e Guardian. Charlotetown. Mon., Feb. 11, 1988. ‘2 . 3r , , » ‘ . - L”, .. it. n . WIN TITLE, SHARE MALT l.iu'la .\nn Ward. 15. and crown at the 1965 Canadian cl t'urpcuter. 18. of Galt. Figure Skating championships WILL. celebrate with 8 mal in onton. Interim’ newspapers oil to fill N .Y. void By IRISH DONNELLY ;\V YORK (AP) — Three ‘the strike was 60,000 and which llf‘l‘ “Inning the junior pairs n- tl'k city's nine major dailies. cementing them are out-of—I The Standard is edited by n newspapers, whose circu-tHarry L. Welker Jr., formerly ion here has increased ire-lot Tlte Herald Tribune syndi- ,/ eiidously since a printers‘ teale. It is published by Uni-Serv like caused the local newspa- Corporation. operators of the rs to close up shop 64 days Uni-Card Credit Card Company, n. as a public service to customers 100.000. Theland the public With a staff recruited largely remains. new papers, the void slributcd daily the on Sunday. like llL‘L‘Hll. And the news con-I nt. understandably. le 3 v e s ' itch to be desired. says read- s hungry for more local l‘ili mg a great deal of money. W'rc breaking even and a little over . . . it's a helluva thin line.” He has no wire service news agency to provide national and ,international news to supple- iorniu: except Satur a and ‘5 ment the copy furnished by his annluc a circulation of moregown staffers. ldtl 300.000. V E representative edition in- Theu there's The Daily Re-lcluded Wadhington. Albany. Ot- ot'l. another tabloid published i tawa. Bonn. Paris and London louliny through Friday, boast- dafeilnes. as well as many New circulation approaching York stories. Much of the for- und The Metropolitan eign news was attributed to the Pnl‘lllil the newspapers newl lown is the New York Stand~l 'II .I tabloid publishing cac’h ally. also a tabloid, claiming American Broadcasting Com- i?3.tttlti daily distribution Mon- pany. ai- liii‘nuilll Friday mornings. Sports. business. television the papers have described,aiid theatrical news was in- hctuselyes zis "Interim' publi-,cluded. allow, with no thought of con- Most of the advertising came intuu: once the strike is over. ‘from New York businesses. but A fourth paper born of the tnatlonal advertising was repre- ll'lkt‘. the New York Chronicle. isented. too. titled after publishing for a‘ The Daily Report and The eclt. [is editor. Stanford Opo- jMetropolitan Daily follow a for- Dlt‘sky. blamed the death of the imat similar to The Standards. BIIN‘ on “distribution prob—I lndustrlalist — publisher For- Bms." tune Pope heads The Daily Re- The .‘LHlldal'fl - sized newspa- port. published in the plant of tor had been printed at Mount ‘ ll Progresso Italo Americana. of Isco. N.Y.. and shipped somejwhieh Pope also is publisher. Dnules south to the city. Opo- ‘Charles Hagedorn is editor and W-‘kl' is an editor of the shut- ! publisher of The Metropolitan own New York Post. tDaily. published in the plant of TN! New York City newspa» Town and Village, a weekly it“ not affected by the strike Hagedom was turning out be- an“ reaped rich circulation ‘fore the newspaper strike be- ams. They are the Brooklyn gan r ' acceptable... the truth remains V only be a secondary considera- » of truth itself were propagan- . dists not historians. \V Versailles, which ended hostili- .. ' lily" ofhlstorlans bear some re- . ‘sponslbiliiy for undermining the Daily. whose circulation before wr its that of out-of4own dailies, from personnel of the strike- Said Welker: "We're not mak- Each year, hundreds of peo- ple address audiencos acro Cfimada on the subject of electri. c y. It is a subject familiar to us all about a phenomena now ac- cepted and taken for granted. People have lived with. a n d used the power of electricity to make life easier at work and at play. and its benefits are ac- cepted without question and without much thought. Difficult as it mry be to vis- ualize a time when this wonder- ful convenient power was not It was not always trusted. Back in 1900, a writer with In American magazine prepar- ed an article pleading the cause ‘ History's main role is stated MONTREAL tCP) — The his- torian's main responsibility is to find out the truth about what has happened in the past. Brltlsn historian A. L. Rowse said To day night in a guest lecture Mchl University. The effects of the truth Should es at tilon. Those who put them ahead lnsistlng that the Treaty of ties between Germany and the Allied powers in 1919. was not unjust he said “a small minor‘ rtrcazy. encouraging the relapse of the United States into isola- tionism and paving the way for the Second World War. The treaty “was all too con- siderate and liberal in its treat- ment of Germany." He said Britain and France have had to band together in the 20th century. Separately. lthcy would each have been at Germany’s mercy. ‘I can only say now, as an historian. that France‘s attitude in the 19205, in insisting on the treaty. (Versailles) was roughly right. and we (the British) and |the Americans. in undermining !it to please the Germans, were org. "I dare say this is an element w newspapers are trying gal- t now claims . the in Fiance's attitude today and, ntly. if futilely. to fill the void iBrooklyn Eagle. claiming 150.— lf so it is understandable." it by the blackout of New‘000 daily circulation-—up about of the overworked housewife1 s.- and urged electrical aids for the 1 home of the future. But. he con- . 9t ELECTRICITY TERMED “summon or Mlasclrs _ _ VI World’s progress is linked to electrical advances in a different way. They think I suits are seen... but what it is, of it in terms of the elevation of man. As was previously stated remains unknown it cannot be stored. It must eluded his article with the fol- I —It provides economic security ‘be produced at the moment it is lowing stern warning: HARD WORK GOOD “In the day when the electri- cal home is commonplace. there will be one thing to be looked} after very carefully. The m a n; of the house will insist on hav-‘ ing a motor attached to the lawnmower. This must be pre-. Vented”. he cautioned— “for ai certain amount of hard. labor- ious work out of doors ll good for any man who sits cooped up I in the house all day long". . No one ll prepared to argue" the wisdom of this man's re- marks. he would not likely ob- Ject too strenuously now to the electric lawnmower. In a later the —electricity powers paragrat e summ up value of electricity with these w ordl: “The note of the age is doing things on the wholesale plan— °‘ The turning out of thousa n dl upon thousands of articles sub- stantially identical has made commercial prosperity p.o sai- ble." “It has increased the total output of the sum of human en- ergy and has made the average man of today richer than the average man of any other day. Making him richer, it h a 5 made him more free, and mak- ing him freer. it has made him more intelligent". Now electniclty may not have made man more intelligent...but who will argue that by relieving man of drudget it has given him the time. the wealth a n d the opportunity to better him- a fb .— n. For this reason when electrical industry uses the theme “Electniclty P o w e r s Progress" as is done for N a- tional Electrical Week, 1983- rogress can be regarded as a ing of many sides with many ifferent meanings. NATIONAL BENEFITS Many people, like the author quoted earlier. would define pro- gress in terms of material bene- fits. They would have in any obvious reasons for doing so. For more than 80 years, progress enjoyed by all people can be attributed to electrical p o w e r. Without it nations are undeveloped. with it. they have the key to self improvement. For electricity has multiplied productive capacity. crest e d time saving conveniences. sti- mulated miracles in science and medicine, led mankind to th e threshold of space travel and at the very same time to the high- the TV NEWS DIRECTOR station manager of CBLT in Toronto. has been appointed TV news director for the CBC In Toronto. it was learned Satur- day. He succeeds Laurence Duf- fey. who is to become CBC TV news supervisor in London. England. The end 0 TORONTO (CM—John Lant. electricity is not yet in Sight. est standard of living in th e history of mankind f the benefits of A recent historical article re- vealed the first streetlights in lCanada were erected in Pem- |broke in October, 1884. Five streetlights approved by th e town council were on from dusk until 1 o'clock in the morning. thers may define progress or underdeveloped nations. becomes the valid measurement of a nations strength and II force to preserve its beliefs and way of life. It is essential to the rev search that frees man from dls- ‘ ease. it is the power by which] we communicate one pers o n‘ with another—and one It a tion‘. with another. I GUIDES SHIPS be some electrical beam that radar used to defend our way of‘ life in time of war. is now used to guide ships of trade and com-l merce and the commercial air-; liner across now no a c c f u I} skies. i If we examine both premises} material 3 progress and electricity powv-ral social progress. we arrive at the true benefit of electricity. E-ichl us must have our own inter-I pretatlon on which is the most‘ important. l I Like the two mountain climb- ers who were lost atop a snow‘ covered mountain. Just as they were about to give up hope.i they saw a Saint Bernard dogl coming toward them with the familiar keg of brandy about its , neck. I “ k. cried one— “H e r e . comes man‘s best friend". i er climber— “and that S a i n ti Bernard is carrying it". i Like the climbers it all de- pends on your point 0': view. COME LONG WAY i But regardless of point of view, electricity has come long way in the past six decad- es and so has acceptance of its benefits. Regardless of point of view, the fact is that electricity can take credit for helping in practically every field of man‘s endeavour. There is no other industry. no other business. no field of hu- man enterprise that has exerted greater influence on our way of life than the electrical industry. That is why during National Electrical Week. tribute is paid to the pioneers of this industry. The Week at the time of Edi- son's birthday on Feb. 11. be- cause this first practical incand- escent lamp began a whole new I era. He did not invent electricw lty. but he was among the first; who taught people how to usei t. In He 1 which that is not only 'nVIsible cannot be weighed nor have physical dimensions. It can be it, , acknowledged the oth- .own energy still have the right Ielped create an industry. is quite different fro m have not been confined to the , most other industries. It is the home or industry. The In odernl only one which sells a product farmer has almost 400 labour -: ‘ ' b u t [saving electrical devices avail-i i controlled and measured: its re- telcctricity. have all iii of requ'red. It must be ready cannot be temporarily out ck. The electnical industry.— the manufacturers. the utility. the! contractor :‘n the dealer we worked together to provide for; such requirements. So well. in n n O fact. that very few of us c a n tam imagine a world without elec- icit . Electrical power is vital to our country. Only three nations- in the world —the United Stat- es, Russia and the United King- dom produce more power than Canada. and they have from three to 14 times our population. Only one nation in the world- and that is Norway— uses more electrical energy on a per cap- ita basis. In 1910, the average house-t wife had only 19 electrical appli- ances available to her. Tod ste has more than 100 w lth‘. many more in the development’ stage. Whether we need electri- cal tooth brushes that sound al disccrdrnt note when the teeth! are brushed improperly can be debated 3' the dream of every farmer and The housewife of the future Will find more and more of her i chores are taken over by elec- Quiet and more emc em‘ tricity. The operation of th e As someone so aptly descljib- home will be ('tlnll'flllf‘tl by punt. ed the farm electrical revolubxon buttons. Sh, will adjust th , - - -"W01'd 30‘ “Found “‘3' “’1” temperature and the tumidily ' \\ll comforts made possible by mod-‘ ern appliances plus I: I e c trlcal equipment to make his w o r k rooms and a both were better of Individual moms, the "13‘" “V9 mom“ and “ bmh *‘nd change the colour of the walls so the hand pump. cistern pump and the lighting to suit the oc- and force pump were repluccd canon, By changing lhi‘ tlzm ml with an electrical pressure IyI- electricity she can make a stun- "- 9 unit a quick-freeze or an oxen. This might have been the first, Then will be ultrasonic sinks I!” to a new type 0‘ tannin"— to wash dishes with uouud. and where food and Prfiduc‘t- are t blankets that cool in the. sh m. moved electrically. where mavi n)?" and 1m... in H... t. chlnery such as electrical milk- Dusting will be d”... “m. ‘03 eqummem has "0' only magic electro-static “and that made work easier. but the pro will gather dust to it like duct safer. magnet, Such advances prompted one It may sound fantastic but not W911 known “rm equPmem one thin has been mentioned manufacturer to remark public- that hurt .Iready been date. ly this fall 7 "push llllll"il lurm- loved, ‘ ing is gathering momentum and . . . . _ the applicant," "f electrical “I Electilclty will fIIIlhei reiol a pie \Iill I-.iouize industry and commerce. Already more than 00 per cent of all manufacturing machinery r is powered by electricity. Com- puters can already do in minut- es what it look a group of en- Hincers months to accomplish. 1 Electric furnaces produce but close to the temperature of the sun. And molecular electronics -—a part of the electrical indus- tl'y,\'~- has already made po s- SIh‘e the exploration of space and the relaying of mistrial” ll'fml this country to Europe. We are entering a truly new and remarkable era. It is a time \\ hen more and more peo- make electricity work for them. it will add new streng- th to the phrase “Electricity Pout-rs Progress‘, This is the electrical indus- try‘s proud claim— only during electrical week. but every week of every year fo r many years to come. war In making it possible. It is it is up to the manufacturers to make the dream come true". 1 So now, we can see just how complete is the influence electricity. And it isn'tfinished yet. Heariily But you cannot say that it won't do a goo job on your teeth and those who prefer to clean their teeth with h e i r to do so. ALWAYS THE WAY And this has always been the way. When the first elecnic mot- or was introduced in a Toronto coffee shop to grind coffee, on irate minister described it as an implement of the devil. He may have been right at that. for it ran out of control and e poor merchant bed to grind everything he could find to prec vent it from heating up while somebody ran to find how to shut it off. The minister said it would free domestics from honest toil to walk the streets. And taking a cue from his remarks. a group of housewives tnied to prevent home electricity be- cause female domestics working only 14 or 15 hours a day would face temptation. . As we all‘ know. electricity survived these early fears and- discouragements and electrical appliances have not only multi- plied in number but have in- creased to efficiency. The b e n e f i t s of electricity able to his industry. He can. be- i cause of the widespread use of the home "RED SEAL“ ADEQUATE , WIRING To HELP YOU LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY “Member of P.E.I. Service Electric League" CONNIE, LeCLAIR Building Contractor 64 Orlebar St. ' Charlottetown , Graham’s Road SWITCH ELECTRICITY CAN BE YOUR FRIEND IT CAN ALSO BE YOUR ENEMY ALWAYS Have competent electricians attend to your electrical problems. Inserted by FIRE PREVENTION BUREAU City of Charlottetown We Recommend Rod Soul Wiring for Safety and Satisfaction. . Live Better octricolly 0 Make octricil'y WM! ’9' Y9“- FREE ESTIMATES . . . we are a member of the Electric Service League of P. E. I Preston Mclure Member of Electric Service League of P.E.l. Phone 143.2 Montague Wiring for IOOFIrn-oySr. PALMER Electric Lid. Charlottetown Electrical Contractors ELECTRICAL SERVICE We Recommend "RED SEAL" ' SAFETY ‘ ° SATISFACTION 0 Malta Electricity work for you 0 Live boner Electricohy We Service What I We Sell. Member Electrlo Service League of P31. Palmer Electric ltd. Dial 4-8543 obligation. Today’s Electric Power IS THE KEY TO TOMORROW’S PROGRESS! Kent Street To "RED SEAL” wiring system and assure yourself of safe Elec- trical Equipment. For safety's sake have a real good wiring job done by a reliable electrical contractor. No job is to big or too small. FREE ESTIMATES given without Chas. STEWART Charlottetown Dial 4-5036 National Electric Week being celebrated through- out Canada focuses attention on the contribution electricity has made to the economic strength of our country and our Canadian way of life. It to appropriate that the neck of Feb. 10 to 16 was chosen because it is within this week, of Feb. 11, that we celebrate the birth of Thomas Alva. Edison. BURKE ELECTRIC LTD. "Member of P.E.l. Electric Service lune" Chuflm designated as and life. and electricity, in this observance. w The Rogers Hardware Co. ltd. ' We Strongly the ,P.E.I.'S Largest Stocking Electrical Queen Street . EARL CAMPBELL I The RED SEAL Standard of Adequate Wiring “RED SEAL“ .ADEQUATE " WIRING MR. EARl CAMPBELL Member P.E.l. Electric Service League A: PROBLAMATION Whereas the week of February I0+h - lblh. 1963 has Been NATIONAL ELECTRICAL WEEK in recognition of the importance of electricity and and the electrical industry to the social and eco- nomic strength of our community. whereas in drawpublic attention to the importance of the services performed by the industry in everyday whereas To encourage the safe and efficienf use of note therefore. I proclaim February Ith - Ibfh. I963. National Electrical Week in Charlottetown and I urge all citizens and organizations to participate A. Wallhen Gauclet, Mayor of Charlottetown. Recommend Standard of Wiring ~ in All New Homes 8. Old Home: Prince Edward Island Member Electric Service Magoo of P.EJ. The Rogers Hardware Co. Ltd. "If It’s Hardware “'9 Have It" Endorses Phone 16-12 Distributors Charlottetown