rnosrous. THE GUARDIAN Total City Zone . Retail Trading Zo Authorised as Second class Mall Post olflw Department. Ottawa. The Island Guardian ? blishlng Co. CIRCULATION 3,7 65 13.049 Editor and Managing Director. J. It. Burnett. Associate Editor, Frank Walker. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink". CHARLOTTETOWN. WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 12. 1951 1 crack In Freedom's Wall The eighteenth century Spectator Papers. of Addison and Steele contain a descriptioni of a citizen of London who was so alarmed at the political situation in Turkey that he neglected his own affaiis and brought his family to the brink of starvation. is a lesson in that little episode which may, explain some of the phenomena observable in contemporary affairs in Canada. Politicians and a good many publicists devote a great deal of attention to what is likely to happen in the present menacing international situation. CBC broadcasts the opinions of self-styled experts who profess to provide us with the answers to such questions as "Will there be a truce made in Kaesong next week or next year?", "Is there a Chinese-Russian con- spiracy to delude or exhaust the West'.7", "Is Mao's breed of Communism dictated by the Kremlin, or is he an oriental Tito?", "Is there a strong underground movement in Poland and the Balkans, or is this only wishful thinking?", There Every week the "Does the CBC Inter- national Service affect the thinking of mil- lions behind the Iron Curtain, or is it all a lot of eyewash?". slighted and pushed around by Washington. "Has Canada really been or is it just that External Affairs Minister Pearson has a chip on his shoulder?" The Englishman of two hundred years ago who sought to escape from his im- mediate responsibilities by projecting his thoughts several thousand miles away to- wards Turkey has his counterpart in a vast number of Canadians today who are more concerned with their fear of Russia than . .--.e4.-amp ' e - A with what is happening in Ottawa, or in Prince Edward Island, or for that matter in Charlottetown. Eternal vigilance, it has been said, is the price of liberty. The liberty and free-' dom, political and economic, of the people, of Canada, depends much more directly upon what happens in Ottawa, or Prince Edward Island or Charlottetown, than upon events in Moscow or Peiping or even Wash- ington. Citizens who seek escape from the responsibilities of eternal vigilance in mu- sing preoccupation with foreign affairs have no one but themselves to blame if liberty itself becomes tarnished and circumscrib- Port cliurchlll Neglected The Regina Leader-Post complains that only three ships have loaded wheat at Port Churchill since the shipping season opened in July. It states that if more ships were sent to the Northern port at regular in- tervals, so that port facilities would not lie idle for days on end, a much greater vol- ume of grain could be shipped through the Bay, perhaps up to 50,000,000 bushels com- pared with the 8,000,000 .bushels expected to move by that route this year. It may be. remarks the Ottawa Journal, that it is not possible. to switch sea-going vessels from other runs and duties to the Northern port on short notice, the light of the present emergency. But Churchill's grain elevator and the connect- ing railway were built at great expense to the-Canadian taxpayer and if, as the Leader-Post suggests, these facilities are not being used efficiently then there should be an official explanation. even in Ilorsemeat At Ottawa Ottawals Board of Control has decided that a by-law should be prepared for con- sideration by the City Council, but without any specific recommendation to that body. authorizing the sale of horsemeat in the Federal capital. "In the absence of cogent reasons against licensing this business," says the Ottawa Citizen. "the sale of horsemeat will likely be permitted here soon. ready been legalized in several other Cana- It has al- The practice of eating horse flesh is commoner in some other countries than in Canada, and a Saskatchewan can- ning factory has found a market for its But under the pressure of high meat prices, many Canadians have overcome sentimental dislike of the idea of serving equine sirloin, and find this new item on the menu satisfactory. The only proviso insisted upon by Ottawa's medical officer of health. Dr. J. J. Day. is that any horse- mest sold should be properly and regularly H The price, it is said, will be a good deal lower than prices of corresponding beef 8.451 ; 82': " indoor rink bucket. ler. Royal Visit. 0115. acreage. The N. B. Deputy Agricultural ter's prediction of higher prices for potatoes this Fall than last year does not imply very much, for last year's prices were ruin- A very much higher price is what the farmers expect after having reduced their cuts, and so bring relief to consumers who can no longer afford expensive cuts. But the Citizen instances how margarine prices have gone up since this commodity was first introduced, and suggests that horse- meat is even less likely to offer a substan- tial saving to the consumer, since supplies are limited. EDITORIAL NOTES The City Council and the Streets Com- mittee are to be commended upon adoptingl a progressive improvement scheme in re- gard to streets. Summerside is not taking the loss of its lying down, taken to provide an outdoor rink to fill the breach temporarily. I 0 and has under- The "detour" made necessary by work on the main road near Wood Islands is acquainting Charlottetown bound motorists with the almost perfectly straight secondary road available. 0 O O A million dollars is not very much if. you say it quickly. but Summerside estimates that the contract for wharf improvements there will amount to much more than that with extras included. 0 C I Visitors sometimes refer to the Island as being quiet and restful but just now it seems that there are enough fairs, meets and events going on to satisfy anyone or rather everyone. The. Minister of National Revenue (Hon. J. J. McCann) is welcomed to the Island, and the hope expressed that the weather will continue to be on its best behaviour during his and Mrs. C McCann's visit. 0 0 Canada must spend another S1,000,000,- 000 in oil exploration and development ac- cording to a western oil man. seemed to be a lot of money spent here for the purpose is after all but a drop in the What once The real danger of war in a world that wants to avoid it was pointed out recently by Prime Minister Attlee. ways brought about by scoundrels like Hit- They are," he said, "sometimes brought about by blazing fools like the Kaiser." "Wars are not al- C O '1 The ratio of men to women in the Dis- trict of Columbia is now each 100 females. which may mean that more women than men are now being em- ployed by the U. S. Government while the men are overseas. I The Senators seem to feel keenly that they will be debarred from the Chamber, unless they present a permit, during the The trouble is so many Sen- ators are so little known in the Capital that officials would not were admitting a Senator or an assassin. know whether they 0 O G O I 0 Guizot, French historian and statesman, died this date 1874. bonis history and achieved high rank in the government service. wrote histories of England, Europe and France, as well as a life of Washington. His political policies are blamed for bad feeling between England and France and in large part for the French revolution. I He translated Gib- Out of office, he The local division of the Canadian Med- ical Association meeting here on Friday have considerately put the interests welfare of their patients first on their pro- gramme by arranging to have direct tele- phone communication with the conference hall in the event of an urgent call for any of the doctors attending. This is an example of "First Things First". and Dr. E. V. Cowdry of St. Louis. inter- nationally-known cancer researcher, is now also president of a new branch of science called gerontology. Discussing the coming meeting of the new organization in Belgium 91.9 males for Minis- he has taken note of the disease problems of elderly people, and of the high rate of chronic invalidism among them, and comes to this conclusion: "It is perfectly clear that if you give spirit and occupation to older people you will thereby not only make them part of the manpower pool and W0- manpower pool, but you will also reduce their burden on the medical profession and you will make the home happier and im- prove morale everywhere." He adds that gerontologists figure that it man escaped disease his body would function from 120 to 150 years. It is that "if" that's the criminal. THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN incompatible Pair New Methods Used In V.D. Control -mi (Medical .5; Pharmaceutical Bureau. New York) Successful treatment of three of the major venereal diseases by terramycin. wide-range antibiot- ic. is described in a group of five new clinical studies by leading United States physicians. In one series of 177 cases of gonorrhea. a primary cure rate of 92.6 per cent. was obtained by Dr. Louis T. wright and a'group of associates at. Harlem Hospital, New York. N. Y. giving terramy- cln by mouth. "Highly gratifying" results were obtained with the drug when given to 20 patients suffering from lymphoglranuloma venereum, a virus-caused vener- eal malady which has hitherto been "unsatisfactory and discour- aging to treat," the same doctors say. similar experience with a total of 4.3 cases of granuloms in- guinale. a third venereal infection. is also reported by this and anoth- er research team. "The discovery of antibiotics with such remarkable spectra and ease of administration brings disease within the realm of possi- bility," the wright group. in re- porting on their studies, told the Symposlum on Recent Advances in the Study of venereal Diseases held in Washington, D. C. out Gonorrhea. in particular. is one of the most. prevalent. trouble- some and ancient of human af- flictions. Its incidence and dis- tribution are unaffected by geog- raphy, climate, season. age. race or sex. Its complications may be extensive and include sterility, semi-invalidlsm and the blinding of babies born of infected mothers in the series of 177 cases al- ready mentionecl. bacterial cul- tures from patients were negative -revealing elimination of the gonococcal bacteria which cause the disease -within 24 hours. Dosages of one gram and of two grams of terramycin produced equally good results. There were only 13 relapses. The same re- search team obtained cure rates of 95 to 96 per cent in treating a second group of 260 gonorrhea cas- es by means of both terrsmycln and another wide-range antibiotic, aureomycin, on a. comparative basis. These drugs. they concluded. "are agents of choice in the treatment. of gonorrhea." Unlike penicillin, which must, be injected lntramusculsrly. they may be taken by mouth as a. capsule. considered an important clinical advantage. Lymphogranuloms vencreum. sometimes called tropical ulcer or climstlc bubo. is reported increas- ing in virtually all countries. One reason for its intractlbllity to treatment has been that its caus- ative agent. is s virus-a microbe so small as to be almost invisible under the microscope. Because vir- uses attack the body in a differ- ent manner from that of bacteria, which are considerably larger, vir- us diseases have tended to resist even many of the most. modern chemotherapeutic agents. Terra- mycln and the few other wide- rsnge antibiotics sre practically alone in possessing effect. against same, though not all viruses. 0 O O. In contrast with the 24-hour gonorrhes. treatment. however. terrnrnycin was given for an sv- ersge of s month in the 20 lym- phogrsnuloms. cases treated, by Wright. And the doctors believe even longer therapy is needed in order to avoid recurrence. Careful follow-up for almost a year was maintained. Grsnuloms ' ' is, also called pudendal ulcer. is manifested by deep ulcers of the skin snd muc- ous membranes. originally thought mainly I. tropical infection. it is now encountered more and more frequently in the United states. That lsrrsmycin is effective ag- slnll it is the conclusion not only of members of Dr. Wright's group but also of Dr. Robert 3. Green- blstt. and associates of the Medical tonnes: of Councils A Go. eradication of widespread venereal' '1?-'u'u'u'-5'h'ul'lu'u'-'u55s'u'-'- The Age-Old Story ".5---ax-.-.-.-.-.-.-l.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-s-.-.-.-. -T But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned them: and that from a child thou hast known the holy scriptures, which are able to make thcc wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All scripture is given by inspiration of God. and Is profitable for doctrine. for re- proof, for correction, for instruc- tion In rlgliteousness: that the man of God may be perfect. thor- oughly furnlshed unto all good 7Ae if ?oea'6-um THE PINES AND THE SEA Beyond the low marsh-meadows and the beach. Seen through the hoary trunks of windy pines. ' The long blue level of the ocean shines, The distant. surf. with hoarse. com- plaining speech. Out from its sandy barrier seems to reach: And while the sun behind the wood declines. The moaning sea. with slghing boughs combines. waves and pines make answer. each to each. And 0 melancholy soul, whom far and near. In life. faith. hope the same and undertone Pursues from thought to thought! thou needs must. hear An old refrain. too much, too long ' thine own: 'Tis thy mortality infects thine ear; The mcurnful strain was in thy- self alone. -Christopher Cr.-mch. The former treated 11 patients, the latter 32 with the drug. Here, too. treatment lasted as long as two, three. and four weeks. some- times even longer. and follow-up was continued for as long as eight months. Two of the Wright team's re- ports are published in a recent tune of Antibiotics and Chem- otherapy. major journal in lhls field. another in the New. York State Journal of Medicine. A fourth was delivered at the Sym- posium on Recent Advances in the study of venereal Diseases. The Greenblatt study appeared in the Journal of venereal Disease In- b;-(3Dx9,-,2-Ef)siC.!')tl0(iix'0G9(-Oildb-i. Old C ha rlotlelown ll (And P. E. I.) V3 b -mm-av GRACE CHURCH OPENED "The 2nd Methodist Church was opened on Upper Prince Street for divine service yesterday. It is a small but neat edifice. in Gothic slyle. with mullloned win- dows and pointed gable roof- lhirty-six by eighty feet. and two storeys high. On the lower flat. there is 21 small room for a library. and a large room intended for a Sunday School. but now used for public worshipas well. The lat- ter is thirty-four feet wide. sixty- elght feet long. sixteen feet six inches high. and contains sitting accommodation for four hundred persons. The upper storey is di- vldecl into five large class rooms twenty-five by fifteen feet, and eleven feet high. There are no pillars in the lower room. The whole of the ceiling is supported by trusses running through the partitions separating the rooms above. The building is well vent- ilated. It is to be heated by means of a furnace in the basement. and there is to he a "lift" thence to the upper rooms for raising hot tea. etc. in case of social gather- ings. We are also informed that it is proposed to add in a few years. a church and spire to the south side of the building, so that when the design is com- pleted. the part lately construct- ed will be. as it were. a transcept fit the whole structure. Mr. Ro- bert Fennell is the builder; Messrs. Sterling and Harris. the arch- itects. The work of both has been credilahly done." -The Examiner. Oct. 15. 1877. Chas. R. Mcqtuoid B.A. BARRISTER, SOLICITOK NOTARY. Eto.. Easterr. Trust , CIIARLOTTETOWN Phone "II M. Alison Former 3. A. LL. 8. MONEY To LOAN Charlottetown. P. E.l. Bell. Muthleson 8: Foster Barristers. Solicitors. Ibo. R. R. BELL. K.C. D. L. MATHIESON. LL.B.. K.C. G. R. FOSTER. LLB. Leaps on City and Farm Properties. 150 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P. E. 1. Joseph R. MacMillon. iLL.B. BARRISTER. SOLIUITOR. ECO. '15 Queen utroel formation. PRON-L 710 Money to Loon Collection coupu:-rra - INSURANCE I SERVICE c(1fr3C.3?.o3ersJ5onclos iedmltoa :s 181 QUEEN ST. AGENTS '1'!-IROUGHOUT THE PROVINCE ”; ed out by the Reds to aid Chinese f. I Notes By We've received the ment that a supermarket chain has installed a conveyor belt which will carry your purchases from the cashiers' stall to your car. They am working on a side- car which will carry you too. when you collapse upon seeing how lit- tle change you get. grom that 510. bill.- Collier! Magazine. Dominion Bureau of statistics figures on highway traffic, during June, between Canada and the United states show that Canadian border crossings increased by 37 per cent. over June, 1950, while U. S. border crossings showed a gain of 15 per cent. Evidently the cam- paign to have Canadians sec Can- ada. first is not bearing much fmit. - Kitchener-Waterloo Re- cord. Once they called it the cup that cheers. Now it's a national peril. That's the opinion of Sir Alan Herbert. recalling a speech he made in 1945. Said he: "All day long workmen are interrupted by tea. So are offices. workshops. docks and ships. I have seen it all through the war." Before the war we each drank six cups :1 day. Now we go through eight. No one de- nies that tea is a grand thing. What. would the British army have done without its cup of chah? Ev- ery vehicle had its dlxle. And ev- ery stop was brew-up time. But tea was not allowed to interrupt the job. So it should be in Clvvy Street. A cup of tea is good. But at the right. time, and not when there's work to be done.-(Dundee People's Journal). It won't. surprise us If the Rus- sians sooner or later become as disillusioned over China as we did after trying to be helpful. The Communist newspaper in Canton is yowling because 32,000,000 hand- famers to raise better, more fltable crops has gone down the drain. The Canton editors sound just like their American counter- par do when discussing what hap ned to the American tax- payers' money after 1' was passed around to Chlang Kai-shek's Na- tionalists. They rage about mis- appropriation. corruption. arbi- trary allocation and embezzle- ment." Thelr reporters discover that the recipients, who were sup- posed to spend the money for seed. cultivation and irrigation. used it to buy houses, pay for lavish wed- dings. settle grain taxes and even as capital to set up a salt. smuK- gllng enterprise. - Detroit Free Press. pro- From the Ottawa Valley. cradle- land of the Canadian woollen in- dustry. still comes wool cloth high in quality and large in volume The mills there were among the first in Canada and have supplied Canadians for more than 100 years. Growth of the woollen industry in Canada. was the natural outcome of the production of "homespun" cloth of pioneer days. Woollen manufacture changed from a do- mastic matter into a major indus- try. however. when the first wool carding mill in Eastern Canada was opened in the valley in 1830 by James Rosamond in what to- III!!!)H1106- SEPTEMBER 12, 1951 .ii. The Way zw of the century many of an now famous group of valley texm, mm had been established and the 0: tawa Valley was fast bee.-,,,.un' known as textile territory. vukg mills are soundly run and mu; are small. Machinery and equip. mom: is modern and staffs are well trained. Many of the employee, came from families with textile traditions-some are third gang”. tlon descendants of the first work- ers in valley textile mllls...(A;. monte iGazett.e). Recently there have been many headlines about petty graft ma crookedness among U. S. officials, Well, when reading such lines my to argue from the particular to the general. In Washington, 3, 1.3., weeks ago. death came to Stephen Early. Early had been in the While House with Franklin Roosevelt. later served under Truman. was an important cog in the Defence Department. He had chances to graft. But when last week lhev came to probe Early's estate, they found that it was under ssoooo. that his bank deposit was 5100 and that he had S131 in cash "around the house." For every pet. ty grsfter in the U. 5. public 5011'. vice there are tens of thousands like Early - Ottawa Journal. Government censors have mm. ed in on the Bible in Communist. dominated Hungary. A new print- ing of that work, sponsored by the Hungarian Presbyterian Church, was combed over by the censors who eliminated the words: "Thy Kingdom come" from the Lord's Prayer. The official reason given was that "it is dangerous to the children's morale to give them the impression that a perfect regime had not yet arrived. or was com- ing only in the vague i'ui.ure.” The only good thing to be said about this act of perversion is that a re. gime so weak that it cannot even permit boys and girls to say: "Thy Kingdom come" is a regime that cannot last. How sad that so many must. suffer during the few years these Red rogues remain upon their tottering throne. -Montreal Star. A London hlslnrlnn that the art of handwriting been on a steady decline for hundred years and may be peeled to pass in its checks any moment. now. surely there just won't be any handwriting at. all. he says. What is a person going to do with those long winter even- ings he used to spend merrily fig- uring out words in a friend's lef- ler? What are the poor girls of the future going to use for ari- dcnce in their breach of promise cases? How is a person going to know what kind of character he has if he hasn't any handwriting to study? Whose going to work for a diploma without any Spen- cerlsn rurllcues? How is a man going to recognize the handwrit- ing on the wall. if there isn't go- in: to be any? It. looks as if things were getting out of hand. The on- ly compensation is that the art. of announce: has four ex. making squlggles on 99199110"? pads is on the upgrade. and this may open up fields of cxpvrlrnff of which the mere art. of hand- writing never even heard rumors. day is Carleton Place. By the turn -Moose Jaw Times-Herald. PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. A. McGuiqon IAEBISTER. SOLICITOII, EIG- NOTARY. ETC. IARRISTER. SOLICITOI CURBIE BUILDING Motheson. Peaks & Nicholson A. W. MATHESIIN. 5.0. A. El. PEAKE. B.A.. LLB- JOEN P. NICHOLSON. LLR. Barristers. etc Collections - Money To Loan 90 Great George street Chlrlotfefo . Palmer 8: Hoslom A. J. HASLAM. 8.A., LA--B. Bsrrlster. lilo. aunt of Nova Sculls Obombsn Charlottetown. P. E.l. MONEY T0 LOAN BYIIOII J. Ellllll 0. ll. OPTOMETRIST 12854; Kent Street PBONI.-1 I79 Adjoining North American Hotel J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist Eyes examined. glasses tilted Corner Kent Cs Queen su Office Phone I950-House I011 Dr. A. L. Moclsouc nI'.N1'l5T Dental X - Rs! GLORIA BUILDING I79 Grafton St. 4 J. A. CARRI ITIIEBB R 0PTOME'I'RIST PHONE 2872 123 Kent Street mm to Elmpsons Asoncvl Gouda! 8: I-lossord (ilI.BER.'l' A. OAUDET. B. A.. LL I Barristers and Sollcltofl Huey to Mon Canadian Bush of Commerce lid; Phone Ill Dr. .W. R. Carson cums-um. llr. Jolln 5. Siam! Palmer Graduate onanporrsrown summon Phone 107: 201 Prince so. V"”m”' Phone 720 288 Pownsl 3'- Offloo Hours By Appointment M.- mm.-n IANIJOLPII W. MANNING. GA. other offices at Halifax. Monotonp It. lobnil. Amllefitu mouth. Kontvllle. Liverpool, New Olllnw and ll.ll. MIME and GOMPAIY CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT! us omit Goons so Charlottetown Phones 3080 - M11 - Box 341 cums Ills. uonouam. OIJRBII: I 00. ouiassssso sooourmuc-rs Olnliotttitwl nun r. mnmmnsou. OA- True. ((-14 II ssssl. OI I900. (MIND. TII'IIl0..lIIII John. Ihstbroolc. Vuznu. ll:hIsoo labs. Ilnotsu. Ilsumsl. Obanoststown soustnt 1'" 4.-