eAGt:J-lip-R THE GUARDIAN Department. Ottawa. The island hfunrdien Publishing Co. - Editor and Managing l)l:ctor. in A. Burnett. Associate Editor. Funk Walker. CIRCULATION "Covers Prince Edward llland like the dew" "The strongest memory is weaker than live weakest ink". CHARl.()TTETOWN FRIDAY. OCT. 18, 1853 Wide Horizons The people of Southport propose that it will be a long time before that commug, nity runs short of land suitable for develop- ment within its own boundaries. They have no doubt observed the unfortunate posi- tion of other incorporated communities in this Province and elsewhere, hemmed in by too narrow limits and forced to see their real development taking place ouside their limits. The meeting on Wednesday, which requested that a plebiscite be taken on the question of incorporation as a village, pro- posed boundaries which enclose an area bounded by the Hillsborough River, the entrance to Charlottetown Harbour and Hillsborough Bay. The proposed eastern boundary is beautifully simple, being a straight line formed by the Mason Road and its extension. It ends on the south 250 feet east of the Kinlock Road. It takes some imagination, or rather vision, today to see this district as a politi- cal unit but, despite the varied type and stage of development of its different sec- tions, on the map the area is indeed a unit and there can be no doubt that it will best develop and prosper if administered as a composite whole. It is elementary but all too easily ig- nored that the most effective planning must take place well in advance of development. We can decide in advance what kind of communities we wish to live in but once they have been built it is costly, if not im- possible. to rectify the errors of unplanned development. :A,..A.j Business llevolutlon Business is on the threshold of a new development with the impact of a coming industrial revolution, according to Business Week magazine's special report to execu- tives on Tomorrow's Management. Just as mechanical power was the heart of the first industrial revolution, so electronics is the heart of the 20th century development. The special report outlines just what the implications of this revolution are to cor- porations internally and to business as a part of the changing scene. Much of what lies on the fringes of pro- duction and management techniques are just now beginning to loom larger in the planning of business men. Those who are looking ahead know that when the elec- tronic age becomes a reality, it will mean vast changes in: 1. The shape of corpora- tions; 2. Their operations; and 3. The economy as a whole. There will be vast amounts of goods produced automatically. A term has been coined for the new-type production-automation. be fewer workers, been known to live for more than 30 years, but positive figures on their life expectancy! are lacking. The lion, long hailed as th' king of beasts, has a comparatively sho reign of 20 to 30 years. . Greatest span of positive record is 1; years for a turtle captured oii the India Ocean island of Mauritius in 1786. S. Helena Island in the South Atlantic claim-. only living link with Napoleon who lived there in exile from 1815 to 1821. Defi- nite proof of its age is lacking, however. Giant tortoises of the Galapagos Islands are known to live for more than a century Among domesticated animals, the horse holds age honors. It lives from 20 to 35 years. Cows rarely live beyond 25. Dogs live 5 to 15 years, occasionally 20. Cats- ones that live well-have a span of only '.” to 15 years, despite their mythical nine lives. ' , Patriarch of the fish family is the carp, some of which have been known to fre- quent quiet ponds for 60 to 75 years. Trout,; bass and perch rarely reach 15 years of 1 age, minnows less than 5. Parrots share with ostriclies. eagles and vultures the longevity record among birds -up to 60 years. Canaries rarely exceed 25; robins, 12; and starlings, 8. Adult life of many insects is reckoned merely in hours. Most durable are queen ants which may reach 16, and queen bees which sometimes live 5 or more years. Part of the secret of a queen bee's long life seems to be a jelly, rich in special nutrients, which is secreted from the glands of worker bees and fed to the queen. A mouse can exist for as long as 5 years if it stays out of feline reach. 'The maximum age for a fox is about 12; deer and beavers may live 15 years. Span of squirrels and rabbits is 8 to 12 years. Pigs and sheep can reach 20. Other reptiles are babes compared to the tortoise. Record for the alligator is 43. Snakes are even shorter-lived; their record is 21 years. EDITORIAL NOTES Because true iiidividualists are so rare the Colorado Springs Institute of I-lumanics is offering S1000 annually to whoever of- fers to spend the money in the most novel and creative way. I The response should be able to supply material for writers of fan- tastic fiction for years to come. 0 D 0 Peace lovers have for some time been embarrassed by the Communist line. Now, however, it is to be the turn of the patriots to be uncomfortable. "The Outlook" re- ports that Labour-Progressive (Communist) leader Tim Buck has announced a cam- paign of "Canada First" in an effort to drive a wedge between this country and the United States. 0 O O O A traffic survey of nineteen major Canadian cities has been prepared by Jac- ques Barrier, traffic engineer of the city of Montreal. This study is the first of its kind undertaken in Canada. As the author points out, it does not purport to be a complete coverage of traffic in Canada. It is, however, a beginning and will prove in- valuable to those responsible for the reg- ulation of traffic. a problem which ranks B993”-W me”) will , high amongst those facing modern admin- companies will be able to provide more istrators. ' g benefits. give employees individual atten- . . . . tion, understand their problems more fully Inertia is familiar as R Source of power than is possible now. But unlike today, it will not take large staffs to accomplish it. This will do much toward bringing about the talked of, but little realized, democratic industrial society. Workers will be more highly trained and educated. Their knowl- edge of industrial processes will be broad- er. Great as the economic gains will be. it is claimed that they will be matched by social gains. to farmers and others who use the station- ary engine which fires only to maintain the speed of the heavy flywheel which in turn supplies the constant power that is needed. A long step further has been taken in Switzerland where a bus has been con- structed powered only by a 3,300-pound rotor. In one-half to three minutes of contact with an electrical power source the rotor reaches 3,000 revolutions per minute, HOW m provide for the increased num”enough to carry the vehicle four miles Ber of unemployed resulting from the new. wnhout vibration, noise my Odor. production methods, however, is another , , , question. Will they have to be maintained "we are working on ah, projects so by increased taxation on the workers, oi utterly fantastic that they stagger the will other outlets be found for their activi- ties? This problem presents itself with every change in industrial development, and so far has worked out beneficlally.. A striking example has been the revolution- pry progress in mass production of motor vehicles. This comparatively new industry has brought many other new industries into exlstence,,, not to speak 05 impmvifd highway standards and social and economic changes on a vast scale. T ' Longevity lleeerls " I Who lives the longer, man or beast? Tbiscovery of on authentic 129-year-old tor- heoiept longevity among inun- in. llhode Island has revived the en- : troverey. Man's life span exceeds ofeny animal except the tortoise, says I , Ilionel Geographic society. Next to s-. to loolyeero or more. theeelephent , . imagination, and we are going to Canada to, put these projects -in high gear,” is 3 statement attributed to a British aircraft manufacturer now in this country. 'The modern imagination, however, is well de- veloped, particularly amongst the younger generation but it must be admitted that this world is, becoming too small e place for any but the largest countries and Can- ada's vast expanses may soon seem all too narrow as a playground for modern scien- tists. - p O O I . Liaquat Ali Khan, Indian politician, was assassinated this date 1951. Belonging to a wealthy .Eest Punjab family, he was edu- cated in England, being called to the Bar bylthe Inner Temple. For fourteen years he"was e member of the United Provinces legislative council, becoming leader of the Democratic Party. In 1,940 he become deputy leader of the-Moslem League and in ' A . A poor the close association with Jinnah played e leed- 3: m" ” '9 port in "the negotiations which convert- -11.. next" place we come to-in other may elthe Empire into two Domlnlone. ggggltg.-mg-rug ,3?-,3 gvgg a 178-year-old land tortoise, reputedly the THE GUARDIAN. urlAl(LUil:liE'llUWbi Closing In 0 9131 Prisoner Of War- Claims (Ottawa Citizen) The ruling on prisoner of war claims handed down by Chief Jus- tice Campbell of the Prince Ed- ward Island Supreme Court of- fers redress for R grievance of long standing. On the whole, men held -prisoner by the Germans in World War II have not been con- sidered eutomatlcally eligible for compensation on grounds of mal- treatment, ss was the case with soldiers confined by the Japanese. Yet. proof of maltreatment in Ger- man camps would have required testimony by individual ex-pris- oners. and many of these were reluctant to re-open old wounds. Chief Justice Campbell's report reduces personal investigations to a minimum. A semi-automatic award, with- out corroboratlon or proof. is re- commended for men taken at Dleppe, and subjected to forced marches, chaining. and degrada- tion. Those who underwent forced marches in the winter of 1944-45 come within the same category. But there will also . be compensation for other forms of maltreatment. some not so obvious. Ratlons and clothing were often inadequate by the standanls of the Geneva convention. Men were compelled to work on a diet below that en- joyed by the general population. This could be considered a form of maltreatment, although no physical violence was involved. Much of the argument for coni- pensation. made by the National Council of 'Cenadlan Prisoners of War, was based on the fact that they had not received what they were entitled to under the Gen- eva Convention. The ex-prisoners regarded the food and clothing they should have received, but did not. as property which was taken away from them, and on which they had n claim. Whether the award is claimed for mal- treatment, or for restoration of property, it is clearly deserved. for Chic! Justice Campbell has found that the prisoners did, in- deed. suffer from lack of food and other elementary necessities. Old. Charlottetown umi r. e. I.) JOHNSTONES ITINERARY From a letter descriptive of, Prince Edward Island. by Wall" Johnstone, 30th July, 1821: "I have now travelled over the greater part of the Island on both, the southern and northern shores. from East Point as far west as Bedeque on the one side and Malpeque or Prlncetown on the other. I have also crossed over the Island from the one shore to the other at four different points and traversed much of it several times over. . . - "After leaving East Paint a lit- tle on the south-east side of the Island, the see has receded from the lend n good way. where A large send-ridge is found upon the back of it, when the tide comes and goes by an entrance a considerable way to the south- west. This is called East: Lake. Another to the west oflthle celled West Lake. The land bor- dering on these lakes hi good, and lately bottled from Pei-tbshlre. The scenery is beautiful and romantic; but it is for from market. . . Af- ter we leave these lakes the land in thinly settled. and the woods. at present, much infested with mice; but when the land: are more cleared. this evil will be Ion prevalent. - "The next piece is celled Col- vllle Bey on.tlie map, but 'Soui-h'. or "Mloe'., by the French. The next .is Poi-tune Boy, 1 beautiful settlement. math a good deal of .eleei- int c it. and e number of schoo ere belonging to it. whlch- trade to Newfoundland. Hsllfex. etc. . . . There to excel- lent herring fishing here in the month of May, and the people, attend from a considerable dil- ..-Vial. V an intend. it an -the (taunt-depth -. '3' W Kinieter of l'"h'”'”- 7 . p , of water.” eulut of entrance, the Chironologyfs I London. Many famous or- Lhaeological and prehistoric re- mains on this side of the Atlantic will soon be dated more accurate- ly by 1 new British adaption of the American radio-carbon tech- nlque. The method, which consists - f reducing the carbon sample 1 ii gas (acetylene) has been worked Out by A group of chemists and physicists from the Harwell Atomic Research Station and also from the research laboratories At- tached to the Royal Institute and the 200-year-old British Museum. it is based essentially on the disintegration of activated carbon particles, first demonstrated by Willard F. Libby of the Univers- ity of Chicago's Institution for Nuclear Studies and subsequently adopted by several universities in the United States, Denmark and New Zeaiand. Dr. Libby volunteered to teach his technique to British chronolo- glsts in 1949 but the Labor Gov- ernment refused to grant funds and the problem of establishing I national laboratory of radio-can bon chronology wal referred to the isotope di.visl.on at Harwell. . the feet The British method. like American, depends on the . that all organic remains, such-as ancient wood, bone and seeds, are composed of two kinds of carbon, the ordinary element, of atomic weight, 12, and the isotopic ver- iety, called carbon 14, which is transmuled in the upper atmos- phere by cosmic rays and ab- sni-bed by plants and animals in the form of carbon dioxide. The relationship of the two forms of carbon in ancient or- ganlc remains can be estimated by radio sensitive countries for iime periods up to 15,000 years. Estimates are based on the fact that bf'lB particles or fast elec- trons, "escape" at n diminishing rate from the radio-carbon, and at an age, or half Illfe. of approx- imately 5,600 years only half the particles remain. The American technique con- sists of converting organlc- re- mains first to carbon dioxide and then to pure carbon by passing it over hot magnesium. The sooty carbon is then spread thin- ly in the form of a fine film around the inside of n geiger counter which records the beta "links" of the carbon clock. British critics say the method A.......A.:.A..m.:... spring and latest in shutting In the fall or winter. one cf.the three principal towns projected by Government. called George-Town, is intended to stand there. . . . A small house or two is all that it can yet boast of. ' "To the west of this. about twelve miles, we come to Murray Harbour, which may be entered, it in said. by vessels of nearly three hundred tons bui-then. at high water. This Is a very pleasant. thriving and comfortable settle- ment. . . . From the there rift- tle west of Murray Harbour. It I place called White Sandi, across the lxlandto Savage I-lei-beur, on if that north shore, it in about thirty miles more. . . . From White Send: to Wood Islands there are several miles of excellent front lend. unsettled. "Passing Wood Islands. we come to Belle creek, Flat River. Jen)-n'e River. or Pi-lnnet (Plnette). After peulng this we come , to Point Prim. On the north side of title. Orwell Bey runs into the land I long way. On the south off: the settlements of Belfast; the settlers ere l-llghlenden and moqtly Pro- testants. with this Buy, rew- nel ena.1-iilhboi-ouch new, all connected, the mend in muebeut up. At the hold of 1-lllle b Bey we enter the river of t o Chnlottr own. . . . - On the northwest cm of nm river. about four -mllu IIWVI In Junction with the Joy of the some made the beautiful .9 are of . Cheri the mm min. and the bet-boui-f of . ii cii ., J . it tune with new-it for drilling the Militia. Executions, beet eleltend. nrlleetv open -in etc." Carbon Clock (John Hllleby in the New York Times) does not allow small samples to -be used. The film. they claim. cannot be made sufficiently thin and the particles are subject to "self-absorption." It is also alleged here that Am- ex-icon counters known as "screen" wells register less than 10 per cent of the total carbon eman- stions. This, it is said, permits accuracy ratios of no more than plus or minus 400 years in age estimates of 5.000. The British technique consists of reducing the organic sample: to either acetylene or ethylene gas. Acetylene is feyored, al- though its explosive properties under compression are proving I handicap. Acetylene is made by converting the sample to csrbor. dioxide and passing it over heat; ed lithium and adding gas-fret water to the resultant leithluir carbide. O I 0 British chronologlsts claim that their new type of counters can register 70 per cent of the par- ticles in their free gaseous state. They also claim that the tech nlque can be operated with about five instead of ten grams of or- genlc material. and the results are accurate to within plus or mlnus 200 year: in 5.000. The new lead-sheathed particle counters used here are surround- gelger counters." "which register and discount radiation: from external sources such as .cosmlc activity. The apparatus is to be instal- led at the British Museum and will be available for all archae- ologists and preiiistorianx early next year. Priority claims are now being worked out by a com- mittee. v Unfortunately neither the British nor American carbon "clocks" can register the age of organic re- mains much earlier than 15,000 or at most 20.000 years B.C. .um-nlli: goes for in ad by a battery of eleven ordinary . I. Notes By &. that "the world can no longer of- lt is remembered that one of the the thought of hatred as ii. luxury is sufficient to give able food for thought.pFoi' one thing, it lilggests that hatred is the satisfaction of 3. human appetite. which. like most. appetites, grows by what it feeds on. As, indeed. experience has proved to be the case. particularly in international affairs. Those with first-hand re- collections of I-Iitlei-the Germany will rememb with e shudder the swelling tide of pure invective emitted by Dr. Goebbel'ii Propag- anda Ministry of assuage the constantly growing appetite of that unhappy lists for rencor. Like most lndulgerices. hatred quick- ly sntletcs the palate. and he who ministers to its gretlficaticntmust constantly find new and more original methods of tltillating the loaded taste.--Halifax Chronicle Herold. Replying to 3 question about whether or not young mentodsy are "spineless" because they ex- pect their wivee to work, a col- support of the marriage where both partners work-end hive to work-to sup- port the home. She cites as a typical instance the case of A year- old marriage in which the man is 23. the girl 21. The marriage could not have taken place for several years without both part- ncrl continuing to work, and meantime the couple have those several years of married life which they would have otherwise missed. The final conclusion is drawn that "they are a courageous, cep- eblo couple who knew what they wanted." There in room for some thoughtful debate here. and pos- sibly the more so because the pet- tern of early marriages, contrad- ed before the man is emotional- ly mature or anything like fi- nancially independent, is becoming more and more on established feature of our society. Even In the colleges and universities, the traditional home of celibacy. an increasing number of students are contracting matrimonial tics be- fore they an even near the end of their course. Possibly this phenomenon owes its origin to ..:A.:?:-:A-::- These up the things that ye shall do; Speak ye every man the h-nth to his neighbour; execute the judgment of truth and peace r Cuunwe Pl'llIl.,MlnI5l.cf med . telling and forceful if not wholly . Original phi-no when. in the course of an address in Montreal, he sold ford the luxury of hatred". When Drlmlrv meanings of the term "lux- ury" in an indulgence which in the long run will militate against the best interests of the individuel,' l UUf0BEll( 15. . 195,; q Th t I. e Weyl. Q the conditions of - post--war period, t-m:n1m:,':,f1d,'a”' were full of men of mature ysffs mlny of whom had returned from the Services mari-led,land all m whom had the feeling that thus had lost time to make up, maritzif ly as otherwise. But today there; colleges: yet, the married student seems to be increasing in num bers. I ..?m:.... We EEG? ?oe&s' Gym” WHEN LEAVES DEPABT I love to see. when luv The clear anatomy errlv: depnm Winter. the paragon of on Tim. kills all forms of life 3.... feeling . ” Save what is pure and will survive Already ,now the clinging cimm 01' Reese ere harnessed to the moon: Stripped are the great sun-clou.1g ing planes: i And the dark pines, their own re- veeling, Lot in the needles oflthe moon, Sirllned by the gale the cm"... whiten Like tllqllty wrestlers bent i And. with the vines. their bl'l.l'lche,q lighten To brim our vats where bummer lingers In the red froth and sun-gold mi, with soon on our hu.rth's reviving pyre Their rotted stems will crumple up: And like a ruby, panting fire, T119 Krlpe will redden on nngcrs Through the lit crystal of the cup -Roy Campbell )'D'.lli EASTBOURNE. England (CPi... Rev. Phillip Richards doesn't. let his wooden leg stop him from visiting on many of his parishion- en as possible. Now bets looking for somebody with ii bolt, who can take him on calls to Beechy I-lend lighthouse. ' ooururris VISUAL REFRAOIIOZI AND ANALYSIS 6. F. HUTCHESON 8: SON Optometrists 53 Grafton Street in your nice. PROFESSIONAL 2' CARDS Chas. R. McQuold BA. Dr. W. It. Carson Barrister end Solicitor Bank of Commerce Building Charlottetown Money to Mon Gordon E. MacMiilan. B.A.. LL.l.. , IABBIBTEB. 30LIOI'l'0B.. Ewan cmxornnoron BARIIISTEII. S0l.l(llTOB. Filmer Gr-duh NOTARY. Inc. CHARLOTTETIIWN 3...," Tm, Dial 643: . on Prince sr. ...s.A.-....AA.c"'""'”""'”"l"" Goudet 8: I-leszimi M. Alben Farmer. Q.C. an.nun-i' A. GAUDET. ax. LLB. EA" LLB. Blrrletere Ihd Solicitors Money to Dull! canadlnn Bank of Commerce side. A. Wuitlien Guudet. LLB. IABBISTEB. !l)I.lCl'l'0Il. llir. Phillipe Slliiding lll Grafton Street be Loon ” Collection lllondy could be settled by the new tech- nique. Among them are the most elaborate work of the Eu- ropeiin cave Artiste (about 12.000 B.C.).' the vest and muddled chronology of the earliest Egyp- tians, dating from the were of the Home follower: with the copper men or Eoliths of the Nile delta about 4,500 B.C. In Britain a long spectrum of cultures, ranging from the eei-ty meeollthl (15.iXi0 B.C.) to the la 0 metal men. have yet to be disen- tangled. And If the new technique II no ” critical as the Harwell men hope. it may be possible to distinguish between genuine Anglo-Saxon es- tate charters (around we A.D.) and the mus-produced vellum forgone: so cunninjly fabricated by til! poet-conquest. -lend-nob bore. p . . , '. ' cliarlottotovni Ilotol "SPECIAL nouns! WINEIBBAIIS "r-tolnelet. - IOQ. .enee-one .,f.':?.'---,-...."l'l...... ukllelxpeetrptlrpeueeei. iorlmtbu, write: I93”: -IIAIAIIII . At these limits the beta pa - Iu rm”. sh ' ch". ticles seep out of the carbon-corrr Duh "23 telning substances at rates of about two each minute and be- H' '1' M9595 R'o'. come inextricably mixed and con- , fused with radiation "noise" from op"""”m" cosmic and other sources. "It's like an ordinary clock "an-su" " IL L which has almost run down." says mum. up Herold Barker, the chief ' b ' t ' in the Museum Res ch D rt- ' merit. ear ep. . Jo so R-0. There are, however many hun- -du.-do of dilputntious. key date: oywonlrnmr later than 15,000 3 on. which 3!" 3W'I"M- GiIIMI'FiiM Corner Kent and Queen su. Office Phone 9133-llouse I150 BREVITY AN D CLARITY loll. Metlilesen & Foster i -Ben-inure. Eoileltqre. Ste. B. I. BILL Q0. - (I. I. IOBTII. LLI Home on Oil: on Fer- . Properties ' Frederic A. Large. o.c. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary loyal Benli of Clnlde Bulldlnl Charlottetown. P. IL L yum on City and Form Prcpertlel Matiieson. Pecite 8: Nicholson A. W. MATIIIISON. 0.0. A. ll. PEAIIE. B.A.. lJ..lI. JOHN P NlCllfIl.tMIN. LLB Bari-inure. Gui. Collection: - Money To loll I'll Grafton street Palmer & I-ioeiem C A. l. EIASLAII. B.A.. LL!!- Borrletor. Etc. look in Nov: satin Cbembcn Cliulottntowll. P. B. I. MONEY T0 MIAN J. A. -MeGiIlgan IAIII ITEK. IIIIJUITOI. 3"- Allison M. onus. uf..e. IAIIIITII. IOIJUITOI. KM II lIolIlIonghl.t...-nlalbarlothtowl Or. if. A. Meeidelien DENTIST iu llebiuoud emu oiiutoumn. us. :''''r.''::'&:::' max; 2 Trainer ' ”ToT"Tmm'l----V----4”-7 I. I. uunnie. e.A.. cc. lyi-en J. Grant. 0.9- I '”'"....i.....'"'”"'l-'.'.'."'l ” . 0-Tomi-H t V - - do lent Street "rmo I" - . .. ,, - - 'Dr. A. L. Meclouoc - neunn uumi .1-no ouoeu l0lI.niNo no Onflon Io. . Plum ”' DOIIII x-toy Above Ohrletteuwu Clinic no can It. on an 4 Jo Ac R0O' ' IIBT - Phone :8" l . llnpeeire A10!”-7' 4 so not (Next to broolxe. VI!;9""'" i "II- 'r Idmnlglel 873' are relatively few veterans in u,,'