Schooll he was med y School and Tlfe grateful tear to lthedt Youth will be Samoa ooom'dm' ma mm W bomw the mm wrrnzson no ' Alba" Farms" ' " icollege although he took high honours in. ' ' m"'"” -Edmmml -l0"""l- do Wt ' ' ' BA. LLK A. ll. PEARL. B.A.. LLB. JOHN P. NICHOLSON. LLB. Barristers. Etc. Collections - Money To loan I75 Grafton Street Bu-rlltor and Solicitor Bank of Commerce Building Chlrlottetmrn Money to Loan Keep green the memory. and the:Borrow said before the world mov- grave; and guard the heritage ed into the present age. But these ldays youth is very often serving it- lseu. That is as it should be. since --Webster Rogers, quoted by the a youth that serves itself today will the ceasefire. l . . . . H was something that needed Saymg'.classlcal studies. He usited Italy and G01- and that may need to be Said again atlniany in 1911 and published his first vol- iume of poetry the same year. It was fol- ye gave. frequent intervals. Comments the Hamilton g late Mr. Bent. Brcmner in ii is e the world significantly to- 'T”-S S ctator. For it is a sad characteristic of lowed by a nervous bleakdown fm,m oveh "Tale! of Abelzwelt". is n'i.'.i.ow. There is. for instance, , H J M b R 0 P9 . . C On. . . the Western world that we tend to win work He made an extended tour m 1913' I m""""'""'”'d H""”" 8”" Macphg. & Tram". g ' including to Canada and joined the Naval , ration of Dallas. Texas, who flicks And he uidgfho Lord come from n. F. mu-at-re. n.A.. qo. Optometrist wais and lose the peaces that follow them. , , . Book; Recelved a switch and studies 1,500 stars in sung, mg mg. up "gm 5,1, "M, '. SOMERLED TBMNOE BA we throw away the benefits of View” DlVl5l0" at the Oulbfeak of war. He was ggg eighty-nine constellations thrown them; he nhlnedfortln from Mount . Mm.g...,g.g. i "”""'5'"”- 7' 5' " .' . ' I ',rat the defence of Antwerp and died on the . GREEN -m.mM3s (Rowena A. onto his living-room ceiling. Young Penn. he came with ten thousands : mm” 892 through a combination of carelessness, lack . . 1.-mm , R em,, 39, 5400, Harrison didn't wait for his 'par- of ulna: from his mm 1...": ”TjT”' :T g,. of interest and a burning haste to forgetiway to the Dardaneuw ms poetry mm' Profegltinaly Eardeners pxglil read ems '0 We him N5 "'05'-" H9 "W "I" I ll"! l" 1" tlIem- Yen. Gordg" E' Mucmmum ' b 7 b . th b r h d g igles humour and beauty. Mr. Fillmords book with interest he started studying the stars at he loved the people . . . . B.A.' LL.'" Dr. W. R. cafson 3 out flan nng 9 oys Ome an tuml and fellow nurserymen will enjoy CMBOPRAC1-on inward to the pleasant normalcy of ouri V ' ' " :0l'?I::l'i1.fY3f!l0teS yvilth tlhe :.ul.liitfll1i', 3533:”-53, 5ou(Cy1hE?':',MIaug., ,,,,m, G,..,,,,..,, ' ' ', v ,- ', , U I O ESDOCII Va He 0 C v st, .. wn ' own flresldes. , Di. A. ll. Greenwood, Dnectoi of Scot- amateur gnaw" ma my me”, I . m P ” DIAL an ” um mg"-""1" ”';:"lwPl:Im st In Korea we have perhaps not won a land's Poultry Research Centre of the or with I small plot of land to w K A ' I - , - . beautify. ' ' - J A c "I '3 war, but we have fought aggression to avAgrlcultu1al Research Council has left for Mr. Fillmore. A nrdmer Mm ,, I y . - - 0"" C u - - on K. A. M.cEuchgfn Stllfldstlll fmm Which the Bzgressors de- a lecture tour of Canada. He will address lifetime of experience ranging from I m K Ig:'l'f:MlTll3'll;h . an cided to withdraw because they found that! the Poultry Science Association at Van- x”;”,f::dc:,":d;u::erfi:f;i”;nmg ,,,g';. .0 ”s”,mwm., Aw',',,, nfI::tlT::-3" their effort no longer paid. It would be a,couver. Dr. Greenwood, who was born in Annapolis Valley, is II. Msrltlmer, g . Timon M Gin": LL ' Above Charlottetown Clinic I tragedy. "' after demonstrating that "medi Aust"a"a" ha-5 d-"med t almwt his enme iiiizriiiznmiiikr line” Cgciii A ' nsnaisrea. .sou'orrin:. E.ua.. 2-.m..............--'2 QM" sit D".-1'-E aggression is l10t Worth the effort. We,W911e research career to investigations on the and climatic conditions of the ' . too Iloiunond SI. .. out-losuumn D, A L M I c to allow political disruptioh to succeed. domestic fowl and-he has won the Keith ”;l":2"'.eug::Vl::f&-A with author - l - . ..L......P.'ElZ.2'.....m.. " ' ' ag 5'. The temptation to wash our hands of Prize of the Royal Society for his publlca- it.y.on lawns. shrubs, trees and Iyron J. Grant. 0.5. .,:,E,!:Tyi::., Korea and leave it to its own devices is tlons on the Biology of the Fowl. Awarded 3l”"”i'-til" "ch "'5' demlblnl . .. i 9”'-””'"'" GLORIA IIUII-DIN" . . . l it he no I 1 some bound to be Strong. It is an unattractive a Rockefeller Fellowship in 1931, he stud- valgletliifcngnd .:l:el:iln:'u:l;hr:::le.:i. Telephone. :3pp..n..,g...... 3:33. m "' i3''"”' "- "'"”" M llttl countr to whose defence we came-l d t h i ltles f Columbia nd c ""J . W W" '1' be : Ion ii int obi 'rinci le not from an dee ghi 8 t e' ii" velfls th (iamerlc a ainaln mow” W" Th mm" who MgDoNA"D' CUR”: & co' P0 P D . Y D. cago, vlsl ng or 8 g wishes to try his hand at rose cul- Onioe pg 181 Queen and g 6,31-8542 nun"-gnu; Accuun-'-AN-I-5 ' sense of kinship; and the behaviour of Pre- 1946 as a member of the British mission :l(fv9m5h0ggg o:l:9e:wi':e0r0th.de;-Killed v Ifon'tas:l'. 0l;.llwn,wTor.nIt.o. Saint mi... Sherhroolie. vam...-or. - - ' ' . - l'- r In one n. I! lit . . El ton. sident Syngman Rhee, first in postponing to investigate the development of the poul- muon mm most complete. and JQHN 3, 3031535 wALTEnM. 35535 Currlo ma... ci.:'.:.u...,.,,., "' "' C'''''''""""" ”"",','.,.. s the armistice by freeing prisoners of war, try industry in.Canada and the U.- 5. He is 9” Mon ll?! claliuro 4:! . H R DOA"! --- then in compromising the truce talks by his a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh ...i...' ' ' m ' ”' "9" C g;;i'l9"N Relldenon - emmmi git-WggglT'sANY Stubborn arsumentntlveness. has not eII- and has served both as vice-president and mg; Vfyalglgnolilgignrmgtlgstexiggn "'3 - H - M Ill oi-on only at. cam-mmown U dared its government to us It is all too member of the Council He is a past preai- , ' ' ”'" l ' '5" P- 0- 3”” 3 .- ' ' M r0IdlM- Ind tho cm! index AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE PIOVINOI nxnou-5 q, any to feel that the time has come to dent of the. British branch of the World's lncmm its usefulness As I snr- "Wt P- "wPlllll0l'l- 0.A. .uN"'lNlilVilllLA.i. Mclll'2NNA. CA ' don annual for reference when on... nmou at Illilfn. blonoton. pt. Joints Mninmt. Im-tmn ieovgthe Koreans to their own devices. Un- Poultry Science Association. . questions and problems arise. R"'i""'”- ”V"P00l. New OIII row, Trnro and Corner Brook-