-I-:9 - - 'l'Ul:SDAYL-1liNI!!J. us-1 Yeslerclay's Election At the time of writing .the over- all result of yesterday's history- making federal election was still un- rertain, with the two major parties running neck and neck, Conservative gains in the Maritimes and Ontario being offset by the almost solid phalanx of Liberal victories in Que- bec. There can be no question. how- ri-ei-. about the tremendous change which yesterday's voting will mean in the constitution of Canada's next Parliament. (lone uill be the oven whelming majority for our party and 3 the new government---be it Liberal or Conservativ&will be kept con- ntantly on its toes. Provided the re- suit is not ii complete stalemate. this should mean better administration. and certainly more vigorous repre- sentation for the Maritime Prov- inces. , Prince Fidward island led the way in the Conservative drive, re- V turning all four of the party's can- didates. Messrs. Phillips, MacLean. Macquarrie and MacDonald, whom we congratulate warmly upon their linprecendentcd victory. Tbcir l.ili- eral opponents put up I strong fight. but it was evident from the earliest I returns that they were in serious l trouble. The same trend, though less i marked. was soon evident in Nova C smtia and New Bninswick. tinder- lined by the defeat of two cabinct ministrrs. lion. Dr. Gregg and Hon. Mr. Winters. The ('oiiseiwative gains in the Marltlmes are not hard to account for. Over a nd above other griev- ances. shared in general with other parts of Canada. was the feeling that these Provinces have been badly p treated under the new tax rental i agreements with Ottawa. We believe this to have been the most important issue so far as Prince Edward island ' was concerned. According to I Dom- inion bureau of Statistics report published last week. this Province has the fourth highest direct per capita debt of any Province in (an- nda. The figure stands at S206. with New Brunswick and Nova Scotia still higher. Undcr the tax agree- ments the three Provinces zct equal- ization grants totalling little more than one-half that of Quebcc. whosr direct debt per capita is only 581;. A large part of our available revenue must be diverted to servicing this debt burden. It I time when the Tiominion Government has been roll- ing up huge year-end surpluses. in this Province the contrast between our impoverishment and Ottawa's bulglng treasury is particularly strik- lng. we got nothing extra out of tlic new tax deal, and were billed for a million and I quarter dollars over- payment under the. agreement which ? t terminated last March. Our taxpay- ers Wt"i'P rightly concerned about this situation. and they expected evet'.V ' candidate running for office to be alert to its serious implications. (for- talnly they will PXl)W'- fmm """ newly elected representatives. coer- getic action in obtaining I readjust- merit. Now thIt the election is over. it is to be hoped that both sides will forget partisan politics and concen- trate on the problems ahead. in the Maritime: eIpeclIliy there I! much to be done. and the fullest coopera- tion between our provincial and talent niamhu-I will be required A Timely Precautions V twltll beaches bedtonilll the public ouuulur fun in the water. it in Hull to II! reminded that mmmar 7 vanntbiia eon bring tragedy to 3. not swim far from shore. Swim pan- allei to the shore if .V0U Wish t0 "')' for distance. Non-swimmcis should not float into deep water on inner tubes or other inflated articles. If the float begins to leak. the swimmer is in difficulty. Do not dive into unfami- liar water and do not swim beneath diving boards. . if a swimmer is in difficulty, try to rescue him with ii boat. I rope or an extended oar. D0 H01 Swim to him unless it is absolutely necessary. Often the would-be icscuer also be- comes ti victim. At public beaches, swim near the lifeguard stations. Wait for at least an hour after meals before swim- ming. Beware of tindcrtows in rough wam-l no not swim during lightning storms. These suggestions can save your own life. But you ma.V H150 be time to saw Sm-n(anflP else's life if you ipa,-9 hmr to administer artificial respiration. it is it 200d idea. l0T you may be the only one It hand for this life-saviiiz "iW"3ll0n- New Language A new language-actually I scientific languazt”-Will URUFP in the reports of the ninth International Congress on Rheumatic Diseases. to be held in Toronto. .lune 23-28. More than 1.000 medical scientists from 40 countries will attend the congress. the first to be held in Canada, and the second in North America. The new language. lnterlingua. notes the Cape Breton Post, was born of necessity of a single means of communication in essential words used by people in combaitlng afflic- tions so universal and world-wide in attempts to combat them. as arth- ritis and other rheumatic discascs. Aiistracts of more than 200 pap- ers on these problems have been translated into lnterlingtia and will appear in a tfifi.page volume foi' all dclcgatcs. lnterlingua is the product of i7 years of effort by science academies in Great Britain. France. Italy and the llnitcd States. lntcrlingua uses a mixture of English. French. Italian. Portugesc and Spanish. and its founders say it can be readily understood by peo- ple who speak any of these langu- ages. For example. the English word "school" is found as ”ccole." ”scu- loa." ”eacuela" and ”escole" in the other languages from which inter- lingua is derived. Grammar is re- duced to a minimum. and the word order is generally the same as in the romance languages-this is to say in the languages that derive mainly from the Latin. EDITORIAL NOTES Yesterday's election will cost the ltoniinion treasury about S6.5fi0,000, which is an increase of 3i70fi.0fifi over l.'l.'i.'l, this being accounted for by higher fees to the host of 20fi.000 who registered the voters and who were in charge of polls on Monday. 0 O O The British (;overnmcnt. un- niovcd by American protests. has acted to place trade with Commun- ist (lhina on the same basis as trade with Russia. Four other nations, Japan. France. Noiway and Den- mark. are expected to follow almost immediately. The United States is almost alone in its dcfiant insistence. on maintaining it total embargo on trade with Communist (lhina. O O 0 That world public opinion is soft- ening towards former Nazis is shown in ii dispatch from Gemiiiny which says that I on. time concentration cii mp commandant convicted of murdering hundreds of inmates has been given I nine year prison sen- tence. When these. trials first began and for some time thereafter the death penalty was meted out for lesser crimes. 0 O 0 Scot: have been noted for their inventions which have brnuxht INN almost revolutionary process?! in engineering and another seems to be populiir with certain great industries. It has COIM to light that John Mc- Gregor of Edinburgh has produced I ubotance which, applied to I!!! surface of any metals. will eliminate Iipercentoffrict1on.therehY WV imglng the life of machinery and PHOTO FINISH The Habit Of First Names Chicago Tribune l.nokin: down I list of popular i singers the other day. we found only thnee whose press agents per- mitted them to face the world in their own hniicsl-in-goodness first names Elvis. Perry. and Roger. .-ind vie suspect the press agents 1 of those thrcc would jump at a nice. cute nickname if they j could only tltink of one! is for the nthcrs. they includ- ed Piurtrlx. f'liiu-k. .iohniiy. .linun.i'. Fat:-. Ricky. Tali. Fra ikie. Bobby. Randy. and almost ci'er)' lW'k' name which has ever been applied In I third grade hny during re- res: Nirkiirimcs used to be a sort of personal maltcr. cniplokcd b,V childhood friends and close rela- tivos They become public only vihcn popular figures earned the. . spoiitaiieoiis affection ol the peo- . pie through human qualities. The miscliicvous glint in Kini Henry VIII eyes won him the popular nickname iiarry. and the first queen i-llizabcih, ii gal who really pnjnypd her job. was Bi-sii. Victor- ia had I perfectly good family nickname. Vicky, but she just wasn't the type to encourage it pulilicl) Aiiici'ir.1ns ,s-liuucd the same spontancous affection for Abe i.in- coin tind Tcdd.V Roosevelt. but oth- er equally worthy characters just weren't the nickname WSW wll" viould have spoken of ”.ini'n" Walli- Sugored History Toronto Star ”Yrui. probably kiinw that in all its history. the United Slates of America has never unleashed an ......,i... Mar." said Turner Cat- ledge. managing editor of The New York Times. to Nikita Khrush- (-hfv during it recent interview n Moscow - it s not reported ill at -Vii? Khrushchcv giiffawed. Perhaps. he was being unusually polite. 07 P"- hapa he is Is toiichingly innocent of some facts of American history. iix Mr. Fiirlediie seems to bc. Hui Canadians. rcmembcrinii tbIt Un- cle Sam was not nlviays xuch I friendly neighbor as he iii now. may be permitted I quiet smile. in lfi46-48 the United Stnieti forc- ibly relieved Mexico of the respon- sibility of governing any part of this ”an uniiistiablc war uncon- stituiinnaliy begun.” in iitiiti the United States picked I fiitht with reluctant Spain and drove the Spaniards out of (Tuba. Peurtn Rico and the Philippines- Then there was that ttnirly hefty swing which the United States took It this country in itil2. No doubt many well-meaning Americans of that tiny aimed to liberate us from the tyranny of George. ill. But we hadnlt asked to be libei-Itcii. Ind there is I monument over at Queenstown marking the place where. the American invaders were thrown back. Of course. the custom of white washing certain pages of the his- tory book isn't peculiar to Amar- lcnnn. Off-hand we can't recall any country even coiifesiwi in aggres- sion until I conqiicrorii boat was on ltii chat. Activity At Frobisber Boy Ottawa CH1 uigton. "i.cx" Hamilton or ”Wnod.v" Wilsoii' Today the nickname has become in commercial attribute intended In make people think the bearer has earned it. Press agents dig nicknames out of family photo- graphs and grade school class pic- tures; and if I bidding entertain- ment .utars' name does not tend itself in I nickname. they more nlien than not change the name in politics W. Avcrcli iiarriman ended tip frantically as Ave. and the once aloof Thomas Dewey be- came Tom. The "nee-how-the-folks - love me” bill has bittcn almost every field except perhaps funeral dir- cctnrs. Snlemn corporation exccu- - tiics emcrgc. in the company rail- in Ids. as Charley. Bill. Jor and Danny; Ind it old Cbarleswilliam Eliot and A. Lawivnce Lowell were to try to raise funds among the y alumni today. they might well 0- l merge as Chuck and Larry. i t A Costly Gift Manchester ardian Another nf France's once-proud edifices. the 450-ycar-uld Chateau de Gaillon. sixty miles northwest of Paris. has been humiliated by the brave new world. it is offered as I gift if its land is bought It the current local ratc- lnquirics have been made by ”all sorts of queer people” who display no more interest on learn- ing that 50.000 would be needed to make the place habitable. The Chateau. built by a cardi- nal who uas a minister of Louis Xll. has an historical cloister. n Renassance turret and portal. dun- geons. and ii vIst hail between two towers. Parts of the fabric are in the Louvre iiiusciim. The pri- mates of Normandy lived at Gail- ion. Kings stayed there. Napoleon used the chateau: as I hostel for the poor. it has been I convalescent home. I prison. and Ii workshop. its only inhabi- l lant is I caretaker. and it is one of the few old French Chateaux that has not ii ghost. Sahara's Resources National Geographic Sociflv The clesolala Shara. whose name. comes from I primitive word meaning "wild lInd good only to he crossed." today promises in- dustrial wealth and power through unrtcrground resources Seven goveriiments .VliHrt' con- trol of this vast and still little known desert of North Africa. lays the National Geographic Sn- ('I".V Reaching; from the Mediterran- ean lo the rontineniis hcart, and from the Atlantic in the Nile. the Saharan countries include French Algeria. French West and Equator liil Africa: west-coast Spnnlii Sa- iiiirI.; Arab-ruled Morocco. Tunis- ia. Incl Libya; Egypt. and the Su- dan. Current economic developments spotlight French territory. by far the largest of Sahara holdings. There. in recent years. intensive prospecting has turned up far- flung mineral deposits that add to reserves of producing areas and open new fields for development. FINDS VARIED. RICH Foal iron. manganese. and tuna- lien have been found in northwest Algeria along the undefined Mor- ocean border. More iron is avail- able in western Mauritania. where rich copper ores also invite exploit- ation. . Oil strikes have nroiised hopes of abundance comparable with that of the Near East. The flowing black gold has gushed up It points in northeast, east. and central M- geriI. . For good meiiiuirr. natural gas iiiiri coal fields lie near the oil of mid-Algeria's in SIiIti Uranium - has been detected farther south- east in the AbIuIr Mountains. Tin is worked south of the Air mountains, in easternmost French West Africa. The practical difficulties of ex- lrlctllll the Sahara): buried trus- ures. however. are an imposing II potential economic returns. Vast uninhabited expanses Ind The fur trade was already on- tatiiinhed there ulthousl not until formidable uh-itaclcs barren mruntaiii chains. rock-strewn plI- ii-Ius. Ind dune-dotted seal on und -- discourage transport of incoming supplies and equipment. and outgoing ore shipments. Violent winds and dust storms add in hardships of sun-searing days and freezing nights. in lands of little rain Ind no permInciii rivers. sudden lloudhllfallt fill dry Wadis with iloooods that sweep Ill before them. . DESERTS ON MARCH Students of Sahara climate Ind it-rrain say. too. that the eroded fiinty deserts are on the march. and that nomads speed up the pm- ress by overgrazing liveiitock and burning as fuel what little vegeta- tion remains. On the other hand. research scientists and Iechniciarui long liIvo. been piling up information on ways to conquer the SIbIrI. Spurred now by known resources the French Government. is consid- ering long-range programs to tap and conserve Ill Iourcss of water. and bring Ii-id. empty had: to life by planting hardy food crop! In.i windbreaks to check erosion. industrial plans call for build- ing mine settlements. oti refiner- ies. pipelines. roads. railways. and airports. Modern lIbor-Iaving mn- chines are proposed to offset the oasis-and-delert f.'i'iIli1try'I Icaiity manpower. Those hopeful of making the Sn- hara more productive and livable point to the tiny when North Afri- can wait I Roman granary. Ind. centuries eIrlic.. when natural and irrigated crops supported iaru II- live populations. Strlkhig evidence that the II- iiIrI once held life-giving forest: Ind gran land: linui-I in prahio ioric rock and cave drawings h the heart of wutelaiidn. motion explorer: have come on In it carvings of horse-drawn war c Ir- iotit Ind bll-ulne hunters with such animal: as glraffes. elephants buffaiou. gatellel. Ind lions. Pmblabtt thus thin unique legislative will gain I better knowledge problems and potentialities the Eastern Arctic. That Ito: in only banking to secrets. but It i . Cuttii-igl3t5wn On Salt At Meals Iy HERMAN N. IUNDBEN.M.D. i-our moat of us. food would taste pretty fiat without I mu. IIII. But you never realize how much natural salt. or Iodlilm there is in various foods. u atil your doctor places Wu Oil I I01-l' ium-restricted diet. Generally. our daily conIump- tiou of sodium in one form or an- other totais somewhere betweu three Ind Iix grams. CUT SALT INTAKE Simply by eliminating the us 0 of salt in reparing the foods and It the tab c. you can cut this in- take to between 1.000 and 1.51!) milligrams. or I gram to I gram Ind I hall. For persona Iufferiiig congen- tie heart failure. .h.lSh blood pressure. certain kidney diuull and other illnesses. even this amount may be too much. so the doctor will advise cutting down on sodium intIke. There's only one way to do it.- confine the diet to tooth with low s" content. FRUITS AND VEGETABLE Raw fruits Ind vegetables ill comprise I major portion of any such diet. becIuIe for the in on part they contain insignificant Imounta of sodium. They Ira especiauy desirable in a sodium- restricted diet. because may add flavor to I meal whi:h might otherwise be lacking in taste. with other foods. however. you have to be careful. Animal foods. in general. con- tain in fairly substantial amount. of sodium. Coniieque-uiv. you must consume such items 5: meat. poultry. fish. eggs and milk in restricted amounts. BANNED FROM DIET Larger amounts of sodium an found in shellfish and organ meats, so they are usually banned. The white of an egg contains considerably more sodium thui does the yolk. and the dark meat of I chicken and other poultry has greater sodium content than does the white meal. Use of nailed broad Ind butter. of course. must be restricted. However. you don't have to go hungry on I iiall-free diet. There are plenty of foods you can Int. - QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. U. P.: My metabolism is extremly low. My doctor wishes to give me Thyroid. How eve r l have had tuberculosis and am dubious about taking it. Answer: Persons who have had tuberclosis Ind have I low meta- bolism are benefited by taking tiiryoid. You Ihould be guided by your doctor. 7oedGMaz RAIN AFTER DROUTII After the pines: weeks of that tor- tured season When the ponds dried up. and I haze which was always smoke Hung thickly. and always behind it the iiun'I red treason. . - When I few nice clouds banked up in the northeast. broke Again inln sunshine. and gain whipped forward I rush of sulphu m..- threat from Icru of burning oak. . . the when we watched Ill night for the spark in the underbrush Or the tier: brown fields that should fire I barn. the reason Timing those halted Item to the moment) husti. . . . Oii. now this rain fIllI lileuedly on my heart . Day after day of it. drenching tiui pIi-cbed-out Ioli. Slow dogwood leaves Ind the lien- -itIiitpoppyrooiI.... lrlmming the Itrumi. Ind plod- Itng the buckwheIt'I Itart. Leaving the intervals laced with I iiilver coil. Assuring both meadow and brain of their natural fruits. ---Florence E. Jacobs in The New York Herald Tribune. The Age Old Story We0piIlg may endure far I light. MI Joy roinnili in tho rnralnt. OUR YESTERDAYS From the Guardiu Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Una: Ii. I033) The Gordon homestead. near Al- bertnii. may me I emot- iIl to two missionaries of that name who gave their Hveu to the work of the Presbyterian Church in Eromaiiu. New Hebrides. The Presbytery General Assembly to day referred to tho htaoricai cun- mittee the Min of the owners. A iipeclai meeting of Bond was held . was accepted. eommitue us Iuitio N.OTES BY THE'- WAY -- 8-" 1- can buy the lroeel-in for I weeak for 85. but who wants to live on lPl8lIet.t.ic and bird Iced? -Moose Jaw Tllneg.Hel-lid of coarse clothes don't make in man. but so many are better judg. es of clothes than they are of men. -Brandon Sun W50! you find two nearly-wed: Wllihtlxeir neat Idequately feather- ed -11: time to look for four well- plucked parents.-Nanaimo Free Press The fishing boat. llnse Valley of llurnmouth. Berwicluiiire. caught I monster lobatcr while operating off her home port. It measured ill inches Ind weighed 7 lbs. (W: on. -Edinburyi Scotsman "Ii you believe oil I!" F fade away." observe. a v.-' -. World War I. "Just liy , into your own army uiIi'- .- Hamilton Spectator i.-....' A Milwaukee man went in 1... police station to pav a SS pa.-tuna fine. As he walked back to his -3,- he was handed I ticket for jg)-. walking - 82 more. - Edmuniun Journal A -'i p H” Nniv that Elsa Maxwell and ii". - Duchess of Windsor have m.-,.i,. it up we can stop slaying uvakp . at nights worrying about them ma v devote mane time to this new quep. tiun raised by I magazine. 1. Frank Sinatra really happy... Hamilton Spectator ' CIIOOSING IIXBCUTOIS 7 include the Royal Trust and damn your family the pro faction of an Ixporlonaod and p-iaioncat Executor. Write or lIlOplIonI for inter mation about our union. IHE ROYAL TRUST e o M r I N Y W? ouzsu si., CNARLOTTETOWN . mama”; 4,33, C. F. INHW, MANAGE! PERIL and welcome your inquiries obligation. (itfires. Charlottetown On the sea. on land. in the air. peril of storm. falling aircraft. of automobiles. of accident. of sickneu. in our modern life we are surrounded by perils and that. lit why we employ the system of insurance to protect us financially. 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