A Page 4, The Guardian , ' NOTES BY THE WAY A man's putt! hard is please is the inner satisfaction he gets from paying e traffic ticket his wife hag incurred doesn't more than man. up for the -financial loss.-Winnipeg Tribune le'rnest probers late the effects velopmenf. Goddard's liquid-fuel rockets, built and tested in the 1920's and 1930's, foreshadowed the German V-2, the recoilless bazookn of World War 111 the Wac Corporal and other modern high-altitude mie- siles. ' In the Society's files appear early letters between Dr. Goddard and Dr. 0 .Gilbert Grosvenor, now Chairman of the Board of the National Geo- 'Me'dicolly V ' Speaking IF YOU BREATHE T00 FAST DO, you breathe too rapidly or too deeply? Many persons actu- ally overbreathe and get only trouble for their efforts. Overbreatbing. or hyperventi- lation. occurs when the rate or depth of respiration is greater pl. .719 Guawlian . 4--cum Prtaas Edward Island Like the Def Published every week day morning at lob Prince Siren. harlomumu. P. 3.1.. by on nuinsuu cu-nanny us. King St. W.. lkarueln. Iositreai office. & L'niiersll.v Tower lid; Editor. Frank Walks General lllsnaaer. Ian A. Burnett Member Candies Daily Newlvllilli Publishers An-ietattoe Member of Tge CIIIdlla:vPc;C:.:i”. Iiember Audit ureisu o if Iranch ollicea ll Sllmmer1ide.IdonIIlllI and Aibsl:-toe Authorized as Second Clan list! by "II PM 0' N Department. Ottawa. Sunuinarnlds sis.oo PC? as- ..Aa ell feed is Iebedy who likes music that makes you tap your foot instead of the kind that makes you Jump up and down -Brandon un Something that leeterists need to learn in a hurry is the fact that there's no such thing as a traffic " Q3." nSr?ri:mPwgT' I900 om: Provinces and 1 i new - -- - - . . . , . "” -- --.n em-me sow In Avril. 1920. vn :2. fl: ::::3:i:i.".i :"::i..'r:.".::.'::. -- -have or new T.”-TT.-e;t meniory is weaker than Goddard appeared before the So- sol? eq 3 0 ya it should be the immediate'con- 33,',',':,,”,f,2:'ni.Li t'l.lI';:yth:i:IlI.i;e W " ron - l - . TM ' ' Thi means that your body 9"” "E ""7 ”'""”'m ” d'ml"'' ' ognlae also that if children arleeca clety's Research Committee to out- line plans for a rocket capable of , reaching unprecedented altitudes, for weather research. T h a t s a m e month, through a news release, the , Society announced first tests of Dr. ' G0d(lard's apparatus. It predicted, "The event may rank in the history . of a new super-aviation science. as yet unnamed." problem to adults, adults are much more of Se problem to childi-en..v.n. eouver un ..penato Jead-Francois Pellllot f (1 ch . f2:'3':.':.'.Jli ”.:':.'."i. ":i':'...?:'. if o,T,';;rfe”l;',g;g; g--Tggm----iii the Canadian Senate. For example: ,1 h ... V- NY- ha! a new rug. removal of paint from "1 '"' "E9 ' ”” Wnlend windows. better artificial lighting. Y'"." lfo';";.P.'"..l."" fh”:i;'gV- W J frankini ” fo f ' ' mem- mail and replacement for wartim: "3:':hgec;gc':'e:,?, :d:lk';m?,l;9nc:lil1:)t:":s Bi . WI! 1 ceded ill of coi.irse. ill:l9W and young- Tim" um 'Ph'"' b”V'- NW" live er senators from other than the "P"sYd"7 mm R990” Liberal party.-London Free Press the weakest ink.” loses a greater amount of carbon dioxide with the results that your hemoglobin clings more tightly to the bound oxygen. Thus, less oxygen is distributed to the tis- sues as your blo0d courses through your body. In the brain, and other sensi- tive tissues. this lack of oxygen is apt to have immediate effects. You may develop a giddy feel- ing oi; even lose consciousness. your face may become flushed. your vision may be blurred and your hands :nay tingle and feel numb. By this time you realize some- thing is wrong. Since you appar- ently have no control over what is happening, you might become panicky. And this will add to your symptoms. l-Iypei-ventilation can be caused ' by various things. Exertion, especially excessive running, sometimes sets up an overbreathing cycle in apparent- ly healthy individuals. They slin- ply csn't reduce the rate and depth of breathing after it has ihft human cause.-Quebec Chron- c e , liloii5IT'ITTTMAi7Tiif-iiss .-.....n Railway Settlement I -1-hm-,. will be general satisfaction over the scttlcnicnt of tlic threaten- ed railuay strike. The Tai1Wii.V5 aiijd the unions alike are to be-commcri - ed for pursiiiiig negotiations with d-Nm,,.1,V il15'lead of waiting for an avtual work stoppage with con- spqtii-iit confusion and prolonged (halal. A special cause for satisfac- i him is that the Railways, after first Hilus-111;: to negotiate on the basis of 13-,.v L'iiii('il'laii0n Board's I'8D01't. say im iiisiltim of changing thCi1' P051” lltlli iii iii-at respect. After all tho liirii-iioii of an arbitrator is to work I out a compromise between opposmlz ” and if, in this instance, the An ambassador with whum ," were talking the other any ex, plained to us the chief diff-----in between an ambassador 4- . minister from his personal ,-ii-. point. An ambassador must be seated near the head of the ialilc with-we should imagine-s three: to-one chance ofsitting next iii an old bore. The luckier minislcr being of lower rank. gets to in farther down, where there are ex. cellent chances of sitting next to a pretty girl.-New York Times ..In her suit for divorce. a De troit woman complains that her husband's,ludo tricks interfered with her place in society. When high-toned company called. she said that Walter-that's his name -grappled with the unsuspecting guests. "After our friends were thrown to the floor several times." she moaned. "they would leave. never to return," At any rate, just try judo if you want to rid your home of unwelcome company. It's more convincing that s hint.-Syd- ney Post Record L'aw vs. Mercy Moi) terror, such as that which has hm-ii troubling the island of tlypriis for the past several months, is a fcaiiiil thing which calls for ex- traoi'ilinai'y measures. Unchecked, there is no telling to what it might lczid. Whether or not the British govci-iioi- of the island was justified ill rejecting the appeals of two Consider how enterprise can in views; l ., . . .. ' ' Y i tho were sentenced to i carried onf i"liiiidbS had itmained obdurate in iuuni. mm it been automatically increased by , ram one generation to . v i I - - . . - . - has been riI- anothers Col R S ' i . . - - ' i - l . iig id fol their alt in the cur- the exertion. . 0'11"!" N"-" "W - . . . McLaugiiim, . f,..;- of the boaids decision. It it lli It), V I ig ltyhe ti ' T Exposure to com mm pa," or lng rapidly in itihe pest. fewlydearl. grandfather started mnking an ii ll up ittiia . ano r ma el. 0 other strong emotional lgseu p according to t e prov nca epu- handle; for his own use when lie minister of economics. Mr. was clearing land at Enniskillen. piiiwctleiit would have been estab- 1je-lwd xvliivli, in time, would have might start hyperventilation to i ly or . He made such good axe handics that his neighbors asked him in the Rritisli authorities, and from a g g pf- If lnlereel. The Guardian doe! IDI est-ensarily endorse the eplnloe el asrrespondenll. made H18 M1019 Dli1IlCiD1e of arbitra- strii-t legalistic viewpoint, they were . . . .. ........ nu... .... .-.-- It's a natural response to such i . . t-rimiiials, and as such deservin of t' l t. d""?"'d '9' '"?"”"3' "hm" "d "”'k' W"? F" """"-- Then he T , , ,, ,,, the penalty ............f by HUFF AND PUFF ”'l;.:'.:2 .. a"."..':si:';:;r:”:.:';::.”..”r:. ::.';:::..:"l:"'.i. ' Ti 1 1 not 0 sugges la le - 4 . e ma ng o car- , , M K. d th Hke iaw, To their fellow citizens and to - - -A--?-mm-W 0' 0.V"b"""h".l8 by "eq"f,'"'Y l current boom and are well worth Hazel. and eventually the tie. ;:- . unions which threatene e s i .i . . ' g - OTTAWA REPORT . yawning or signing to re e;'e I some of the inconvenience caused I "' automobile: today. (;.-n- l were justified in their demands or l their Gieek klnsmen they weie pat- ; C F l . . ailiiisiioitiyghhos rgL;fglIS,'lt0n.beCg:l:lEenll;l3ee:' l:i,ag)Et:'53:ly rapid expanslon.-0tt- :ralBMntito;-asulial Canada Ltd.-Roy. that the final Setuement was fair riots, and now martyrs in the y enough and frequent enough to, T em! . , ! both Sides That of course is a struggle for freedom. The question 1;!-n ;oI-mu In Open to the an... . produce hypervt-nulatmn. l . 0 ' ' ' ”" , """'”'"'d'"" "' ” i By Patrick Nicholson Snmctinics pcrsons actually de- tliat confronts world opinion in the the case is simple: Were the hang- velop a habit of nverbresthing upon finding ihomselves in an unpleasant situation. three times the size of our catch or Russia's catch. Salmon runs vary in Will the east-west cold war, erupt into a salmon-canning war. debatable question; and there are many people in this country who are i size in 1 NOTICE 1 . - . ings morally defensible? - v - -1 n i 0f the Opmmn that ranway Workels Tl g . f f. . I . A(;,uN5-r m,u0mDA-"ox I,l.1,ep1::e(;iflbvoi:eTt'ii:sn95ari':dlan l cycles. 1955 was a poor cyclical I For example, you might light a l 19 an-SW91 15 3r 10m 91111139. 5;,-.,..'1-hank you for pubpshmg , fisher-!nen's alliance? year. Russia however feels that I cigarette when under tension or are apt to air their grievances a bit too often. That is as it may be. The important thing in this case is that the recommendations of the Con- ciliation Board were accepted be- fore the dispute had time to get out of hand. It is to be hoped that from now on, at least for the life of the new contract, the railways will be able to function without threat of labour trouble. It is to be hoped, too, that the unions will not get into the habit of asking for more and more benefits every time a contract comes up for renewal. There is. after all, a limit to what any special group may properly expect in the way of eco- nomic concessions. On Tbe Edge Of Space Science stands on the verge of sending the first man-made moon beyond the earth's atmosphere-fub filling the 40-year-old dream of an American rocket pioneer named Robert. H. Goddard. Neither men nor animals will ride the first mis- slle into space. Yet it will carry with it almost limitless promise for the future, an article in the National Geographic Magazine predicts. Within two years, th e dis- tinguished sstrophysicist Dr. Heinz Haber writes, the first artificial satellite will be circling the world, climaxing a. great research project carried on intensively since 1955. His article, "Space Satellites, Tools t of Earth Research," is illustrated by I a series of color paintings of how the tiny new moon will appear. racing high above the earth. The dramatic pictures were painted by William N. Palmstrom of th 9 National Geographic Society staff. For de- tailed accuracy, the artist and roc- ket. experts checked such points as stiir positions, shndings of color at great heights, perspective. and the exact paths the satellites will follow at five miles per second .'-iroluid the earth-one complete circuit every 90 minutes. Thirty inches or less in diameter and weighing about. 211,52 polinds, the orbiting sphere will have a clear view both of earth and far beyond. As it sweeps across continents and oceans, high in the fringe of atmo- sphere where the last traces of air become lost in outer space, it.s motion may reveal many secrets of the earth's gravity and qomposition, cosmic bombardments. and the fac- tors thnt cause and affect weather. "The artificial satellite will not be the beginning of s new-weapons de- ”' velopment, and it will not be built because its creators are planning a I , trip to the moon,” Dr. Haber says. a "The satellite program has been in. as a purely scientific project i but one feels that in Britain itself, to say nothing of the wider world community, there will be many who will wonder whether magnanimity would not have served the British cause as well as, perhaps better than, the inexorable carrying out of a statute established in crisis. Fol- lowing so soon after the deportation of Archbishop Makarios-again a perfectly legal order--the incident could very well postpone, perhaps indefinitely, the restoration of law and order, which of course is the first aim of the authorities. "An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth" may be a logical formula in face of terror. Yet, it must be said that mercy has been known to serve the purpose of peace equally well. EDITORIAL NOTES The general view is that the more cheerful a worker is the better work he is likely to do. Not so, reports a research team; the really efficient workers are those who grumble a lot. A professor says that the late Sigmund Freud made words like Id. Ego, a nd Supcrcgo, "virtually household usages". It isn't quite as bad as that, surely. One feels cer- tain there are many, many house- holds where the tricky words are never spoken. C O U Dr. Jonas E. Salk, the origin- ator of the polio vaccine that bears his name, stated recently that the vaccine can now give lifclong im- munity against. paralysis, although the mildcr forms of the disease may resist total eradication for some time, pending further developments. An F.B.I. report reveals that major crime in the big American cities is down slightly from what it was a year ago. Strangely. the rate in cities under 250,000 population and in rural areas has gone up a bit. There's a worthy subject for re- search. It used to be the other way round. 0 O 0 German researchers have dis- covered what it was that made an- cient Roman wrestlers so tough: honey. They ate huge amounts of it daily. To do its best work, the re- searchers advise. the honey has to be in its natural state. not heated to make it keep longer. This should be good news for splarists. Q 0 O Scientists report that the cir- cumference of the earth is a half mile shorter than was believed. They call this information "very import- ant" for the artificial satellite pro- ject to be launched next year by the United States. It would be hard to think up any other reason why the , anus b at an veins. as my letter ”Against l"llioridallun" in your issue of May 7th. ii is g refreshing to come across a pap- er which in fairness to its read- ers gives them a chance to see the other side of the picture on the action of fluorine. Your Note following my letter is based on a pamphlet entitled "Comments on the Opponents of Fluoridation". Your readers will be interested to know that previ- ous issues of that pamphlet con- tained ccrtain statements on me slid on my work, which, hcing totally untrue and libcllous in naliire, had to be omitted in the following issucs. The statements in the "Com- ments." to which your Note re- fers, likewise require r(-rlifira- tion. it is true that the biblilr graphy of the Report of the United Kingdom Mission which came to study fluoridation in the United States failed to list a single reference to my work, but everybody familiar with the methods employed by the fluorid- ators knows that ignoring the work carried out by their op- poncnls is one of thcse methods, irrespective of whether the fluor- ldators' "unselfish. philanthropic. and altruistic" activities are put into praciive in Great Britain, in the United Stalcs. or iii any other distant part of the world. Concerning the second state- mnnt taken from tho 'fFuin- ments", according to wliicli "in- 1952 the National llescarch Coun- cil publishcd a 565 page book with 2016 references entitled 'Survey of the Literature of Dental Caries', of wliich chapter of 90 pages was devoted to "Fluorine and Denial Caries, but none of Dr. Spira's iiumcrniis papers was montloncd in this bilillograpliy", may I point out that it is not the job of a practis- ing physician and research work- er on the subject of chronic flu- orine polsoning to deal with the problem of dental caries? it was. therefore. quite legitimate for the Survey to omit the 34 puprrs which i had publishcd on the purcly mcdical aspcrl of the dis- easc. Not in one of them have I touched upon lill' problrm of dental dct-ay. The study of this problem should be left in thc dcnlnl proics.-inn. so iilliil as it does not facts with Vlilli'h it cannot be cxpccictl to be iliinilisr. Sonic light is. liuivevcr. thrown on the altitude of the fluni'idatoi'.-v. when it is nliscricd that in tilt- chaptcr on "Fluorine and Denial Caries" its author writes from the centre of both fluoridation of public water supplies and Ill! aluminium industry that "in ad- dition lo alertness for the ap- pearance of mottled cnamcl.-. it may be well .... ..to dctcrnii hearing acuity", without even mentioning the fact that it uas I who was the first to draw the attention of the medical protra- sion to slowly progressive draf- ness being caused by the Wise continued action of ingested fluorine. I daresay I feel Hatter- ed to know that my reports on the subject of fluorine are con- sidered by the fluoridstors to be V potentially or harmful to their plans enre has to be siippressed lest someone Interested is tempted to look them ulr. , I am. Sir. etc. LEO SPIRA. ll.i).. PhD- Ncw York City. The Age Old Story Enter ye II at the strait gate: for wide is the gate. and broad in the way. that leadeth to destruct- ion. and many there be which go . in tllereet: because strait is the i gate. and narrow is. the WI!- tlere be that find it. LOW SPOT The Dead son. world's deepest is I.& feet below see filler iiitcrfore with liictlirill , that mention of their exist- l Worried Canadian and Russian fisheries discussed this increasingly serious situation, Fisheries Minister Jim- my Sinclair told me in his Par- liament Building office recently. .-it stake for British Columbia is the whole of her fifty million dol- lar annual salmon industry. Tile threat to this rich see her- vest lies in the mass-cntchingj methods used by Japanese factory ships operating-l nearly and pcrhaps correctly said ”poschlng" in mid-season. Unlike the other great harvests of the Pacific- lislibut and herring-the salmon is not a lifetime dweller in the public ocean. it is spawned and grows up in the steltered waters of rivers, and the nations owning such rivers" rightly or wrongly feel that they have a preferential interest in their yield. The Russian salmon spawn in the mighty Amur river. Ours spawn in the Fraser and other river systems. The third but comparatively insignificant course of Pacific salmon is the smell: Japanese rivers. Last year, Japanese fishermen could only catch six million sal- mon in their own territorial wat- ers: lhat was presumably the to- lal available catch from the runs in Japanese rivers. But the c.-iiiglit a bountiful sixty-five mil- , liim salmon on the high sons, nearly all of which are presumed to have been iailicr than Canadian salmon. as they were caught in the western half of the Pacific ocean. DID JAPAN POACH'.' in contrast to that big Japan- ese haul, Russia last year could only approximately match our latch of about i30,000.000 pounds. ii is impossible to compare with act-lirzicy the Japanese system of mcasuring catch as so many fish, as against our system quoting so many pounds of salmon. ('ommcrcially-caught species of siilmnn may each range from about 4 pounds up to 30 pounds nr more. Our British Columbia plants canned one and a half mil- lion cases last year; each case being the equivalent of eighty pounds of landed fish before trim- nuns. A good guess would be that Japan's catch was more OUR YESTERDAYS from The Guardian Files TWENTY FIVE YEARS AGO fMly I4. I931) Three students attained di.sIinciioii" alums in the Faculty of Arts and Science. All three are from the island. they are; Stuart Docherty, (lardigan: Earle Ebers. Charlotte- town; and Robert Donald, Malpr- quc. ”grt-at The (TGS Montcalm is ;t pre- sent placing bouys in island wa- ters. The harhnr bouys are in pos- ilinn and the steamer today sails in the direction of Cape Breton The work is expected to be com. pleted in a week. p Prohibition officers have not yet discovered where the quantity of liquor has been hidden. which was landed asst week by daring rum running aviators in the vicinity of Summerside. TEN YEARS AGO (May M, INC) A C47 U.S. transport plane took off from Summerside airport yes- tcrday afternoon to insugeiste ; what may become a profitable . trade between Prince Edward ls- l land and U.S Army bases in New- foundland. The plane carried a cargo of M0 gallons of fresh milk. Eighteen Charlottetown girls. with Mrs. Edwin Jollnstone, music vnstrnotress. leave by has this morn for New Glugnw. N8.. where-matey will the Pro- vince in the Nova seotia musical l festival. mi New Glasgow mu. : sl is only I from Nova sestia and Prince Int Ed officials have alrendyi Russian salmon T in the recent examin- p open to competitors Id- - the poor haul of her fishermen. operating traps on the Amur riv- er, was partly attributable to the l Japanese depredations among the i fish on the high seas. could reach the Amur. So Russia has ordained an up- per limit of 25.000,000 upon the number of salmon which Japan- ese fishermen may take on the high seas this year. FREEDOM OF THE 1 Japan is very disturbed by this ' action. Canadian officials are un- derstandably concerned to what the next move Will Japan observe edict? If not, will own salmon? which her fishermen 000 miles away? The delicate point freedom of the seas. any fisherman full scope outside another nation's territorial waters. Despite this freedom, Japanese fishermen are being progressively First there is hedged in. "Rhee Line", set up Y i Syngman Ree 60 miles off Korea. Then there is the dangerous radi- coming from the U. 5. atomic tests at Bikini. Then there is the North Pacific International Fisheries Trcziiy with i ation and fall-out its boundary on the lei. And now there is catch limit. This situation gives portsnce to tile kov. with whom our clair confcrrcd in year. EXECUTOIS AND . iii gt as let em beellal 'A hams: Wly as Meal Veer WW this game of international poker. force to back her claim to her If she docs. wlll' Japan break the 3-year-old treaty i with us and the States, under from fishing nearer to our coast 1 than the 175th parallel-about l,- - tional maritime law involved hcre is the ancient principle of expected visit here in August of U.S.S R. Minis- ter nf Fish industries. It gives little importance , i lation in food. QUESTION AND ANSWER before they Answer: SEAS? no chance of becoming pi 302 will be in Agulapan the Russian Russia use i in Seattle this summer. are banned 1 of interns- by a seine peace. the W5 Ell" STUDENTS TO SEE CAPITAL OTTAWA (CF)-More the by President ture in ll "fl" sey. 175th parsi- P . "1" R"”"'" LAND GIANT RAY esp:-cisl im- l AA, 151,. came up with a giant ray fish Jinnny sin. we-igliing 1,115 pounds. The four- liussia last man crcw fought the fish four hours before landing it. for things you need and wont GstS50to3l000 nt Pousehnld Finance lur iiny worthwhile purpose. it's the way thousands of people every year not the extra cash they need on IA-rms they can aiford. if you have a steady income, and you can meet the regular monthly pay- ments, you can borrow without endur.-at-rs nt ill-TC. & Ff HOUSEHOLD FINANCE W R. Wheeler, Manager I50 Greet George 50., who I, phone I511 CHAILOTIITOWN, P.I.I. TRUSTEES FOR OVEI NAIF A CENTUIY your family needs the protection your will can give them Only you can put your wishes into your Will. We can help you do fills. THE ROYAL TRUST OOIIPAIIY I79 QUE 37., CHAILOITETOWN 0 TIIHONI 6336 &l.Ql7I!V.MANAX i an obese person may seek conso- Mrs. A.Z.: I am 52 years old and have not had a menstruation period for over a year. Am I still in danger of becoming pregnant? Usually, in women in , wiiom menstruation has ceased ' for this period of time, there is to the first Russian step towards participation in the Canada-U. S. North Pacific Treaty: namely her request to be allowed i to attend as an observer at the treaty organization's next meeting Fisheries Minister Sinclair re- mains hopeful that friendly agree- ment may be srrived at before i competitive catching destroys this bountiful harvest. Or. to coin a nasty pun, the east-west cold war may be followed in the Pacific than 180 young Canadians will be in the capital this week on an ”sdven- sponsored by the Rotary club of Ottawa. The students, selected from all parts of the country, will visit the House of Commons and Senate and be re- ceived by Governor-General Mae- TAMPICO. Mexico (AP) - The crew of a shrimp boat off Tam- plco cast their nets Friday and 'As our business has been reorganized to s Ltd. Co., all accounts owing the old film are due and pay- able before Mey 31, 1956 and after that date we shall be obliged to take legal action for collection of same. Should there be any discrepancies or adjustment claims kindly content in before that date. PALMER ELECTRIC B-0-A-f Ticket Instalment Plan for Canadian: who want to travel now and pay later Forti-iecomuiiesscsofnwelenishowmsolty first and pay tau L0.A.C. Tieinat instalment Plan is the scam. Iii pie: '3 eapeciely rhodiu- ofinanwtiswistitseevdviboulistsoting savings or investments I Tbeee who wish to travel on humans ad -outdliketetsksheir-inssteeg O IIaveHeedeevdeIiveeeheedIbqnvo& iiksbvisit O Wisltstravalietedaseetieeelperpeen OWaeidl'akateungeierbieedauvehtives alireadteoolnetetlaasde. l.0.A.C.is nee 'I'.l.P. applies for s dvort trip or a whole pedtage tour. It's as simple as this-sea your Travel Agent or B.O.A.C. ticket office- pian your trip. pay as filth as I094 down. balance up to 24 months. lave: below an based as mad-try navlujnan Mcnlreel Pill MINI 034-00 851-80 new new TIIIIFIIT 880-10 00”! 812.1? out II)! All. OVII THI WORLD III VIII IIAVII AOIII. IMIWAV VIGIII CHIC! OI IQIDI IVIQII HOD MIWIVI IOIFXA