e Guardian i "L... i....c. huialu nun use an: Oct yuhllanm yr!” M-gs 4., uumng II in Prince sued. cnuiimi.-tun. P L. L. D: 1-: Ihuluwll VWIWW W 14 nut; 51. u. luiuuiu. uuuu.-.i -)in..- 4;. ...m:: lute" will .4" , ,,.,.,..... i-uu...;..i Amt uetieril uuusu National Pharmacy Week siciuii gii cs us is ottt-itiiiucs our ticket to lbtlutl llcclllll, and tie accept the iiicttitutioii ll'Lilll our pitdi'it1aL'ist inc strap UA paper Liiut Loe pity- u.......-PMlii'l"'.miiiii.o.w uith no tiiougtit nliatt-xe:' as to . 3. ...';iIm:i”il..i:i:.::li".-it-. viii.-yo h.- 5,-ot tiic iiiciiii-iiic, it hat he , , ”'.”.i””,. 3' ”..f,'If.T.?, f.'i...i.i.i;.u.l.”m'lii..-.in. , 113.1 1., tin, or nli.it he huti to knoii, mp, . '3 u..i u. in. Punt uiiice , . up ” ...i lluna to ilt'tttllitll'l) coiiioriii lo the tl()(l0l s .. . -........ ...w i... .. V , ..-.. ..,....... ... .-... will om.-. i--9...... an iii-tructtoiis. lhis lill'l is north un- i i ii '3' i''""'” i i 11 it i in h i' being - f" ' . " ti llllll” ii.-' tier 2 't V F ”In.- all-lIl.,I'sl lllvllltll) b wt-0.-I2, than (i P ) I l . I "H M W... .,,,.; oi...-i-it-it .i- mititiiizil l hat llldt) ! I. . MD” "(W1 ,1 135;; I Wt-vi; llll'iILlL',llL)UI tlatiuila. i'. I All . . . t I . . is l 'r..,.i..t, i-int-c llltill sou llt”.l drugs A BOW To 1 ;,,i ,.ii.o.l.i.-i-ti .innu.illy. by more i t t- 2. .-it--:. Iii- . . ..,i--....ii.- nllk. . p tli..ii .i iitliltlltll ll shut it ill is lu c-..;i' Ito.-.i.t.; .. . -lri-tlx oi otlior lltfillx for our health i"ll kll'tll'lr 1.. .t i air i:t;irl-Li-tctl ill t-.',ltllllll ;ii'e:is by g L . . .. . - . g - . it-.-int oi inc -it tllcr lH'Ills ill -I-'-ll”-till lit lllv-W. , amt... cl , .. ., i iiiw plniriii.-.t".-l It-I Vtillllllue l0 . . ll) tn lily .-.'r5 the llllns - ct will-'l' (lI'l-IRS t. , -HM. um” ,,,, W . ltirlllll.'l11ll-tii'l- -t -lwiiiaiid. Most 5 , y l . -ix. 'r-it - ' ,.)i. , l ml-U1.-I-,-iq;,..-r g; i'lIll4tl'lillll U: l” llldlrl ii n 0w r ..-lo t- - . ' 'illx llltlllltnt llltll illltlll on-.'-' V U I"-Ht' I'l'tllWl'i3' lll'il viw ll .- o.i- rt-CQltctl ixi. ...; uith other-, t 1 '9'l'v it ill” ll0l- ll" . . 1 I .. t,. H WW necpr 1.-Hivw iiiu.-t knou til. ,l tii.ti--. Ill L'0mbll1il- F011 I i:' i -1 , l' . Indeed. tin. l-'viii-it and Fitiwt'll am two. uill t.c-t li;' action of eiritled to ilxk ultwther thc ut'::ittt- dtittlltcr. ll .- all .i t'ttlIlI)ll(,”HlCil zation l:;i- at-iv ittvtliv-i' llLll'llt.i-P, now i -ciciice. tutti i ltl ll- -tll' -” N3 k”0li' that Hccrclarv of State lltiilcs has ' ltttlllr IS ll'dt"- ll iii it'll" .””l5 ill lni let it he l'llliu'l'l that the t'nitt-d ten-ne iiiiixct-1'.V l1'ill?l1ll'-'- iilltl C0”' 1 l , . . . . st-avit sttulv ex-rxiiiiy to lvccp .il)1(-inst . . - l l St:itt'--i hzis no intention of ltar-kiitu 1 up its rtllics in am" dispute that fltlt;S l 0f ll'tVtlittl'”l"”li and imohe not Sttl'lt)llSl)' Altit'l'lt'&tIl Til?” plain put-port of the statement in which he arbitrarily related the Suez crisis to the iniperialistic interests of till out 1;; inici'e.-'t.s. ltils the "mloni.-ii powers." True, in a later comment he tried to soften the i hlou; hut. as he has done on several occasions. he succeeded only in mak- ing matters worse. It is clear noiv-- as clear as any- thing can be in this topsy-turvy world--that any help Britain and France can expect from the United .States in their dispute with Egypt will be so frail and hedged about with so many qualifications that it will be worthless. What makes the situation so very disappointing is the fact that it was Mr. Dulles who sponsored both the internationaliza- tion plan and the canal usersl plan, only to repudiate both when the time came to make a decision. At least, that is the gist of it, and there is no us5 in pretending anything else. In such circumstances, what is the good of NATO? Pigs in POllllCS If pigs have any way of knowing vtlinrs going on in the American political field these autumn days they must be feeling pretty import- ant. They don't have votes. it is trite, but in certain sections of the repub- lic, notably in the Mid-West farm belt, they a re exercising 1 lot of political influence. It is possible, though this is only a rumour. that they mutt men tip the balance in fznoiir oi” the Democrats in scxeral Slillc-. This ll;ll'll('lllHI' facet oL political ct rtzoxvi-.-;v started over a ycar ago llilttli the pricc of hoizs ivciit rioun to Vii a lttindti-rlucitztit. the lowest plillli for svvcrtil years, and thus si.t.lwl the i'.'ii'm i'cvolt :iL':iiri.-'t the lit-r 'll.tl.l"l' zitlitiiiiistiviliuii. Si it c P lllt'll lilt' pint" hits sti'ciit;tlieiicrl a hit anti it staiitls tum at zirolind Kl?) zi lion-tictL.icit.:lit. This. tiii.li-rst:iiiil- (ii-E3, has ltiltcii stiinc of the bitter- ir---- out oi the rt-volt, hut i'vpoi'icrll;r it'll turn thc titlc, sincc lttr sonic r--.'i.oii or olhcr the faint- r s ,'ll'P s;iitl to lit-limo thzil lllf' iiiwitllli rid lij ciioitglt to in- I t I c tins ;ii'tilit'::illi ttm ltcptirtniu-iit of ALjl'll'lllllll'Rl Solo- l)' for votc-catcliiiitz ptirposcs. At fiixt zlnncc this uoiiltl aiipcar to he a hit of. shady Dcmocrntic propa- gznrivla. for it is hard to scc how tlic limp.-irtiiiciit would go ahout juggling: the markct in this mtinner. P.tit, ivittimzly or unwittinizly. Vice-Pi'esi- dent Nivon, who is hearing the brunt of the lmftle in the farm belt. has lent credence to the suspicion. On keveral occasions he has appealed to Wasliiiigtoii for help in tho pig business. and on at least one occasion very good now and uc intend to see that it stays that way the rest of HM season." " The Democrats are telling every- y that in the event of a Repub- llcan victory the price will go back lvhere it was at the beginning of the rripnlgn or probably even lower. In ther wonls they iiie arguing that Ilepublielnra are iulrq pigs to the (lur lllli1l'll1'lt'i.xlS hcrc i'l llrin-c F.tiuai'tl l-l:iiit'. are into Ml t'lii' mdltll" lnilntwks attain.-t the llireal of dis- ggqp This or--iisioii set-iiis to llP an excellent onc for us to par trihutc in ”,,.i,- piillxidlll ."lCA'l"'tlt')', itilcg,ril)' anti iirofc-'xioii:il service. EDlTORlAL NOTES A sciciiti.-t. strts he kiiotis nh:ii makes the trecs put on their t'ulUI'lul autumn garh. Well, he had better kc.-p it to lnin,-cit". Ni one mints at scientific e.xpl.-iitatioii ol bcuuly. O Q C An atomic clock giiziiziittcml to give igiricct time will soon he on the market, the first liating hccn tested alreatiy. Mo-t of us uill have in hp saiisfit't('l ttith sonictliitig less reliable. It costs S3tl,tifi0. fill? Win or lose. Soiititor Exit-:4 Ix'citiit- ver. Deinocratic Vice-llrcsidciitial nominee. will have one di-tiiictioii to brag about: he has sliziltcii hantls with more of his fcllotv citixmiis than any other politician in Amci'ic.'in liistory-and that covers it lot of territory. I I O Lord l?:idt'lillc, thc lil'llisll jurist who has been commisxioiied to draw up a tentative constitution for Cyp- rus, has aiinounccd that his sccond trip to the island iiill he ”vci'y short”. 'I'hat.'s tititlcrstzindiihle. It is hard to imagine uhy anyoiic would want to stay in that trouhlcd spot one hour longer than iicccs.-ary. I O 0 Reports intllcsttc th.tt a lllLj lll'lI2l'l may l3.'i iwicxelopineiit project is unti-tr in St. .lohn'-. Nmvtoiiiiriluiid. liousiiitz units arc living plnniicd and each hlock uill haw court; iirtls llllfl childi'cii's fIl.I)t.,'l't)litlIl.i. The niirxor plvicti tlicrrt will hr "notlii.it.' quite like it" nit; itlicrc i-l-c in tliinirla. ! ... i s'a)s that uhcn llic pl'lijm'l ilv coni- l l Tho ilt':lti of an Aiiici'ivziii lll0llll'2ll iiistitulioii ix qllntcli as S.I)llYL' "N:-it York Vii)" ll.is Eliot) or till.'.Il more ll"';llll'I'V'. Tlici'c's .NllniitllllllLI not jti-t right nhoiil n l l l l doctors lllllll it I siltmttoii l.lw th.it. conxirlviiiig that I II l.'lttill lllitllt coiitintiiiiltvw cu-ii lli thc l'iiilcrl silica, in 1,.) notiiiic; of loss l:l'tIIlll”('(l countiivs, lt.itt,- none at all. I O O I-isirin iil'lt"'S in the l'nitcd Status fcll IIIIP-llllll oi l'b in the month. RI'V'lltllliLj to a llcpartmciit of At;i'iriiltiii'-- rcport. This maitcs the thiirl drop since June: and it rcpicsciits anntlicr worry for Repub- lican c:inrlirl:itcs in thc farm bolt. The one little consolation is that during the siinic period the farmcrs' cost of living fcll onr--third of I').. It, is still. houevcr, 3',-0 higher than past he stated flatly: "the pig market is . it was a year ago. I O I Priinc lllinistcr Nehru of liulin, who is doing his best in ncgolitite a settlement between Egypt and the I. cstern powers. is having political troubles of his own. Scvcral times lately he has been met by hostile crowds in certain arcas uhcre he is making speeches preliminary to the national elections next year. In one place the demonstrations were so noisy, that Mr. Nehm had to stop I "THAT DID IT'' Old Paris Life Recalled Alfred Pahlke in the Milwaukee Journal A ltlll"ll (l, lolll' fooi, four inch l (loitiinhiaii llltlldll. .laxici' Pt-rcira. i.ou l)”IllQ studied by Ncvv lurk lon',',t-t it) cxpci'l.s, Ill&l)' or may not he hi7 ,icurs old, as cltiinicd. Bin there is ill! authcnticzitcd case of an I-1ii.:xIiinan, 'lllitinia.s Parr. ulltl liwd to he 1.12--aiid dicd Ill UlI'I'lH'llIllL; Old Pzirr. as he it-as called. mar- t ried at lit) and HEIIIH at 120 and . had children by both wives, lle uuilitt-ll lo kings and cvrtainly is the uhitc hope in any lIllE'rl'8('l'dl tonlcst tor the lionors of long )0aIS. F Tlicrc arc Ill(lll)' oilicr conten- ilcrs and "also runs." and anyone i curious iiluiiit Ilieir iianics anti (lat- es niziy consult (I. t', Lewisi learn- ed ciilalogiie of cciilenariaiis. But most of there ate more shad- ows of iitinies, vihile Old Pnrr. ill the grave, is still with us. for his .'llllh4'llllP hunt-s rest lll Wt.-st , ininistcr Aiihcy, heiiealh this in- criplion: '”l'lios, Parr of ye county of Sal- l opp. Born in Al) l-ltlil He lived in H' it-ilziis of Ten l'l'lIl('l'S iiz. K. lid, 4, K lid 5, K. liich. Ll, K. Men. 7. K llcii. ll, K, Edw. 6. Q. Ma, Q Hill, .la and K. Charles, aged 1.32 years. and was buried here Nov. 15, I635." tlld Parr must have been the (l('Nl)&llI' of the undertakcrs of many gt'iiiti'iilloti.s HARDY Pl-IASANT This hardy Englisli pea-ii-it was born in the same ycar as llartin Lutlier, ninc years hclnre t'olum- btis (lls('fllPI'P(l the New World. 36 )C&Ili bclorc the grt-at religious ; sflllxln rciii ('hri-lcndoni, llis Iiiiic lul-(cs its hack to the Vliirs of the lloscs He may lime secii Rich- , IIl'tl III, that saintly vtllian. lle liv- i-d itiidcr Henry VIII and his I-ight xiii rs. and under good Quccn dess. llc liu-d iindcr Jaincs I. "the Bri- llxll Siiloiiion" uho. on the .iiitlior- liv of Mat-atilay, was the grcatcll tool of all British sovereigns. lle loud to sci-. and have an inter- vicu with. the ill-f.i1cd Ch.-irlcs I. i a it-u years helorc the l'iirit.'ins cut of his ioytil lirzid lt.irr's lot ccrtiiiiily uas ('lIxl in slirriniz liim-s. biil lhc slirriitg Iiiiics did not hotlicr him lll his llll.Il rcti't-zit With politics anti rc- licion, vulh llic concerns in the lll(':il. lii- iiicildlcd not. and so it Eihiiciirs that hc nctcr was l'l dan- uci ol llic lilock or the stzikc Wc rt-gm-i to say tIi.ii. Vlllll” P.'irr il.l-l prixniv iirtiics. ho uas not it lllll(l('l yoiiiiu man. in fact. up are i ui-I-n to iiiitlz-rslaiid that for the Q spice of more lllllll B hiiiidred yciirs he it (Is dangcrniis to the lad- ir-. a rush: rtitic. a lll.'ll'l about the tilI:iLIc llou int-in,v lit-tirts hc liroke i ll! his uiltl voutli. up to his Tlllh l wxir. n. xii .ll ni-xcr knou Vllwn ' hc uzis lul lic determined in -.i-Itle dmtn. illltl lic iii;iiricd ll.- tired '.tilll lllx uilc prc-iiinahly lviippily i cv-cpl lot -oinc lapses. in 32 i iv;-ii's lllllll hcr ill-.illi I lllll Pl'lll.l(” PF.VlN(iE when lie was I00 tl'8l'S old. and while his title Has sllll llVlll2, ii. is shocking to relate that he had an affair vtith anothcr uoinzin. ll tins discovered and Parr, in the fashion of his day, had to do pub- lic penance at the Albcrbury Church dour. clad in a white slicet. Then-alter Parr seems to have sohcred tlmvn and become a inu.lel liusband When his wife died. he , OUR YESTERDAYS From The Guardian Pllen TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (October 11. 1981) Mr. H. H. German, C.N.R., nav- al architect, who designed the S. S. Charlottetown, arrived in the city this week. together with oth- er officials to supervise the re- pairs being made to the S. S. Prince Edward Island by Bruce Stewart and Company. Ltd. grieved for her for eight years and . then married again. when he was I20 years old. He had children by his tirst and second wife. What kept Tliomas alive? The daily routine of his cottage seems to have been slightly monotonous. Tom Parr apparently had no other purpose than to work in the fields. sleep and eat and pile up one year after another. How long he might have lived if he had been left alone in his wholesome mode of living in n matter of speculation. Unfortunate- lv. the fame of his years finully is-at-lied the ears of n neighboring nobleman. the Earl of Arundel, and the Earl decided to take Parr to London to exhibit him to King Charles as an unprecedented ”piece of antiquity." The old man was literally "car- ried up" to London, for the earl provided "I litter and two horses." ll would have been sure death if Parr had been in a carriage and iolted nvcr the roads of Jacobean 1 llnizland. He reached London in I there had the I good health. and memorable visit with the king. ”You have lived longer than any other man." Charles observed, "what have you done more than other mcn'."' l,l0NIZI-ID IN LONDON The old man has lionixcd in Lon- don. and the change of air and heavy London lnod proved too much for him. He came to an un- timely end. being prematurely cut L off. as stated abovc. at the age of 152. while he tins in London. and that is how he happens to lic buried in Wcstminisler Abbey. I)r. lI:irvcy. the famous physic- ian. made a post-iiiortcni examin- ation and found Parr's body "re- inarkablv stout and healthy. with- out any trace of decay or organic disease, so that had it not been for the ahnorniril influences to t-sliich he had hecn siibjecicd for a few months before his death. there sccnis little doubt that Parr might have attained evcn I much great- cr age." QlHlFl(l'l)' scizcd on Parr's name. and for vears a potent medicine ua: sold. labcllcd after him. as n stippOS0(l cllxir of life. Tbc por- lrziit uscd to adorn lhcsc invslcrl- nits bottles of tonic was derived from a likeness of old Parr :ini.vn by Rubens A writcr In Chambers Book of . llnvs saw that there was doubl- Ics: snmrlliing peculiar in Prirr's constitution which f'fl:lhll'fl him to resist so long the effects of .igc and dccav llis longevity was tran- snuttcd to his licirs. and his grandsons. Robcrt Parr. born in Kinver in 1633, lived to the age of l24. The light Columbus Saw Rahnmax Development Board Liircrl on hv a still-unexplained llllilnlnnl light that flickered far out to -ca, Chrisloplicr Columbus' tiny flci-t. the Nina. Pinla and San- la Maria. edged westward to make their historic landfall on this tiny Bahamas Island 164 years ago. The light soon by Columbus and several crevvmcn. according to the Inc and other records, ended n threat of mutiny and the ships sailed on But live dark hours and 30 milcs of water slid under their kcels hcfore the trail caravell came Vlllllln View of this Baha- mas Island that marked discov- cry of the New World. There is no logical explanation for the mysterious light first seen far out at sea, Britain's Imperial Llghlllouu riuldo lists this IsIlm'l'l present Beacon at 400,000 candle er. yet it is visible only I! m lee at SNL The light then. apparently can- mit be ascribed to a share position. There lies been conjecture 'n- boul native filcnien nulhg with a blazing but this pne- nlblllty in rewlh vole! llllt i-on-not a lot: 1 nlnusl IQ lnthonu. Ce no inn feel. Wit. " . ) . 3 i 3. i t E vision a self-Induced Illusion by tired men whose straining eyes had so long sought a sin of land? Christopher Columbus. on the sic-rncntle of the Santa Maria. first saw the light. His page, Pedor de Selcedo. immediately confirm- ed the report. It was ln'lhe dark of the night 9.15 p.m., an hour before moon- rise. Oct. it, 102. There was no cry of discovery. False nlnrm-i had already brouizhl the crew to n nenr-mulinoul mood. ready to demand that the expedi- tion turn back. Only three hours previously. rebellion had been quel- led Then n iienmnn. one Peder Yzqu- lerdo of Lepe. shouted I? new: "Lumbni Tlerral" - (II and Land. Eyes straining. the men of the inc of g The First Prince Edward Island Medium Brigade Canadian Artil- lery is in training at local head- quarters in the Drill Shed for eight days. Lt. Col. P. W. Mac- Nevin. DC.M., V.D.. is in com- mand. Mr. James Paton returned from Toronto yesterday where he nt- lended the exhibition of the Amer- ican Hospital Association. There be inspected all that is newest and up-to-date in hospital equipment to assure that the new Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital will be in the forefront in this respect. TEN EARS AGO (October 11. IN!) Bruce Stewart and Company. Ltd., whose plant was destroyed by fire yesterday with n long or 3150.000. are making every effort to re-open the machine shop to- morrow. Officials stated that as soon as electrical connections are made and castings obtained. the machine shop can be put into quick operation. The citizens of Kings County are to be congratulated upon in- Hllllerlllllll I Wlr memorial in the shape of an enlarged and greatly 1 improved hospital for the Coun- t.v. It is pI0D0IEd to provide a 3100.000 institufon of three um. P.Vs. with accommodation for 45 patients. ashore at what ll now known as Landing Bench. near the native village of Cockburn Town, on the western shore of the Island. Since that day there had been little physical change on San Sal- vador. The tiny settlement: that dot the island are populated moat- ly by descendants of slaves impor- tcd In the lllth and 19th centuries to grow Sea Island cotton and ala- al. Native Arawak Indians of the Taino culture are now extinct on the lslanrl. They were long ago transported as slaves to work Span. isli gold mines and sugar planta- p lions in Cuba and Halli. Today San Salvador is vigilant l with a Us. Air Force guided mis- Slll' base and a U.S. Navy base lo- cated on land that was granted to America when average US, mg. trnyers were deeded to Britain early in World War II. Discovery my In a holiday lltflllllthniit the colony of the Ba- liainas. It is a day of prayer gnd devotion as well ll Celebration, ,4: Nassau. the colonyscapllal, than V”” be field Ilmrts. cricket nnd soo- rer matches. bicycle races. rent. tax. and other sports nctlvitlu .3 llahamlans observe the anniver- MFY of the birth of n hemisphere. MAXIMS I have never for one luau ug- ele-rtv Vllhln myself: how. then. would you have -0 Judge he deeds of others? AUTO THROUGH WALL GUELPH. Ont. cc?) O Rog": I-310.017! lost control of his nutc- mobile during the weekend and It ""594 "P )n his neUlbor's living room. Lnenby wee backing his car from the driveway of his home in nearby Acton when bl: feet slipped off the elneb. The ear run: uni Icllom. METZ, France (CPI - ual. mnrnn. liner nulllau Medically Speaking I! llennnnlu. lnndenen. I. ll- . USE CAB! IN CANNING Alon! about this time of the lfnr. many homemaker: are cau- nlnl foods. Now I m not holng to advise you old-timers nt canning how to go about it. but extreme care is es. Ienllal in home canning to pre- vent contamination. Maybe even you veterans will benefit from these few tips. PRESERVING FO0D.,. . . . Canning is one of the most com. mon methods of preserving food. It depends on the use of heat to destroy practically all bacteria In the food being canned and '-u lhe halting of the oxygen supply to preven5 growth of any which might remain. a The best way of doing this is the pressure cooker method. such a cooker provides steam that is liotlenough to destroy even resistant Colstridiuin botulinum a species of bacteria which can lie without air. F00d calmed commercially is processed in pressure cookers and "0! 1! Sillllle case of l)0lllll3slll has i beenlfeporled from conuncrcisilly . canned food in A v - 192' FOR ALL MEA'r"S".:il.cd hm,” 1'3 Dmbably best to use the llressure cooker method for proc- GSSIIIE all meats and nuiincitl vcg elables such as beans. corn, as- l paragus and peas, -Processing them in a boiling water bath usually takes three in . four times longer. The U.S. I)l-2' PARTMENT OF Agriculture has leis 3V3l18blE Kivinll the time and temperature needed for any inci- hod. But no matter how well you pru- pare these foods for caiiiiiiig. I suggest that you boil them for fie minutes immediately iiciiire Gating. D0n't even taste them un- til this is done. COLD VEGATABLI-IS. . , . As for rionacid vegclablcs which you want to eat cold or use in salads, you can boil them and then refrigerate them. Acid fruits and vegetables stich as rhubarb. toinatoes. berries and the like. can beproccssi-d safely by the boiling water bath method. Their acid, you see. prevents growth of disease-producing bac- teria. cven Clostridium botulinum. Applesauce, tomatoes, kechnp. sauerkraut and fruit juices can be pasteurized by placing them in hot jars which have been steri- lized by boiling and keeping them at a temperature of 165 to lilo de- grees for half an hour. QUESTION AND ANSWER C-.R.: Can putting vitamins in the ice box destroy their potency? Answer: No. freezing usually preserves rather than harms them Excessive heat can he detrimen- tal to vitamins. EIGHT PIGEONS. I do not know why pigeons flew About a sky of listless gray As if it were exnltant blue. A: if this were A golden day. I lmow they swept around. around With swift co-ordinated ease I do not know .what joy they found Above the tops of barren trees. I know that I shall never know What lifting impulse made them t'l.v. But having seen them doing so I have no need of knowing trliv. -Jane Merchant in The Christian Science Monitor. The Age Old Story A faithful man shall abound with the , ,0?-sun- NOTES BY THE WAY 3 vv"nr .x.a 4 I07 ureellcrk "sun" nhoeu nails. .re.' '. the hammer. Jul! wait till the do-it-yourselt boy: got a hold at that.-Toronto Star University of nu-no freshmen were given some sound novice , by Dr. Sidney Smith. president of the university at the openlnl of their classes. He urged them not to be content with merely getting by. but to try lor honors and said that industry would rather have one good graduate'than 20 who had just scraped through. - London Free Press l The Governor General. we see. is going to Moose Factory and Moosonce at the foot of James Bay on his latest tour which will the moth since his appointment in 1952. Up there it can be cold and blustery in October but that will make no difference to Mr. Massey who came bouncing back from the rigors of the far Arctic. and a ilighl. over the North Pole i earlier this year as if he had been on a jaunt to the sunny South.- Ottawa Citizen Mn". Anne Munroe. n Cnnadlnn iinssioiiary returning from India ulicre site spent thirty-six years. has ioiind Vancouver traffic more irigliieniiig than panlhers and oth- or wild beasts of her experience. tlonsidcriiig that Vancouver ll re- ported to be doing as well as any Caiiadian city and perhaps better than most in handling the traffic problem, this is' disquieting. It might be well not to expose Mrs. Muiiro to the hazards of Confed- eration Square. - Ottawa Citizen l I For great acting in hard to 5;” the pouucian expressing .n..-mm, surprise that the polltlmnns on at. other side have stopped to playing pallttca.-Edmonton Journal British Columbia Douklumgn have gone to law to test. the valid. ity of an order holding children In a suiitnrlum under a provincial act. To liavethese troublesome people recognize that they my obtain results from legal probes- ses gives cause for hope they will be more co-operative citing. 1. the future.-Ottawa Journal The English have been the most successful colonizing powgr in history, as the world-wide spi-end of the pound, parllamehta and'Eg.. gush sports shows. Some sort or crown to the British colonial qr. eer was added on a football field at llford. England. A team of elcv. en barefoot soccer players from Uganda beat the British Olymplc Sam 2-1.-Peterborougli Examjn. Hail to the women of Cobum Hollow, Kentucky, who went to work blacktopping ii road to shame the country officials who failed to have the job done. The women. mostly coal mlncrs' wives. bccan filling in holes and levelling a Inilp and- a- half stretch of road lead- ing to Coburn Hollow, the home uf some 50 families. The next day they were joined by some of their husbands and a county road grad- er whlch, the women said. "came out of nowhere" to save their hands from blistering.-Cape Bre- ton Post PBorrow with confidence from HFC borrow with Over half: million Canadian families every year nfidc is CanaHu'wnIyconsuniertinai- from HFC. because HFC , ny backed by 7! years experience. Household Finance specializes in providing loans from 550 to SL000 in one day, and in privacy. This prompt, depend! able money service is available to you today. 3 OUSFIIOID FINANCE 1 '.7 anon pond, sound loan Plume 7395 I50 and George 80., who I, phono 1517 CIIAILOTIIIOVIN, P.l.l. HOME ECONOMICS COURSE Provincial Vocational lchool The Vocational lcrunoniics beginning November 5. I957. School offers a seven month course in Home 1966, and continuing tlll May 31. AIM-The aim of this course is to help young women perform their present duties in the item more efficiently. to provide n back- ground for students who anticipate earning a living in , and to prepare laled to Home Economl makers. the fields re. them as future home Instruction will include the following: ' Sewing and Textiles Foods and Cookery Nutrition Home Nursing Family Living Child Care tThis course will be held only If n sufficient lions are received.) Young women who are interested 1. Interior Decorating I. Weaving I. Handicrafts 10. Folk Dancing ll. Singing I1, Public Speaking number of appllrl- should apply at once to the Principal of the Vocational School. Charlottetown, Dial 4641. Fresh Ground STEER BLADE AND SHOULDER ROAST BEEF. lb. 35c HAMBURG, lb. . . . 33c RIB STEW BEEF, 2 lbs. 59: SLICED BACON, lb. 55c CORNED BEEF, lb. 29c Barbour's Ivory Fluffo Magic Nescafe Fresh Mixed Pltted Shlnola WAX. fin . . PEANUT BUTTER. 16 oz. iar 43: SOAP.4bcm......,....-..... 25: Sl-l,Oll1'ENING.2 lbs. 59: make POVlDEll.lb.iin an CO!"-FI!.2le:.Ici COOl(lES.lb. 35: DATlS.3lbs. 39. Every day. every way. you save by shopping at our store. Ask for D.P.S. Stamps for Free Gifts. aims: . lb. '53.-. ORANOES 2 Dex, 59: