-chase. and finally deeded to 11: 9u,A,hD.IAN ' Published every weekday morning at 1.1! Prince Stnot ':n..Inttetnwn. P.l.'.l. by tho 'l'homoou.0osnpany Ltd. Kill It. W.. Tomato. hlunlltal Office. as Uutverdly TVWII Bldt. "fjiuvrs Prtuco DIIIM lallll Lilo II: Dun" I-Jdilor. Prank Walker General Manager. In A. Burnett llleniber Canadian Daily Newspaper . " Association Member of tho Canadian Pren . Member Audit Bureau of Circulation: Ii tn-.-vi olliuu ll suinmu-side. Montague and Albertnn A-Ilfif'lll:d as second Class Mail by the Pan offieo Department. Ottawa. By urnei Charlottetown. sumniurnde I1.i.00 per no sum. Eliwwhere III P. E. l. 39.00 Other Provinces and U. S 812.00 per annum TT"The strongest. memory is weaker than the weakest Ink." THURSDAY, SEPT. 22. 1955 The Legion Convention The Canadian Lcgioii, Proviii.-iiil Command, will hold thc iiiciiiorial and opening ceremonies of its an- nual convention at the Prince of Wales College this morning, and it is to be hoped that there will be it large attendance on the part of the general public. as well as of Legion members. A warm civic welcome will be extended by His Worship Mayor Stewart. and His Honour Lieutenant Governor Pl'0llK'P and Premier Matheson will also he pres- ent officially. The convention is being honoured with the pi-csriiice ol the President of the Dominion (ioni- mand. the Very Rev. .lohn Anderson. Rector of Christ Church Cathedral. Ottawa. and other Dominion offici- als. The occasion will be an impres- sive one, of great interest and im- portance to all our citizens. When a branch of the Great War Veterans Association was fornictl hero in October, 1918, the First World War was still in progress. The first bylaws of the Branch were adopted in October, l9l9. and were printed with the following in- scription on the cover: ”l-Tear God. Honour the King. Learn Citizen- ship, Follow Duty, Practise Discip- line. Think Broadly. Perpetiiatc Comradeship." The Branch met in a room on the third floor of what was known as the Offer building. on Queen Street, and returning veter- ans were welcomed there by their comrades in arms until the following year. when the present home was secured by an agreement of pur- the Legion in December. T926. It has been enlarged on several occasioiis. and since that time its facilities have been enjoyed by thousands of visit- ing service men as Well as by our own l.egion members. The G. W. V. A. went out of existence locally in 1927:. merging with the Canadian Legion of the British Empire Service League but retaining its 0I'lElll?ll aims and objectives and broadening mil into a great Province-wide or- ganization, in close union with sim- ilar organizations across Caniidii working together under a Dominion Command for the improvcmcnl 0! conditions of ex-seiwice men and their dependents. and for the hctlci ment of Canada generally. The influence cxerlerl Irv lll' Legion has been all the grcator ho p it is non-sectarian and non its members are united hv the common bond of wartmic scrvice to their coiintry. zuirl 01 dedication to pcacclimc scrvicc or the same high level. It is under cause political. Legion auspices that we p.'ll'lll'lll.'tll each year in Remerribrancc Day. and this function of pPl'pvtll&illllE th' memory of ("alien comrarics may tr described as the core of tho wholi great movcmcnt. It tiikcs tirir-.rit,i ovcr ci'ci'y other litisiiicss at l csiior meetings. as it will do this morning in the solemn nicmoriiil which all our citizens will be privil- eged to attend. Work Oi WHO Another United Nations agent; that frequently comes under cril icism is the World Health Org iiizii tion. Yet, judged by its accomplish ments, to say nothing or its well- planned programs for the future, it must be regarded as an instrument of service. An official report is sued by a special U. N. committee lists some of its good works. as fol lows: By bringing scientific treat ment to bear on yaws, whit-li for centuries has shared with lTlltl&ll'll sci vicc ' the place of the most terrible scoilrgr among peoples of the Far East, that itllsease is being rapidly brought un- tier control. By 1950. the T990" says.-"this-.-ddlllmnl Ind 600"- , disease will hay: toha serious problem- N7-l-:-ta. lot, is li' ”" (”!”"I"il'"fl. though pcrliagis not qui.e so rapid- ly. For a while it seemed that DDT was the answer to that malady. In ' recent. months, however. it has been noted that malaria carrying mos- quitoes were building up resistance to the insecticide. That fact has turned the program of control into one of eradication. a goal expected to he rczit-lied. or nearly so, by 1960. Tllili'l'f'lll0SlS is resisting the advance of nicdical science more stubbornly lllilll the other diseases mentioned I-.”-. vii so, progress is being made; and at tile pi-t-.-ciit time the largest anti- tubcrculosis campaign ever attempt- cd anywhere in the world is under it ay in India. In addition to all this. pliuis are afoot to make most of the coiiiilrics of Southeast Asia self suf- ficiciit in drugs, vaccines, and other iiicdical means necessary for the pl'Pti'llll(lll or control of disease. All this. of course. means that. as time goes on, the rate of popula- tion incrcases in those lands will rise very considerably. That. in turn. will prescnt new problems. If, with the present high death rates, the penplcs of those areas are in a con- tinuing state of hunger or even semi- starvation, what hope will there be for thciii when medical science has eradicated the plagues that hereto- fore have c h e c k e d population growth? That is a real problem. of coiirse; but, somehow the well fed peoples of the world will have to learn to overcome it. In any event. from the humanitarian viewpoint. it would be grossly criminal to al- low over half of the world's popula- tion to continue in bondage to con- trollable diseases, merely for econ- omic reasons. Dentai Training Facilities Some weeks ago. The Guardian carried a report of the strong case for Federal aid to dental schools made in the House of Commons by Mr. George Hees, Progressive Con- servative member for Broadview. Mr. iii-es quoted figures to show that the output of dentists from Canadian schools was failing to keep up with the increase in p0plllatl0l'l and that during the past ten years four times the number of applicants have applied to study dentistry as could be admitted to existing schools. Dental services are an essential part of our health program and be- cause of a bad situation which has been growing worse, it is encourag- iitg to note the recent announcement from Dr. A. E. Kerr, President 01 l)iilll()llSlP University, that a new dcntal building at. Dalhousie will en- able the University to double its en- rolmciit of dental students. This is of particular importaiici in the Atlantic Provinces becausc llullioiisie provides the only dental school in this area and because our l'.'lllll of dentists to population (1 to ?...'i(l0l is second lowest in Canada. and the Canadian ratio itself is dan- -.;ct-otisly low. For some years the ('ati;idian Dental Association has licoii urging the establishment of now dental schools and the expan- sinii of cxisting ones. Since it, is coiisidercd that, one such school is eiilli iciit for the four Atlantic Provinces. the decision to enlarge and improve the facilities at Dal- lioiisio will be hailed as good news for the Atlantic region. EDITORIAL NOTES A rcscarclier with a flair for the uiiii.-ual has been inquiring into game liuntcrs. their kills, their misses. and tlicir alibis. Following are a few oi his findings: Less than 309. of all liiinii-is bring home anything. St)". oi" tlir-m get. a shot; of these. more than 70',-. miss; and of these, near- ly i"0',., blame the gun. the am- munition-anything, in fact, but tlicir own poor marksmanship. Strange as it may seem. big Same like deer are missed more often than littlc items like ducks and rabbits. . "l-iinance Minister Walter Hart-15' optimistic Charlottetown speech has -led to speculation here that another round of tax reductions may mater- izilizc in the next budget," says the ' Montreal Gazette. "The fact that the total value of Canadian goods ahd services for the year is likely to exceed estimates at the time the last' budget was presented, means that the forecast defldt of 3160.000.000 will be slashed. ,And a relatively mull deficit, let alone a urplul. would be regarded in official circles here I an excellent reason for an- other tax, yellef allot-in-the-son -for ff Montreal Gazette in The Sunday Times the other- day was a remarkable article. It was remarkable because the writer Cyril Ray. described the rare ex- perience of coming upon two happy men in the one day. He had gone from London up to the sheep-raising country in the cool. grey Durham uplands. He was' in the land of the shepherds. He came upon a wiry, brown-faced man, wearing a cloth cap and with a sprig of white heather in the lapel of his coat. He was leaning on a four-foot-six crook, with a horn handle. His name was Robert Fraser. He was minding sheep on the high Northiimberland tells. just a mile north of where he was born and where his father had minded sheep before him. He was a man getting on to fifty. Cyril Ray asked him whether he'd take to shepherding if he had his timeovcr again, He only laugh- ed. as though asking such a quest- ion vrzu: an odd sort of joke. He began talking about his dogs. Ay. tlicrels lazy ones and stupid uncs, sainc as wil bairns." he said. Bad-tempered ones too, I sup- puse'?" he was asked. He answer- ed. Nay. nay. a guid dogis never lmd-icmpcrcti. oily more than a guid man ever is." And again he said: if ye beat a ting. why they'd never hae any more confidence in ya. A firm hand on the neck. and speak sort o" sharp -- that's more than enough: Dogs are awfii' sensitive." As Cyril went on. he thought of this man out beneath the sky. so contented with his lot that he had not thought of questioning it. And he found another contented man in the same day. The same question was pill to him. Like in do summat else?” hc replicil. Thatis a daft thing to axe: Ah shouldn't be a shepherd if Ah wanted to do siimmat else. Ah'm big enough to please my mcsen. Some folk work to live, lad and some folk live to work; me. Ah pickcd mi hobby as 'mi work. There-'s chaps as works on th' water-works near us an don't really work-they nnbbiit pill in time. and miserable beggars they are. an' all. ...Nay, lad, Ah doan't want nowt in lifc. nohbut a hit o' shepherding." Perhaps happiness, like health. belongs most to those who do not question it. The danger is that the pursuit of happiness may replace its capture. Man never is. but al- ways to be blessed. And the pursuit may outrun life itself. so that, even at the end. the goal will be still beyond reach Happier by far are those who find their happiness coming to them. as part of living. Those who work towards happiness. as to- wards in distant goal. are unlikely ever to reach it. They are surpassed by those who find that happiness grows in the soil of everyday. Perhaps the greatest defence of happiness in life itself was that given by the gypsy. Jasper. to the English wanderer. George Borrow. More than a century ago. Borrow. in his book Lavengro." told how he found Jasper sitting and watch- ing the sun going down over the heath. Life brother.” said Do you think so?" asked Bor- Jasper. row. , night, brother. both sweet things: sun. moon. and stars. brother. all sweet things; there's likewise a wind on the heath. Life's very sweet brother: who would with to die?" Jasper was so thankful for the wand:-r of the world that he said he would llkr to live forever. In sickness. Jasper?" There's the sun and stars. broth- E... ln,hllndness. Jasper?" There's the wind on the heath. is sweet. lleouuonlyfodthoqlwoau, OTTAWA (C?)-A on that airport for located about 10 miles gladly live forever." Perhaps the search for happiness may become the means of losing it. The thing sought is at hand: the long pursuit may place it at I distance. So it is that many. having travel- led far in search of their happiness begin to look back. and find that they have left it behind them. and that it was always there. though they did not see it. Their life may become an eager journeying home. a long road back to the very thing- they thought was far ahead. Fortunate are those who feel their happiness at hand and jour- ney with it. In their lnng journey- ing. their happiness becomes an old companion. much trusted be- cause long known, as someone who had come a long way and will not leave before the end. : 0--974! Mira JET AND GARDEN ' The plane in flight I cannot see Briefly divides infinity, Since man. progressing. must employ Speed as a supplement to joy. when sound as maniac as doom Breaks on these ordered ranks of bloom Neither a stem nor petal alters. It is the human hand that fal- ters. It is the human heart that gropu Backward toward unfissioned hopes . . . . The calm leaves, knowing what they know. Move in the air, eternal. slow. -Sarah Litsey. Parental Worries Ottawa Cltlun Older people greet the opening of another school year with afmix- ture of hope and worry. They hope i that tho younger generation will turn out to be the best yet. But. they worry about the cost of edu- cating a rapidly rising school population. In Ottawa, for instance, six new elementary grade build- ings and several additions will absorb the inflow only temporarily. The quality of education, too, will again come under fire. The University of Toronto may once more complain of students who display "immature thoughts. set down in a crabbed and slovenly hand. miserably expressed and wretchedly spelled." Many will sympathize with "A Parent's. Plea": My little boy is eight years old He goes to school each day. He doesnit mind the tasks they set They seem to him but play. He heads his class at raffia work. And also takes the lead At making dlnky paper boats- Biil I wish that he could read. Tlicy teach him physiology. And Oh. it chills our liearis. To hear our prattling innocent Mix up his inward parts. i He also learn: astronomy And names the stars by night; Of course "he's very up to date But I wish that he could write. They teacli him things botanical, Thcy teach him how to draw, l He babbles of mythology, And gi-avitation's law, And the discoveries of science I With him are quite a fad ; They tell me he's a clever boy, But I wish that he could add. Yet contemporary-s o u n d l n 3 though it is, the scolding of Tor- untols freshmen was delivered iii the good old days of 1894, when some think education was really sound. Moreover, the parent's plea predates the current controversies about "frills" and ”prngressive" notions. it was pointed early in this century. Dr. Harold Campbell of British Columbia's department of education recalled a while ago, 0" Heating by the Ontario essayist. Peter Household Appliances McArthiir. The schools. it seems, Tekwkio are criticized in every ago. And so they should be. for constructive ' criticism can bring ahoiit im- Gf.Qf.GvQo, sf, provcments. - Medically Speaking By Ileana: N. llundesu, I. I. THREE NEW DRUGS HELP TO BELIEVE IUFEBING Medical science never rests. New drugs constantly are being develop- ed to keep you in good health and to return you to health once you become ill or injured in any way. In our monthly review of medi- cine, today we'll discuss the fol- lowing new drugs: BUTIBEL - an antlspasmodic sedative, for use in ulcerative co- litis. peptic ulcer, acute and chronic diarrhea. heartburn. dys- pepsia and other ailments. it is wlso reported to be of value in 'reatmen't of dysmenoi-rhea and lie menopause. The drug can be obtained only through a prescription. it is aken by mouth. one tablet or one ti-aspoonful three times daily. For -liildren. the dosage should be cut it half and for youngsters under S. one-fourth to one-half teaspoon- lul according to age and weight. COBASAL - a ii anti-tlieumatli. drug. offers s fourfold attack on arthritis and allied conditions. It acts as an anti-inflammatory agent by delaying and minimiz- ing local tissue reaction cussed by chemical as well as physical irritants. LIVER DAMAGE it also serves as A guard against liver damage and gives relief of gastrointestinal and other symp- toms frequently encountered in arthritic and rheumatic patients. Sllzxested oral dosage is two tablets every four hours. Cobasal can be obtained only with I doc- tor's prescription. NOLUDAR-s non-barbiturate sedative-hypnotic. which usually brings sleep in half an hour. The action lasts an average of six to seven hours. Clinical tests were made with the cooperation of more than 3.000 patients. These tests indi- cate little. if any, likelihood of hangover or other after effects. In smaller doses. it can by used effectively as a sedative or day- time tension. 1! is avslla le only by I doctor's prescription. ' QUESTION AND ANSWER .B.E.N.: I have been troubled with I catarrhal condition since childhood. Is there any can for it? ANSWER: This conditi be the result of an i..re:i'.'.,:' .1: the throat, the tonsils or the sinuses. A crooked nasal bone or Dolyps in the nose may also eauu this disorder. A thorou h and ca . lnstion shougld be m8ll:eL)u)! rm. siclan to determine the source of the excessive secretions; than proper treatment can be sug. Rested for the condition. ---.m. NEW BOOKS COMING BALA. 0nt.. (CP)-Two Canad- ian authors-Mazo d. 1; Roch, of tho widely-read "Jalna" ggf. leg and Brantford-born Thomas Contain of New York-are vac. ationlng here this week, Mr Costaln. who since beginning novel writing at 57 has written several best sellers. said he has just completed his latest work, "The Tontlne." Miss de la Roche said her forthcoming book in ”The Sons of Lambert." Burke - Electric Authorized T Dealer . Electrical Wiring Repairing and Supplies. "0." 3-ul A Wand'ring l.'o?c " The X”-i-lorin 1'-nic-I A new gadget. a device to assist babysitters iii siifiiluiiig their ob- streperous cliargfcs. is reported from England. It appears that fl businessman of Nottingham, who heard that his baby-sitter had had trouble with his five youngsters. cut a phonograph record on which his voice sternly reprimanded the urchins and admonished them in be good. The recording. says the report. worked wonders. The children. ac- customed to heeding their father when he spoke in that tone of voice. were properly attentive to the record. and the baby-sitter's cries tension to other ltlds. Some In- (onions wife is bound eventually to seize upon the Idea and have her husband's Inployer cut a disc. for use It borne, exhortln Mm to (xii-o igfes of labor. Or-even more ble thought-some boss may have the voice of his em- ploye'a wlfo put on plastic. so that coffee breaks, ldlfug by the water thc loriii of at private lor czicli iiitiividual. ' clt-,-lroiiii device a poc';rt rccnri michl issue good advice. in the in:-r's own voice. when he was ziliuit to commit some mean or sinful act. iiere might be the means of starting a whole new era of im- pcccable human conduct. The trouble is. however. that no one who now disregards the still. small voice within him at such times would be likely to give greater heed to a mechanical' reproduced conscience. In such cases silence speaks louder than words to him that hath ears to hear. . The Age Old Story For my thought: are not your thoughts. neither are your way: my ways. saith tho Lord. For 8 the heaven on ldglior llin tho earth. so are my ways hfgher than you van. and my ammo an ounAN ow:-ins ws:An uonon - For Your Drya&nhN&” mm:-T W000 lSl.MtlS-MWIIOI FERRV SERVICE Daily from each terminal: 7 n.m.. 9 a.m.. ll a.m. l p.m.. It pm. 5 p.m. STANDARD TIME For daily report dial CFCY on first weather broadcast Catch an early crossing and avoid delay Reservations Limited. For particulars t t NOR FERRE LMITED Charlottetown. P. I. Hi ltolrlgimtloo T lepolro To All IIIIC APPLIANCE sun 3 sinvim MOTORS it NOTES av rights at all but only privileges, pri- vileges which may only be accord- ed justly with a sense of whorls right - and safe - for the com- munity as I whole. and which may be retained only if they are not abused. The world would be a bet- ter place lf it had fewer people shouting about their rights andl more understanding their obli- gations and duties. And the world would be a better place. too. if more realized that privileges in- volve responslbllhlen.-Ottawa Journal. Back in 1939 30 per cent of Ca- nada's labor force had jobs in au- riculture. In 1946 the percentage had been reduced to 25. In the most recent survey, covering 1954, the number has been further dras- tically reduced to 16 per cent. or 58.000 Canadians. This very heavy reduction has not. howovor. result- ed in reduced form production. If the reductions should continue, the situation would be reason for very serloua alarm. The reductions ac- tually are indicative of the tie- mendous mechanization which has i taken place on the farms of the nation. Whether that mechaniz- ation can be viewed as a direct result of the mechanization is something for the economic ex- perts to puzzle out.-Owen Sound Sun-Times. - C'0""'0l'fl Mule enthusiasts hi "II! have asked the Minister of Education to make cross-words a school subject. Perhaps a word Same has a place in the school curriculum, but what use can be : ""59 0' ml!!! cross-word puule i words to the business of daily Ilvlnz? The English books used to advise learning I new ord every day-"Use it in a sentence and Page 4 The Guardian THE WAY hard to work words like Lt)! In Auk. bolunoth into a that would arouse any.-W tuest. There's something 5 take into oonaidei-ation:Let t word DI-Ixllel Set into the ct: lum and you'll hear a aq- froln scrabble enthusiasts, (Hm Players and those who in dotie on lexicon. They'll want fliei games in the wrrlculum,too, an. we can't possibly have school re duced entirely to funa d game, -Montreal Star. There lingers to mankind, .1. most like on instinct, I fear 0' starvation and it is probably um which plays an unconscious put in compelling the over-eating hat; its of many. But in the midst at the abundance of a modern clvl. llzatlon starvation is remote and cannofbo confused with the real condition in which the dread know. ledge that food cannot be obtained havoc with the body.-I-Iamlitm. Specular. Things look different around the town this week. While Klnchrdine has not dropped to the deserted village level, the departure or M sldents from summer colony her. and at adjoining beaches leave. . noticeable population gap. As nor. mal activities an resumed, the" but there is a hiatus of a week or so between the two periods in which the absence of scantily clad females and peculiarly dressed males is more noticeable than heir presence. It's something sim- ilar to missing I minor toothache -Klncardlne News. "If it is a good road." the man said. "it is so full of other mo- torists that you do not got then. H lt ll not full of motorists, it pro- bably does not go when you want to go. If you get there. you pray bably will not find anywhere to park." It was the Duke of Edin- burgh speaklng. And it was about English roads and parking condi- tions ho was complaining. But ii there Anyone who will deny that he could well have been talking about conditions in many parts of the United States? Yes ,even in 'w"iscousln and Milwaukee.-Mil WI Yours forever." But ls' awfully Liv.: (2I'tow'n 10:00 A.M. Lv.: North Luke 6:30 A.M. Phone Gh'town 3498 The motor vesse' Blue For space reservations to:- NOTICE CHANGIS N ISLAND MOTOR TRAN-SPO-RT LTD. FALL BUS SCHEDULES HFICTWI SEPT. 25. 195! FOR BOSTON - NEW YORK - MONTBEAL.. Lv.: staid: 11:1!) A.M.. Daily. A!'.: S'sHe 4:10 P.M. Ar.: Ch'town 5:5 P.M.. Duly. FOR. WOOD ISLAND (with connection) F0 NOVA SCOTIA ,POINTS- Lv.: C.h'town 9:30 A.M., Daily. A1-.: Grtown 3:40 P.M.. Dally tron soums and Noimi LAKE- Lv.: Clftowii 4:30 P.M.. Dally except Sunday mu soums nus WILL OPERATE INTO You at BEDFORD DAILY ALL onmn SCHEDULES iuIiMAiN mu SAME FOR iNromuA'r1oN M. V. Blue Prince cargo and produce at Summerside, September 24th. and at Charlottetown. September 26th. MMFARLANE PRODUCE 00., Siimmerslde, or NEWFOUNDLAND SHIPPING SERVICE. Charlottetown. wnukeo Journal. Lv.: Sourls 1:15. AM. Summon-side 2822 Prince will load general and freight .rates, appb II. A. Former, look of Commerce Bldg. Allison M. Gilli. LLB. ll Illchmsol Q. Ill 00 A.Wa.lthou0sudot..l.l..B. Puiuullu. Iuonnult Polmorllluhn ousunanlouuoluc Isthuogruhol Nlohohoo monuuouuu LA. cannon. opus: gpug OhI.B.Ia&NLI.A. ' PROFESS'0NAl CARDS BARPISTERS touctioas. Etc. -njfi. 3g,-g;ggg;fMrm7F- 0PTOMETRlSTS T ..'.'.'.f.";;”i.”""'”"”'.9.;..'3'tz .(:Ei2.g9.T”."'W"&h::a J. A. om-uiitm. RD. '1! 'L."LE .. .'1'.!'.?!B Byron J. Grant. 0.!)- iu Kent mg, 91-1 55!; -l ' Taylor, ll.0. Corner lost 0 Glen 51!- ggofflco Dull loss. 4750 II J Mobol. lI.0. "nu... P. I. l CHIROPRA-CTTAQI: oi rrt?i:hl.'n'0'm:-I” Aizci-tnscf: 0 Keith Plekhnd. in out-no I. in on lftf'.I.A.l-gi-” m, Ioofhoo I lnloot ml" '. '1isoum I” 3 81 I. & Z . P.-Man. Dial Mt! . CHARTERED Accountants an ” iuooit I h 4 , "' I. "Foss": a plays upon the mind and wreaks won't time to notice the d,l'op'