i l 2 Ellie 65mith Cover! Print! Edwlni lIlIlld Like The DUI . we. HIM-:1, 'ubll'lm Ivm'm two runs Well-7 Imuuv. Editor rdim rush-rue um. week thy "taming (.xupi sh» day- .ne .mvlory hol m) n I6! mm sum, as by Thomson lelplpfll ltd. Summemdc. Montague. Albee lnnsllv by Thomson Newsplpon Adv-"lung 3mm lemme, 425 U! mry A". Implu 3.5st, Moms-Ii, up CIIhrIn shah Unlvuvm e.ses1.- when. otIlrI. loan wm Georgi. sum. VIHCOUVIV (Ms 7037i. A . 'ms in cxclullvely Wynne n. m. tun Idr repub- ilnlmn oi all news dllplkflll in this plpel Ind d in ii or it the Anni-tad Full or Raul-n Ind Inn to Ihe local new: publish-d her-in. All ylghn or "Wanna... oI .pe .l app-lo... hmln lilo reserved Subunpllon v No! over 35c per week “LOO I yur by mail or run l serviced in (or... "sum . y... all IilInd Ind ux. mm W your h. u, no elsewhere which n h c . monwellih, Nov over 7. pm ungl. copy. Member Allle Bu of CirrulIllan. inch: a"' ruasosliunusr'znfifi, Blood Donors Needed This is blood donors week for eight rural clinics throughout the Province, and it is to be hoped that the appeal which is being made will meet with satisfactory response. 1080 donors are required to meet the demand. Facilities for testing Ind cla ifying will be available It all clinics, so that even those who have not previously given their blood may do so without undue delay. The present rate of donations provides no surplus and it is very important in maintain our quote. New Brunswick Division reports that a shortage of blood is inter- fering with normal treatment of hospitalized patients, and we don't want that to happen here, Actually. the June clinic in Prince County was some 60 donors short of quota, which means that it reached only 94 percent of the objective. It is well to remember that mod- ern medical techniques require the use of a greater amount of blood derivatives than in the past. The donating of blood is therefore a most necessary public service. That is why six of the eight clinics in operation this week are being sponsored by Royal Canadian Legion branches. The Provincial Command of the Legion has donated a trophy for competition between the branches, and all communities will be compet- ing for the Manning Trophy. It is a contest in which everyone is concerned—for who can tell where the next pint of blood will be most desperately needed? Standing Order 5 Scarcely mentioned in the brief debate on the parliamentary pay in- crease at Ottawa was the problem of Parliamentary absenteeism. The two subjects are closely related from the taxpayers' point of view: but then the taxpayers only sit by proxy in Parliament, and their proxies appear to have been more concerned about other matters. But the fact is that absenteeism is be- coming more, not less. of a problem in the House of Commons. and throughout the latter part of the session now adjourned the atten— dance—bad enough on any day of the week—was appallingly low on Fridays and Mondays. Arthur Blaker devotes a tren- chant article to this subject In the Montreal Gazette, and we make no apology for quoting the gist of it here though we have dealt with it on other occasions. Under a quaint honor system. each MP is the sole judge of whether he has—or has not—been absent from his duties. And in any event. the penalty provision has so many built-in loopholes and escape hat- ches that it is rarely applicable. Chiefiy it encourages absenteeism on the part of Quebec and Ontario MPs whose home: are within easy btrllting distance of Ottawa. Members feel that they should come and go as they please. Yet there Is nothing in the rules ounc- tloning such free and easy proced- u'l'e. 0n the contrary. as Mr, Blake- 5 points out, Standing Order 5 of the Commons—unchsnged eIneI Confederation—npmvidee thIt "every member is bound to Ittend the ser- yic' of the House. unless have of them has been given him by the ul- vuum Ind on ' Time.” It In only I question of en- thls rqu to bring the re- coleiinnt Member. to heel. dly enforced. Any MP who wish- to leave OtthI mutated hen the House through I oolloIguI. Mom m the “trod IbeIrioe had to be given. Ind offendorl were dealt with unruly. Sir John A. Mncdonsld himself was once summoned to the Bar of the Commons for having been absent without leave from I meeting of In elections committee, He duly ap- peared in the custody of the Ser- geant-at—Anne, and presented I defence in the form of I medical certificate. Not since 1906. however, has the Canadian Commons given serious consideration to a daily record of at- tendance. The project was backed by Lsurier Ind Borden. but each was promptly faced with a revolt from restless backbenchers anxious to preserve their lax attendance system. The project collapsed and the system. with few changes, is still in effect. Now that all the Members are on full-time 1783'. wouldn’t this be I good time to have Standing Order 5 dusted off? Down The Drain We hadn‘t heard about it before, but I debate has been going on in learned circles Ibout the direction in which bath water spirals as it flows down the drain. This is some- thing like coming in at the tail end of I show. because the issue has now been decided according to the Christian Science Monitor, which went to the trouble of consulting Professor Ascher H. Shapiro of the Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy on the subject. Presumably he‘s an authority, for the Monitor accepts his verdict without question, Those who maintained that bath water tends to swirl counterclock— wise in the Western Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern due to the earth's rotation are basically right, it seems. But theirs is a hol- low victory, aa Prof. Shapiro pro< ceeds to show. He says that forces of friction and turbulence in ordniary sinks and bathtubs overwhelm the minute in- fluence of the earth's spinning. The direction of swirling drainwater, he finds, "seems to vary in an unpre- dictabie manner" under household conditions. But under carefully con- trolled laboratory CLlnd one that suppress the influence of more pow- erful forces, the turning force of the earth’s rotation—over a million times weaker than gravity—will make itself evident. How does he know? While other scientists have been wasting their time in perfecting ballistic missiles, space capsules. nuclear submarines and whatnot. Frof. Shapiro has been studying vorticity. He has demon- strated the effects of the earth's rotation on drainwater many times with equipment built for an educa- tional film he is prepanng. and thus procured himself I niche in the hall of fame without putting the taxpayers to any burdensome ex- pensc. And, as the Monitor says, he has diplomatically resolved this an- cient puzzle in a way that leaves both sides of the argument with some glory. It wonders, nevertheless, who is to be praised the more— thoee who stuck with their realiza- tion that basic physical force must. be operating in spite of no direct evidence, or those who stood by their own observation that no preferred direction of swirl could be seen re- gardleu of what the theorists claim- ed. EDITORIAL NOTES Londoners didn't have to g0 to Venice this year for I ride in I gon- dola. They piled up and down the canal at Paddington's "Little Ven- ice’" this month with I genuine Italian gondoller singing romantic Venetian ballads. Tho gondola and the gondolier were imported for the island Waterways Association's 10th national rally which was held, Aug. 15-19. for the first time In London. About 150 boats came from Ill over Britain for the event. A requirement (or membership in several California skin diving clubs Is that you ride I shark or at least grab one by the tail. The trick is said to be less difficult thin it might sound to I lIndlubber. Most sharks In unwary Ind Io leek— ldlfllcfl that It’I my in meek up Ind steel I short ride. The catch. of course, II the every new Ind than, insteod of tm‘nln‘ hi}. the Ihnrlr whips free Ind Innpl Iii: ehunln out of Its torment-r. \\ STILL FINDING lT HARD TO RELAX LSOLATED NOURUANS Migrating From Lonely Habitation National Geographic New. Bullllen Moving day is approaching on l auru, whose z.le penp 9 must soon leave llteir lonely Pacificl island near the Equator all the Au=tralian l coast ‘ Behind them. Nauruans willl leave an impoverished, pocle marked. Palmrlrlneed llttle l speck, once railed the richest is- land .n the South Sea wealth came lrmn snurn‘s phos- phnie deposits which have help- ed Iertlliu millions of farm acres in Great aruuln. sup uans. \ ho rlnnmhul under mining boom. ulll not be able to l mnke n llvhuz once the mineral is pone. Thcy have been Ihlnk- . in: of mlzrallng for a decade. . snvsunn .usluhsxp l When talk of n move hogan, l the Anni-phan Government at. ; iered to brl up the Naurusns l from their isle west nl the Gil. berks across Melanesia to the l Australian mainland hut Naur-l uans, proud n1 llloir rullurc. inn» l guape, and traditions_ roared [or a l ow they would lose their identity on a vast continent and sought. in» stead, another island of their n, The NIurusns specified that e new island must meet cer- lain requirements: pleasant cli- mate. fertile soil. and rhellered fishing waters with a deep- in fishing pun. Several islands were Mlecied before the Neurons declded on Curtis, just all the coast of Queensland between the Filzrny River and the port city of Glad- linue. Curtis Island comprises about 1% square miles. compared with Nauru's 82 square miles. The climate is pleasanler: Nauru I! Just 3‘5 miles Iouth of the Equator. while Curtis IS on the Tropic of Capricorn, There ll A part. and the sheltered watcrs between the island and the main- land will provide easy fishing. ILN. TRUST TERRITORY Discovered ln i796. Nauru (list was named Pleasant lllnnd. It was annexed by Germany 1888, occupied by Australia In 1914, and mandated to the Unil- PUBLIC FORUM ed Klagdoin, Auslrslll. Ind New Zealand by the League of NI- tions in 1919. By consent oi the three Commonwe’lth nations lNauru was administered by the Australians_ first undcr lhe League and now under the [la- ted Nations. Phelpth mlniag begun in 1906. Because Nluni has no deep- water purl, hucc canillev. as were consinlrtrd ln extend over the surrounding c orIl reel. Cunvcynrs carry the libel- phrie directly to the anchored vessels, To render phosphate usctul as a minim. u must be treated with sulphuric acid. The result in Suppl-phosphate. The British Phusphain on m- mlsslonm. who control mining operations. pey both leases and royalties In the lndivid uni Nnumsns on whose land the phosphlte is mined. A royle trust fund Ind s lonavtenn ln- vestment fund llIve been eslalr llshed for the resettlement oi the community on Manila, The move to Curtis Island is expected in begin in npuul five years. Although the exact status p the nip-id's govenmielit hu not been negotiated. It Is expect- ed that NeuruIiis will have con- Ildcrable autonomy without lull AN APPRECIATION l Harry M n r as n hp: passed l .u-ay. To the man up the skeet, he was just an ordinary person pnssesslng noilhor power nor Weallll. but his wealth was in his friends, nho were lczlnn. He had henn n rollraizeous loll dter. a fine athlete, . v real competitor in h work and In his sport acllvtl s hove all. he was a ran competitor he never took u n a u e advantalzo. Ind he always met the other fellow half way Perhaps cnnslucrlng his fine whi- record. his ability I. a newspaper man and his very lift-at contribution to short, he could he considered A model cliin-n. His outslaudtna characteristic via, his friendliness ml the why In which he made and held irlphdshlps in the true sense of the word he was r gentleman, lie will be missed in the daily routine of Charlottetown where knew him In his ear- ly days a: "Stonewall" Morgan. the mat goal teadcr of the nth Ahezwcils, and by those hund- rods of Canadian Lealunnatres whn will remember his wile counsel and Ms trlehlily smile. i am Sir. etc, .ronu tBULLEl-‘D MURLEY Charlottetown. ARCHAIC LIQUOR LAW sin—tn recent days I number of letmn the Ippesred in this civillmn advocating the contlhu- Ince of the archaic liquor llw now in tum. me using the tour- III: I! prups for their argument. In the first place, lourlsu gen- ernlly couldn't care lens one wsy or the other about our liquor 1m. Is any motel werllul' who does not keep a supply or Ilouor or beer nl’ both, for his customers is some kind of nul. in the mound and last place, il- Quor oullels are in Ibundlnce over the whole island: the dub difference In here they are un- ed leaders" bet:qu have no license Ind are not II- buy one. So, saying that tourists do not come In the Is. [Ind to drink Is entirely true, but docs not imply um they come here (or flu- cure, or calm here in get fly from If)! 'vsvms M drink" One writer lIld thIl rem“! one couple Ml! In their drum ken argument In lere our II- lIn . Ind bill'nd till. on LI- QUOR. ill prltAI led-n. P er- llllll if there hId been nice m bIndy when they could In and I d . What “this (air IIle" needl lI Iliul'l Ind better Mlil (mum, ll- censed and well managed. When . man living in Rusllco for ex- ample. has m drive to Clint-lotte- town to buy some legal liquor. there is something wrong. Ind not with him but with the pow- ers that be, one hears a lot of talk sbmit poolleaslpz liquor. and what . blight on the com- munin bootlegsel's are. elc, Why not license them? Make them furnish a modern, clean estab- lishment for the sale of beer Ind liquor Ind this way, their pre~ lent pelronr would not have In gulp Ind hurry. al- sunk and hide, and people would have I place to meet their neighbour and have u alIss of beer. There they could refresh themselves from the heat of the day. and be free of the nhllcsunu to huv more film they wish. I: u now the case when you want I drink pr liquor. you lIlVe ID buy I bottle. Put n to . vote at least. so that those ennununlt It wlsh it can have - llcensed plane where one can meet his fellow man to glow] Ind a mu.- price M beef per pound on the boot, the price of lobsters, or the new tourists and en» lighten them on the best place- w catch trout, buy new Mam or sweet turn and where he no get a (he. of beer for twenty. five or thirty centI Ind then leave it he whim, lumps of III fu'ty fpr . else, mp I In. Sir. 2%.. K DOUCETTE E n MARKET! AND TOURISM sin—Prices flflnerl receive In moltly let in "Am-l I7! Tomato. We are In I difficult ml for everything here except poutoel Ind (in~ therefore Lhm II no shorule of Inukti- era. In Devan Ind Holllnd about so per cent of fun: pmd- um are Inka W Hill'- hllnfl boIIdI Ind ctHiperIHVeI. They let lbflut 65 cent the counrner'I (hillr. Here in we are only nt- tlnl about to per cent and going down III the time. Iilllply be will! we IR not mind, The Fedtrltlo‘n of Agriculture. alter ye I H of llIfl'l mint. hII [M N If“ of limb III) In “III! “I Montreal price. If we and mm! members I! could do much more. Membernlp u- pn-u public opinion. Fm t camp-ne- Ind pn-h In coolly one they II! in competition with pd- VIle owned Our Yesterdo s (From Illa Gulrdllll Flea) olm YESTERDAY: (From the Guardlan FIleIl TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (August 2!. ins) Finns have been completed in Inllclpnlion of the sixteenth In- null dioceslli convention of the Cllhollc Women's League of CInIdl. scheduled to be held lll ohsrlottelown, Augllst 21-26, aev. as, GItes oi Manchest- u. an. has purchased the pro- perty of Mr. Willis Warren on VlcloriI Road. Summerslde. Ind expects to uh. possession the letter pm of the year. Mr. s... u will conduct the services It grimly United Chm nn sun. . . TEN vEAlis AGO (August 21, “5.1) High honors were carried off bymemhcrs nflhc L’ds and Lenin BInr‘, when five mem- bers of the Burke family coll- petcd It the fourth InnuIl High- land Gathering field in the DIl~ hausle Memorial rink It Hellf- Ix on Tues-in CALGARY lCPl — Alberta‘s teacher Ilium]! [fill you prob- Ibly will be worse film i yeIi' when and classroom were without tAIEhIl'I. Dr. W. H. Swill, Muty nl'll'lllter of eduu. tlon Id Tum-y. rmn HAD!!! '0!" OTTAWA (Cpl—Fewer bIhlII were born In CIuIdl In the HM seven months of 1908 thus III the Illne period ill! ml. WI Dominion BureIu of Statistics odly. Al the II Y m comp-red win mm I yeIr . were sum mas-risen comp-red wt 5!.“ Ind um deaths con- Plnd with 5.”. SMALL PLANE C SEPT m. Que. lCPl—A Celina in will out of control m up I maan $0 Hillel lurth bee. None of the pilot of the privatelylmea plIII, u- u- . «uni-u on: with III will Ind their ltyeIr-old M. Good Food Is Essential I! Dr. MI I. VII Dollo- All IIIIIII- from I primitive eommunily nub wine In Oly- mph event. Eehlnki's Dr, Mart- HJ. KIWI be men Id women velarde I:le have too l'llIlly llIndiprl to overcome, htludfnl Inadeqth nllh'llloll. He found. for enmple. (tilt the number of point [lined per person entered In the 1952 Fin- nIIh Olympic! WI: 30.: for lib- me: from nounu'les where the linux- cIlorlc conlumpuon V between I.” Ind 4.0m. It VIII only 15.! point! in than from In“ when the caloriel €in for work among llboi'inl men Improv when they elf bIlIneId menus Subv IlIIllIl Imullutl of protein ud fIt ruin the calorie (Willem Im‘l the on!!! 6d heavy phytin work. But all. meIll In no! II beneficlll II several ImIll melll durlnl the lily. rh. mm . pemn sun It one time. the more ll FY ad fatigued he becomes. The Illu - tlou ll somewhat similar to ul- ing I Thanksgiving dinner every day. Good nutrition does not lend to softness and laziness. Cou- lulnllll too little food reducII performance and often coats-h but” In lllnesl: too much lentil Io obesity. especially when the body receives more cIlorieI than necessary to perform til e fish at hand. In dill respect. pmpemus countries need not deteriorate because they live in the lap of luxury. Hunger and ' in die poorer lands go hand in hand with low productivity, p u v my, ignorance. and IpILhy. Any one of these factors could be singled out I: a potent deterrent to ec- onomic progress, But inadeqqu nurluun heads tn. llpt because it is difficult to do I dAy'I work without eating staple foods, Fur- tberrnol'e. mllnuh’ltion conh'ibut- es lo ill-pheIiiIi. Who can work when he does not feel up in w? DEPRESSION mun. STROKE F, M. writes: My husband had I stroke nine months Iao Ind re- mains oulle dew-cued. Why does depresrlnn follow stroke? REPLY Because it is depressing to be handicapped or dependent upon other: Iflel' bean healthy Ind mom: for yeIrI. bow moi-ale lI minlmlzed or Ivolded by encour- Ilement Ind nthlllutlon. rheumatic heart Iifect . per- ton? anew Most victims are unaerc at the scarring of the v Ilve a (leakage) or changes In the heart muscle, In lime, murmur of breath may develop iholrid the old ticker enlarge and (III to perform normally. Otherl de- velul‘l Pulpllhllon or fever. st- pendina uppn complications. sun PILLOWS a, H. Writes: 1 hud one pillow made from two pillows, Ever Ilnce l've been Kevin! on thII big one. i awaken with pain in my shoulders. no you think smaller pillows are pm"? REer Yes, A high pllluw may strain the neck unless you rest y 0 u I shoulders on It. COSMETIC assu E. M. wraps: i Ilways have used cologne and toilet wIter without any reaction but, rim. log I few monuu up. i get an itching rash whenever i s p p ly them. Rule 1 developed III II» lei-n to these proaupm anew Yes, ropsv's hash-in inur— lnszsl: . tamper proof lock on the luck yard feline Iroullfl till swimming pool, nsn sin miner The 14.0w Boy Scouts who It- tended the ma world ilmbmeo 1.500 foul of water NOTES BY- .I win“! “Inc-IIofIlrnlrfim VI hem-'— GIlt Reporter. Two I line “II III! IIlKOd haw It ll when Illnblfl of Pll‘lllmellt can." bout M own ply from om per year in slum. why cInaot th- coun- try and to Increase the old I penllnn by no pel‘ nuts. onl run: we m pm i- t beds: It in Wind- Churchill‘siason no shipping moon in lud- Wn‘l Ely IIII not "DIM under the most ambitious alumni-Ino- u. fleIVy Ice in tho lav eels!- ed the II'l'lVll a! the first slum: ice-anliers mum hem one mil: had its proptller I beat by ice. in is not. however. I llIul‘d peculiar to the Him a A: route. Each yen! the opening of nee is I u the opening of the am: up. I ports, Ice in the my this yeIr «not be used Is In "1th Inlnst the northern mule. Now the IMP! are in Ind loId- lnl. It Ls predicted lhIt before the 1968 season closes in Octob- er I record 22 million hthBII of THE WAY be I l r e I s y n he Dott— nIduIte emirlel with u guhlrls all. summer. _ What: they hm e tun. —Fori, w llilIm when our the been all m Churchill. LIIt yam mun vessels loaded 21.5 mil. . as, c of iiian lull cobalt arid tin min It Thompson will": "Eh n' till a I m s be lie Hudson Bay will;8 tion In line the shipping my... on the Bey extended. This your a a lo the thrd .: C'llumlllll. which will be open officlIIly on Thursday. will pep nit larger vesicle to be hlndlld a: the p03. gladiwlll cut down nn e ens m- the ' h cumin“. y remain Given nonuIl luck. then lean] to no man why 1963 Ihould not be I record so‘spli for Manitoba'l northern port. Mexico Clamps Down Brodivllle Become! Ind Ttmcl It Marathon, Greece. used ppm dIy. Mtidw. enII Ifimml ground for Castro Iflenll distri- huflnl VNPllInIdI materiel Ind trillan council with fellow tu- vellers, Is only “kill: strict p29 cIutionI to halt the flow of un- desirable. from CubI. Going or coming from CubI. every traveller Is phonierth Ind the picture lent to his home country. "Cuba" in numbed in large letters on no part no thlt he may be wItched It home if necessary, All iufllIgI [I thoroughly seIrched, ‘Af one time LItlll- Amerlcln tumult M e hundredl. mIny with Commuulltl flowed xico by "I IpecIIl permit- lllued by the Cub" Emb sly in Mexico City 9 Clipping The Dollar If yuu bad I mIn'I note for sum Ind on the due-date be pIid you nu at so cents on the dollar, you wouldn't think yuu had made I very loud investment. And you‘d probably gIVc him there after I low credit rating. Moreover, If you discovered that this waI not the result or the debtor's “Huck but was - calculated deceit. ulInned that my when the mu borrow your money. we dare say you'd be outraged. Dlsreserd the his World Wu- H inflation and. u the Nation-'1 City Bank doel. IIke the yen- im. if you cunllder that year I: ‘pIr‘ the dollIr today l worth only is centl. This is a 11 per cent depreciation unattribu- table in war or depression: the decIde wIl. in (pet, the m p it prosperous In our history. neruunun One thing this mum is out people who I decade ago trusted the Uni aute- Government with their IIvlngI on I pm in reply principll with interest were paid beck as cent: on the dollar. in every cue they were defrauded in put on the prom- be: IoniI cues they th been the Vletime or “negative Interest" - last is, they ecu-Il- lyply Iowemlnent DI' the prlvllon of leadlu it money. permitting them to travel willl- out Itiuwing on link pellspflrlx they went to Cubl. Once there they trained in sub- verllvl Icllvity Ind mierrllls erIIre. All pmplllm‘ll materlal eru- Inltiul from CubI is now seized by Mexican Iulhorlties Even diplomats are not im- mune from the Iirpni't examin- Itlon Ind clearance may take up to eight hours. It in little wonder unit time who have mlde the trip say it Is liIMe-r lo get into Mexico tillli It il lo set in or out of Cubl And Fidel Castro must woe der ff thil'l America ll Il revol- utionlry— minded I lie hld It flrlt thought. Jollrnll The loss, to be sure, was I hidden one. The Government dld pay the number of pieces of pap- er it hld promised In pay. and Inlay people receiving the car- l'ecl number of dollar h . s “are not even aware of their loss Bill 1 strikes us that this, roller than mitigating the fault, nlsk more deceitful. For those whs are fooled Ire not Ihe rich Ind tic-ted, but the poor and the trustinfl. A SLICK TRICK There's not much new In this and it might not be worth re- marking except that hnw v» m told in Wuhlngton MI! I "little inflation" It not such I old thing. What was once done cor» ertly ll new to be done openly: little boasttullv. All — that is. I depre- cialion "In on the dallnr— of one or two per cent is supppsedly I “lmIli price" to pay (or Ill the good things that will be done. Tile beIuty of all this for pal- itlclnnl is that it can profit lflI mment more than iIxril why Illmlldn't they cut taxes. while Ipendiufl more, when clippin‘ the doll-r can lizll it I'd nIIllhlIy back? We too can Idmlrt the win him we CIH'I Ippreclsle besuiy when it: Idomment ll fle- celt. bel menu-r IldI. “lance-Sheet ‘k Tiny,lnconsplmlnoonoelmtl [Milnmelfliimlh u. with new. AND..." "ll 1' AK All!" mum III-DIV m IICK 'IIIII. IND m I-VIAR mus "MI AVIIuILI on 'I‘II WMAIIIIII IIII III-[IA It’s his "20th Anniversary Days” HEARING AID VALUE * Our newest. walled. "filled . . . 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