l ti-ls GUARDIAN mi -jllnhd .."Zl-y Ick-day morning II in PH-JCT. Dulmtctowl. P.E.I. by tho Thomson Company Ltd. ' II King St. W.. Toronto. Monti-oII Office. 225 University Tmvor Bldg. Conn Prion llvord IIIIII uh III III" Editor. Punk Walker Dulenl Managua no A. lui-nu Member Canadian Dally Novupnpll Publishers Association Member or dis Canadian Press Member Audit. Bureau in Cliculnlonl Ii-Incil office: It . Munlogue Ind Albertoo. Authtlrued as second CIIII Mall by the Pool Omen DepIrunIut. Ottawa. Iq t.Ime.r: Cmtllotteulwn. aummu-nth ua.oo pg: a. uni. Elsewhere in P. E. l. 89.00 miter Province: no Ii. 8. 812.00 per Iununl "Tl" 3l"0'lllesl. memory II weokor than the weakest. lIk." SATYRDAY. AIJG. I7. 1955 A Hundred Thousand Years A long little, ltl(l,llUtl years! i nat, according to Hon. Brooke Claxton, who is presiding as chairman of the (lair-trlian ltlgnways salely confer- ence at Ottawa this week, is me period of useful life lost through ;l.tltltl traffic lalalities in Canada V eyery year. l'hl.- does not take into at count the o.i,t.It,Xl persons who are llljured alilutally but who survive. llubllc melt do a good service by pointing up. in this striking malillcr, lltc tlppallllllg dc:-illt toll on our lllgll- ll-ID pullllc coll- sctcltce lo ijl'P?llPli ellort in the way Ill safely precalltloli.-. Mr. (Ilaxttln Says the short-term view of accident pluxentlon is to 'get dangerous urn"- crs oil the road"; the long-term view is education of drivers. dut educa- tlon is a slow process, and in tile llieantllne the slattgliter goes on. t'onimt-ltdetl by the conference cltalrnlall was all announcement by the Ontario Highways Minister that drivers licenses in that Province, renewed alter cancellation for dl'lllll(Pl'l driving. will lterealter be printed on red paper and stamped ”reinstaled". This. it is believed, will be effective in curtailing accidents from this cause. it so. it should be adopted in every Prmincc. There is no quest ion here of infringement on personal rights. No person has any right whatever to endanger the lives of others. and this is wnat happens every time an even partially intoxi- cated driver takes the wheel. There is I story going the rounds about follr drunks who entered at roadside tavern. (me of them fell flat on his lace and the other three ordered liquor. ”What about him?” asked the bartender, pointing to their prone companion. "Don't gixe him any." said one of the party in Item disapproval: ”l-Ie's driving." This oouldn't happen here, of course! But the moral of the story is that if it did happen. it driver in the condi- tion above described would be less a mohaoo than if he had not "passed out" but was still in the stage of overconfident manelnrrabilily. vlllfl ril tlllblllfl llllt idealistic Tenels "Of making oi many books there is tho end. and much stlldy is a weari- ' ness of the flest." so did a wise man of ancient times counsel at young man who probably took it to mean that homework was not only boring but definitely harmful to one's health. This. by way of pre- amble to it text comments on I book- let just issued by New York school authorities. it begins by saying "ti Well. there is nothing particularly original in that. and nothing that in justice can be held against modern youth. since their ltltlcrs, by and large. are in no octler way. r'lli'th- ermore. considering the distractions that most boys and girls have to contend with IHPSP tlays anti nights, it. is nothing short of marvellous that.they manage to do any study- ing at all. How can a youngster be expected to keep his mind on his homework when somebody else in- sists on giving some slapdasli radio Innouncer permission to fill the house with strange noises which ex- toil the merits of dogfood or hair lotion: With most of the tips in the booklet no one would disagree. Phy- Itcal tltness, budgeting of time, tak- jng HOIGS, memory development, making good use of library books--- Ill these are good and much to be .' desired. Bill here": a code that must. have been drawn up by perfection- lots or else by witty men with their tongues in their checks: "1 will be- , wmoand stay interested. Iwlllcon- oiluntc. I will listen. 1 will take T surprising lulmbl-r ol boys and girls ' simply do itot know how to study." -- llacl-1-.. nvillclllllllp Iveroge care-rreo Ina ployml year-old. Perhaps the best thing about the little booklet is that its authors seem to realize the value of homework. It is not long since anything done by way of study after school hours- and in school hours, too, some say--- was looked upon with virtual dis- dain by many educational theorists. Signs Of Weakening There arethose who believe that the present flowery talk coming oilt of Moscow and other Communist centres is simply part of a plan to do by guile what has been found int- possible to achieve by force alld threats. This is associated especial- ly with Russian attempts to weaken Natols defence of Western Europe. However that may be-at present one guess probably is as good as all- otlier-reports from on the spot ob- servers would seem to indicate that Nalo is, in fact, lacing a crisis. There are, for instance, growing rumours I h a t several countries. including l-”ralice. would like to ease tip on defence expend- itllres, anti evcn reduce their armtes l) e lo iv the slalitlards original y aglced upon by lhc Xalo pclwers. Again, American attempts to lease new land for extension of airtlelds are meeting with unusual opposition. Europeali countries liayc lien.-r lakt ll too kindly to toe expansion of Lilli- 19!- Ellropcall - ted States military facilities on their ' soil. only anxiety for their own security has permitted it all aloll-,4; now that they leel the tlaligcr oi war has lessened they are beginning to doubt the necessity. Only I few weeks ago Freltclt authorities llally reluseo to allow constructltln of new .-iltiericali air bases in North Africa; now the French Government is suggesting that all l”l'elicll troops attaclied to halo oe sclll to North Afl'lc.a where, so the Freltch believe, the need is greater and more urgent than it is in Europe. It is rumoured also that soon the French will demand the re- moval at all American forces lrom North Africa. taken all together, these reports atid rumotirs provide evidence of growing lguropcan tic- liel in the good intentions ot the Soviet Union. ifortunalely, ncltlter Britain nor tianada has yet shown ally inclination to seek modlficatioli of prior cominitments. iilratever trust lnelr t.ot'erltnlenl may lime ill the Soviet Unions prolerreu lrlcltd- ship, they are acting on the time holloureo principle tttal it is pelter to be sure titan sorry. l'lnic't-ltougll for relaxation when security has been doubly assured. be slow, however, in letting up on ueleltce cxpenditlil-es once , convinced that all danger has pas- sed. . EDITORIAL NOTES A .-..trt.s.,t.- oi lttu, -.. .5 re- ported in 1ll)Cl. llils is ii matter, IOF the government employs gleal nuliioers oi lliem to prevent hall, which is called the ”devils ntlscliiel , lrom slrliung the holy city oi the ualal Lamas. me pay is good. set IUUS Sponsors of a school survey re- port that on all average me were plot at little bit orlgnler titan the girls. 'ihe only important thing that the announcement reveals is it lack of chivalry on the part of the spolisors. l:.ven if the linding is sclclitiflcally-based, which is ll()Ubl' lul, lney needn't have made it. DUD- lic. .loys o I o t A group of educators has come tlp wlln the announcement that modern pupils are more proliclent titan the 19.53 crop in such subjects as reading, writing, and arithmetic. Since uewylsm-wnich, rightly or wrongly, is blamed for many of our leoucauonal ills-was at its height in that year, it would be better to go back lurtner, say t.o 1903. I O I The first atomic energy reactor speclilcaliy designed for medical treatment and research is to be built ll. the Medical Centre of the Uni- versity of California, in Los Angeles. The reactor, which will produce gamma rays and neutrons for can- cer therapy, has also been design- ed to serve I variety of medical and non-medical lines. These include the production of radio-isotopes and rodlotloh for experimental steriliza- tion Ilid preservation of food and drugs. Tberooctorlnexpectedtnbe Ivolloblo use in 1957, "amt-'ll period of experi- new i roar. alitt They will not T 56.-Ell .-".27-'05 3lltCc? '” Tc” H16 95:" 7 The 'More, PUBLIC FORUM Milli!-I IIUMH TIl(IL'(iHTS FROM ABRUAI) Mr. Mllllntll t.tr .-pclll-tllitl what a uoltllcrllll one II is .ul the islaltil ultll till i liarltlllcloull cen- lclilllai, 'dlltl all the ”big dlliilgs - is next. a ullll nitlnlelit Jlltlillllg, lly aiclllllits and pl(lllll'l'.b l'sct cl The (iu.'ii'tllalt .t ll5ll'il,.ltl,ltl .tt .t ll... t.-l from a ltircc who is spelltllllg a slllitmcr oil the island Paradise sll. t.llls itl Il' .litl ttr-i Iltnc in st -l'. yczlts ll. .. .. t- p . .ly tlttlt.-,.tlts trail-lllltl; ll.lc.t to file l.xol'tli Sliorc ..cl cululiicltt "silt are coliteiiiplatlitg going to ('aycli- (ilsh . luplc til tec...-' -. .2 can gct a cabin -or cottage this late in tlic st-a.xoli." Till-it slic ldncd ”.llcli”l yo it cut" llitls l tltat tlttiill.l,lil'.'” After which she dccltlcd, under the clrcllm.sIaltccs. site was- n't specially nice to have made that lcliil-ii'k. I'm not clittuils' lit, noiiethelcss. i feel she should he pllnlshcu a tilt. so unat bcl.l- way lltxlli lll urllc a lung, and ill- yoltcd do I elcr wrllc ally l'lll('l' klnd.'--lctlrr ill the most witlcly - popular liewspapl tln the "lslc'; as she let-ls she lnllst rcad. ally. and all my published ellorls lrllm .l .-cllsc oi duty Tlic tlay ill) C','l' tcll till this cll,l.lllll. llllliiccl Palllilt-its l-in- sllrilict. lit -.nllcl (Thllrclt Al. (Javcntllsh ill-a.ll lte plclilrc .li my tild childliotui t-ltllrrh, l rcl civ- el. two ,l.lpi-rs lht tlnu Ctllllilll1- iltl: the article the .atc.st date. as illl lIl('llIIFl. All ttitlicl liicl' hliolchl. lctitl the one til the earllcl llalc tllwl. tbllall) l rcad irohl pagc first and work my pay tliroilgll .t.- t mo Ill that occasion, so by the time l l-t-acllcd the llllllh pap l-lliilllliilnl; inc lllorcsaztl arti- clc the ctclllnl.-, was tar spent. .lllw icl, .;lnliIllir ex 'I- Hill: of the outside of the old ciiurch v-as. anti ll tool. tiltlc ctlorl to visuaIl7.c every mlnulcsl detail of the lll.erlor as 1 last saw ll. The only challgr in the .-ancillary i holed, when I attended service there in l94tl. was the position of the tlrgall had been thanito-(l A bit. i did not realize that ll was I different organ-lite onc lrom the Sunday School room donated by l..lVI ltltiltlldlnicry. My pcoplc may have written me about that. bill. rlllrlllg my busy years perhaps I did not pay too much attention to such items of news. ()l cilllrsc lhlrty-oiic yct-lrs lcave! its iiiark--even llli island folk, who seldom seem to grow iiln-and. ex- cept tor it tew. tltosr l recognized resembled their parents as lid re- membered them. strange, but i true-we on grow more passing years. A cousin of mine made that remork when he saw me. ”every one of you look like your mother all you get older." That's the wIy my nieces recogniz- ed me when they met me It aor- den--onc in seen when she was I little lot, but of course she did not ; remember me. although she travel- led West with me when i made the trek the llrsl time; II. al- though i'd always wnnted to go. i went to help my sister with her smnll children when she won lar- lng lorttl till a visit to our .-;lsii:r on the Prairie. My sister wIll only on I Vllll. but the Nut had claimed me for keeps. II it nu done since with my lslond niocu., Three of my sisters were already ; there when l went-two leoclting 1' school Ind one married. However, the bnrenncu oi snskatchewsll could Io! hold me for long: not noon 1 went larther Ifleld ln senrch of come of the beauty ltd known Ill my yeoril on P. E. l.. and I found it in 3.0, although ibo Itmoupllere seemed so heovy after the ozone of the Prairie tho! 1 could MI:-cely breathe, Ind the growth was so luxui-l'Int (hot it took me I little time to Idopt to the climate. However, I've digress- Id and than Inother story! t R My II c I rest relatives Ifill oe- eupied the some pew in the church. on the rig!!! side from the CH7 our the front Inc in foil who 1 the pulpit old chair. The illflcnoeo llvu.ofeliuru,mybtotIpwII. tboltllluntfomw mwnullllpoml inn unit that l lcctill Hi. Attic- Donald glalicllig arolllttl lhc Hlllle the lll'Sl time he was a supper gill.-.. tt. out .lullle---also the llrst. call--and remarking "they'd l- ntnst till a pcu. l.c did! llowevcr, i cannot spell "pew" to sotlnd the The, Merrler than her share of the activities in the work .1 the cllurclt. Of Mr. Maclnlo ' 's hiinistry, 1 - have malty memories, lor did he not marry one oi my best-loved IlI'sl CUUSIID. allll also rob us of one of the finest school 'tP,d('l1ClS Hope Rlier ever had! Mrs. Mac- intosh lMabell was a most ex- emplary lnllllster's helpmtlte de- spite playing the church organ on a warm ..uliinter's (lay gamed in all atlraclivc dl ss with elbow lPllKlIl slcctc.-a - styles were yltsl. way he prollotincetl ll; allhllllgh island born his accent was dell- clianginli lrom the wrist length nitely "Ar Scotlli. There vtqre , siccvc t- shorter. and i assuiit it at cast four nlCn1l)I:l'x of Tlur took some of the older folk some tamlt) absent from the board tllal. lime to ,.ct used to the change- allerntltlii so vividly cnicnibcrcu, oicr. .tliullIcr item Vllllth m12l"- aiil. . long ago. .ilolhl.-r. my eld- l hair litiplltuilett doubts in solite est 3l.N'l8l'-Ahflnlc ml vacation 'l.Iill. die-hard: minds as to her sult- (.'llarloltelowll- and my baby- ability ll: be a person's wife was sisirr uere spending the afternoon g wi..t relatives and friends in the ciliiintlllilty. and another sister uas lcachitr school in another vucale. The rest ill the younger general- inii-except this writer-werl: in school. I seemed to be always the one kept home to help with extras. elc.. and more are many such on a larlti. St. iihcn Rt MacDonald called 1 had to greet him. and alter sealing him in lhc parlor- all such rooms were dcsigltalcd such in those days-l ran to the field to summon my father. . I l sci-in to have only tell aitd faint memories of the old chlirch in the cemetery. and Rev. Archi- bald and family. One instance though stands otlt in memory: hall. i think it must have been I Saturday atteriinon service in pre- paration tor Communion the fol- lowilil, (lay; as. although i'vr ltn recollection of anything insidc the ' sanctuary, I do recall mother and I ' two of my sisters and l lmel wail- , lug outside the church for my dad to get. through la session meeting so we might go home. After re- peated requests for us to wait ll. the mouse, Mrs. Archibald finally persuaded mother to accompany her there and accept her invita- tion for supper. The older daugh- ters of the manse took us and the l little ones in their familv out In the backyard in play wlllle. their mother entertained her guests and prepared the evening repasi. We had a lot of fun swinging. One reason for believing it must. have been I Salllrdny. was i feel almost certain children of I Presbyterian minister in those days would not bc allowed the privilege of even , such ' humleu pastime on "m l time she was in Bay View i loIi'n- Sabbnth. Sometimes when my par- ? cuts were It morning worship the small fry In our family indulged in that play. but my dad was only l an Elder. Had he been home I doll" if we would have been cell- sured. as. although strict Sabbath ohsuvance was the rule. be WII not unreasonable when it came to children. The only other have of sclly I convenllolnl one-perhupo recolloctlun l I remember I ”ug. and yes. eat- ing wild strawberries iI the-them lll-cIi-ed-for cemetery around the f church while we ploycd between 1 Sunday School and church urvlco. 1 It Ilmout makes me shudder to i won ronll it today. but chlldroli ovldontly Ire no roopecten of comotrles Ind will romp Ind play 'u light-nurtodly In any- l where. tvordswui-t.b' . "WI An tsevoil" pom-Iyl that upcct of y clllllbond so well. of Rev. Roooruoo and lonilly I hove uvoi-Il ioemorlt-.. rbeir clllldron-Ilke steps of stain were the cutout little lunln Ind llnianllll-l with the llilii ill die old chllrcb is not ex- . her selection of texts when she took the preach:-r's role - on ac- count of her (l(lV3ll('Q(l yet-llsl - when she played church with her youliger cousins. To put it mildly they ere not exactly scriptural. i can still sec her in the nlllnllley corner of the old home kitchen perched on a high til and ex- poundiiig lqllcn'ly as she saw it, bill not in the approved maillicr - ot a Billy Graham nor any other tllcllloglan-in-tact Ul any age. rlow ever. we gave her our undivided attention and listened reverenlly. when l rcmindetl tier oi those l-ccas-ltms long forgotten by her- shc ailghcd and T ”cd. I spent the last time i ever saw my beloved Cawnpurc with Mabel and a teen age nlccc ut mule, and also Mabel's grand-niccc. We spent the what. afternoon listening to the roar oi the waves. anu the cry of the gulls and I mihiscl - we lwo while the chlldrenplayed around. Mabel told me lit)0lll ber lino tnmil,. an" i it it about mine; but mostly we recalled old days and old times and both were loath - to leave the shore and go on to the cemetery - our next pm". of callvafler which we had dinner Green iiableil-a never-to-be forgotten experience for me. Before we returned home we called at a well-remembered home. as my cousin wanted to see I native daughter home on vacIliou. and I well certainly not adverse to seeing old friends again. when wo returned to my old home, Mabel - : before going to her nephews I- cross the road where she was st.Iy- l ing-Isked me to show her Ill through the old home. which llbo was accustomed to doing l.-Icb ed, and I remember how loving- ly she touched the table in the old pirrlor. Our home meant much to bar In we were closer than most first cousins. In her dad had been trut- cIlly killed when she was an in- fant. and my dad had been almost like I father to her and her sister and brothers. Although the Mac- Intosll children were not Ill 1IlIud born. their mother told me that 1 they loved the little "isle" perllapc should not be related hero-but l puny mun” "ch nu. u won I! school closod they pocked up Ind spent. the summer there. (I true success story of In hind fomlly Illa could not flail I floor one thou the younger guou-Idoo of tht MIclnt.ooh lunlly. Every one of them wn wIll-educItod- iiot.eIIywdooItbenIlIryofI country or Imnll town pastor. but they were willing to mono unri- llou for their lllllldr loIrIlIg. MIbIl told me sometimes thir- hor boys-would liavd only one sun when to college Ind list thread-bore. i felt rather llooorod when Mn. lllcllltolll. Mabel. told me Ibo bod come to the IIIIII Ispoclollytouelne unhoinlgllt lover no no I in-bow Ibo VII Iboul. ttm. Ilinougn II." tier of us realised it It tho time. oldl mahogany . ; Ilers we ind in CIvIudlIh were it Mrs. FrIuk were looking for l Medically Speaking ly lei-mu N. Ioodoul. M. I. WHAT ARE THE CAUSE! OF l SEASONAL ALLEBGIIS? 3 By this time of year. if you no I hay fever victim. you are prob- ably sneezing. snlffllng Ind wlplng . I your tear-filled oyu Ivory few minutes. But don't doom your- self to this life of distress for the remainder of the summer. All is not lost. There": I lot you can do to relieve those troublesome symptoms. The same goes for the more than 2,000,000 sufferers of bron- chia. I sthma throughout the ! country. many of whom line this the most troublesome seIsuu- , let's see just what in causingl all this sneezing and wheezing. T if you're I hay lever victim or I seuoinl asthmatic, your trou- ble is probably wind-borne pollen. p By in the greatest cause of hay fever and the source or I major number of asthma attacks is the pollen or ragweed. But there are l olhc. offenders. too, such I: say, Ul wormwoou. elm, llemp. chenopud-at"-ranth. English plan- tain and timothy grass. CONTAMlNA'l'EU Alli. ; most wilid - puillnaled p l I ii I I l ripell early in the morning. Al-T though lliey ulscilargc llleli pul- full at Ulla lime, It 5 usually ill or , ii a.lil. uclurc the air is heavily , ctlnlalnlnaletl. usually. the great.-1 est concentration occurs in tho ltlrenuull. .tllel' midnight the air is l'El8IlV!l) lree. , Aliel being uiscllargeu il'0lIl , lho. plant. these little irlaslses ofl yellow pollen cling lo the upenl pollen case: until they are urled l thoroughly. Then. they Ire wlllskeu .om their perch by the next. WIIIL. Luckily, fllulil ut llieni tall tol the ground near the plant. The remtliilidel. huwevel, are carried Ilult by rising air currents even , Ioove the layer of air we breathe. I l '1lius. they can be carried great distances belorc coming to earlbl to null victims and set. lheml sneezing. More than 600 cities to Ntlrllll Alnerlca conduct routine pollen counts. results ut which are pub- lished in only newspapers to ad- vise pollen victims of allergy conditions. QLESTION AND ANSWER g.I. K: At what age does acne, disappear? l Answer: in must. instances.l Iclic disappears alter the periodl ul adolescence. Huweier. in some l instances it persist: well into adult life. The condition should be treat- ed by I physician. ”4f5”.aeli FOR ANNE GREGORY 'Ncver shall I young man, Tllrown into despair By those great nuney-coloured Ramparts oi your car. Love you for yourself alone And not your yellow hair.' film I can get I hair-tlyo Alia set. such colour there. Brown. or black, or cairot. 'lnal young men in despair May love me for myself Ilulio Ann not my yellow liIir.' ll ltealu all ulu lcllgluus lnlll But yestel-night declare That he had lounu I text to prove That only uoo, my uear. I l Could love you for yourself alone And not your yellow liIlr.' -W. B. Yeoto. The Age Old Story" iuul lilting BIC IIIIHMIIIIIEI. I. went up iolo I mouIt.IiI: III when be was not. ltlI dlsclploo ulna unto bin: III be d l taste and good living generally. - Whig-Standard. . possible by F9S.:i.13?!.G"”'dian- NOTES BY THE WAYTT -A visitor to I town dci-pl the nut: of Maine joined . mm group ll men on a all"? pom and mute a few remarks. Nt. ..,, replied and the visitor .th- (i tlwhat is there. I lIw here tlgams talk?" One of the natives t-l-pp,.,,. "No. but there's I sort of mutual lttal t among us that nobody says anything unless he can i prove on the silence. . . .'-OK" chener Waterloo Record, .A vIcIlioI Menu in excel Ill other method: unklng time and l money vanish. - St. Catherine: Stlndard. .lluch ill mode of I new Iir- l croft which can be converted from h rt in 3----'-plano while in motion, but In even risk- ier trick. converting I car into I pile of junk It top speed re- ceive: little applause. - tEdmon- ll” J”""'”l ' There have been. and an-. llt..,,. Happily. people are constantly m Canada who would. dispense discovering for themselves the with the Upper aw" "1 Ullavla. but we would think that her an Very much in the minority. ..ll!!llI. bers of the Commons. particular. ly. would not relish the idea 0, abolishing the Senate. if llnlv an account of the fact that it .'m..l.l give the Commons a lot int.” work to do. A solid core amun the Senators themselves see mg need for Senate reform. The llllli has long passed when the ,,,.., blem should have been Iackl-.-ll Lei us get busy on it: but lllerltg is no need for casting stones M the present membership or th, Red Chamber. - F; ' l ll-,m,,s pleasures of creation and of self- pnrtlclpotion. Beside. lnusic there Ire the vorlous tltiil.: art forms and even lately, handwriting. The results for our civilization, such as it is, cannot but be good. We need more individual endeavour, more individual concern for matters of Only this individually creative at- titude can save this country lruln the mediocrity of the democratiz- Id industriol state. - Kingston. no have It lruni Alexauuer ura- ham Bell himself that he invented , the telephonc in the summer oil 1874 at his father's home in Brant- ford. it was at Brantford, too. I the iii-st lung-ulstancc tele- phone call was mauc on August lll, lll76-to Paris, eight miles away These fact: are duly noted on a moniuncnl at the dell liulllc-stead in Brantfbrd. which has since been known as "The Telephonl City". That was eighty years ago. At Tehran inst weeit, the lralilall (Juv- Irumenl awarded at -o-5U million contract for the liislailalton of 108,000 telephones. West Jermany won it against I. , itllln lrom -'l'lmst- who understand the La... lic. and they were out in force it the Cansu Causeway dedit-alltm were reported to have been HlSlll: entertained by some l'elcre..,.e ,'n Ottawa made by the distinlzlllslll-t. (3-Will weaker. a brotllt-r tll lit. latc Hon. Angus L. lllaclltnlams The Gaelic address uas lllnlll-c to two minutes by official ll-tlp. oi the rapid agenda 'l'on .b'lItil'l I time for all that called for bellll said in the Gaelic. but two min utes can suffice for a pulnu-ll ro mark in the Gaelic as well at English. It can't be said here tha- five other countries-Brltaill, the ll W55 is barbed remark fur i: United States, Sweden, llelgillm had " 90"” ml” tickled "19 lilntll Ind Japan. - Toronto Globe and Di -houslmds present with a lltmt , ledge of the Gaelic. And ll ARI be colljeclured that the dllznllalll-l present from Ottawa WlSll('(l lllm knew precisely what it was llilll In neatly in Gaelic pllrll.:et.lt..tt zirrglck home. - Sydney Post RN" Mail. Clook-and-clal;gcl' police. work in not confined to the movies. it. happens in real life. loo. A power- ful drug ring ills been hit in Vuncouvor and lit mass roundup of suspected pedlars was made "undercover work." Two rookie cunstlables were spec- ially trained for the work by Van- couver city police and the R. C. M. P. They were even given con- vincing looking needle scars to make them appear to be long-time drug addicts. Then they werc l.ul'Ilefl loose in find pedlars. Each at them was able to name I score of di-ugl sellers. people from whom they? lhemse'm. had bought illegal nar- cotics. They played their rules so well that when one suspect was identified by them he blurted out "but one of those punk; was wii-ad himself!" The police doctor hId done the needle scars very well. - Montreal Gazelle. HIGHEST CABLES tillaltlurtllt. rrauce lllt'Ill4lrl. Que oflthe highest cIblc l'allWB)'l in the world was opened Tltursday on I peak of the Algulllc llll llltll, 12.500 feet up in the French Alps. END CANADIAN Tl')l R lili0NTREAl.. tv.i-'l-Llgllt (llll dren from Kaullas. who visited Ol- lawa and Quebec city ull .l "incl finding mission," left for holnc Fri day. The five girls and three htttl made the trip under I plan klltllvl ll "oporstion Goodwill," spoil sored by KInllos war vllterlni Four similar tours of Canada hale been sponsored since 1050 INSURANCE R IN 1) MA Ni llllll co. LlMlll:.Il Iluoo 1813. Offlcoox 0IAIl.0TTITOWN . IUMDEBSIDI I MONTAGDI cosh. return it. Your only cllnrgr p l i.- for tho time you hold it. For example. N00 for 1 month ms" This now voo go confidently on Vlflhfln W with on our: 150 in M00 , locked in your vollet for omun you only 32.00. Phone. write or J” patios If you don't use tho como in today. Iervico lows bk mouth. and taught that. III- log 'I'IlIk not that I In come to destroy the luv. or the prophets: L??? Iot oonu to lloltroy. but to the rut in Charlottetown. However, I heard lllin pi-Iacll uvoi-Ii tlmu. and recall my dad remarking he was gulls I thinker. All the mini- fiue picaclurll, no what”: more, oxccllont. putonl wltlcll clnnot. be Vnld of many of our Western dtvtnu. II the social Ictivltles in most cllurcbu an up far too mucll of their time. This in not maul. for critlclun It Ill. just I Iooui990Io81NOIvwlon6IiI9Io0wo.hmMvnIvhtI "VNV COIFAIV VIVAV IIIII 7. II? VII" .:... ....... FINANCE C0. IN. GREAT GEORGE STREET, CHAILOTTETOWN IOOIIII Floor, Heidi Illlldl Phono: 0518 - Ask for tho YB MA OPIN WININGS IV APPOINVMENI--PHONE POI EVENING HOUIS lulu -It In midst: of IQ iorvooodlng Ion: ' hmul llnollco (nanny of (cult TT'5Tllt)FESSl0NAlTCARDS BARRISll:Kb. SOLICITORS. Etc. .33.... statement of net. The of the church of which 1 Im I inonibor. I ' remarked, "We on oil cougllt up in this bulynou, Ind cIiulol seem to extricate our- selves " Mn. Sterling won ll luvoly lady Inn i know llor hotter tliIll In of our pIItton' wlvu oxcept my 3 a E : 3 5 g E ? MT. imlleaoll cl roam op1'oME1-R,T5'fgT: iv ll! Richmond st. ...m.dm ,,,,, J. Elmer Bllnchltd. B.A. 3 6' E ""””'"”"" ” '”" l 1” 9"" 3L Phou 4282; 5: Glll:hl(C;0.IIngLTcuEsoN. W1 I. A. Former. Q.U., LLB, J. A. Corruthers. R.0. suit of can-liars; Bldg. pm kn: It. nl-VI,-4' Allho M. o . . B J. G t. 0-0- no lucInll'cId of. mm ldllilnclrl W Kgogh an ”"L'lL' .l. s. Tlylot. li.o. Corner Kent O Queen 5"- Otlloo I188: IIOIIIo.-4:75l, Palmer 0 llulom II. J. Mobon, ll.0. Inn II Novo Ioollo Bldg. tum-no l'- I '”"g,::vo:o0-R00 l cl-llltor-lzA"c"lo95: " l-rrlrtv.-lr6r..:.:." m droftoo Olson . - -- in mm at. but 643' o--all-.7 t.t.t"".u.""""'.'t...5 ' ARCHITECL, (I. KOIIII Fltzklfdl CIIII. . M . in Inn: Ii.oQ"'u'.”'Auil A. wnlillul Gllldol, LLB: t Hilllll 3lll- lil Groin ski . L ili-'m-m .lu "Cavendish-:vrltIe'q' tlioE.I(llfu'rhI.lImlooI':d Atlmutt lrllugllllt.-.i 5... ""' 3- "'5 ”'JA-''”'' Iltt I but same: - Iccordlnglo day no her travels. but with be fit. I've DOC liillowlu 51.59)... . rah. ' PIT " '4'" report-were most delicious. sumo cloudy Iv uljf. gm" 3 ... 3' "5. .u. "''':t':'''' t'"""” " oi tin I-I-d I-din ulitnemw llllu"amlnoniloonll.":llu'. C T " ""'-.... -- Iuoo Io doubt more a or bi mg; ,,::,':-I M M mfzmmmmgz n-and”.-7” mm, M HA'RTERED ACCOUNTANTS I VIIropor....irl enl II.vofulrnlrIlrIlItIvII-lIhIll cl)0NALn , W offend unlrtzlghtgarl: Inn to not but I pa-IIIII no S-CID Ila. .'m DIII I71