, oor eee we : Ss 8 et ee na - : = rae i ka a a { 4 fey : * ; ‘ 2 ‘ * _ } : a |Hearing Test |. BY THE WAY ‘@ “ 7 By Herman N. Bundesen, M.D. | - — AF DO tha nants svoiding | ‘The future of th man in “A swim seems to Ig peu? even ignor- | if anyone knows @ continent | men; immediately aes ac ight be | Where White man or black is | out from the water, ot oe oe secure we'd tike to hear of it.— | extremely unattractive, ae ee | Ottawa Journal. gage in tough games of cricket we read and hear so much abou. | A gréat many people-give little The chase their gcruomsing these days. It could be that thought to house thefts: pee : be that you - ru. They with. handfuls of wet neve Deeg, Semcetes- dex tas lade thence or weed or a crab. Dogs, too, We doctors know that people | ever will be. Yet every now ai “cade " en tara often tend to avoid a person who | afd then just ‘such people as/ ably lap sea water and go | bes trouble with le hearing. Ac- Gay Soe de sulter bath late end ty mad”—Mrs. B. Mason tually reasons ous, great inconvenience he ' whee People simply cause. thefts. For instance i ‘ Pg sal goat tpa gy. cow tae ese ee Coseta's. asnaal theft loss is oh en cvifitiee, Mr. Sool teachers poir 1 _ course, thing and of irrelevant answers, | re . & large por- reports a significs change | the need for training of teachers on Eventually, even members of | 100 af it represented by home | in the men's neckwear an unprecedented scale. But ®# was' the person's family might try to | jreenies: — - Sune G +. coastal : : Tr avoid conversation with him. . . es aes : month.. This ref of ? 7 \ rankfurt German ed usually brought them. 4 mext ers, Of course, | problem must be ‘solved by the coun- abiy will be unaware of the real self-service shoe shop has been | “But,” he adds, “women’s to the projected 10-day visit of So- tries themselves. reasons for this apparent anti-so- opened. At the door each cus-| in ties has so improved that viet Premier Khrushchev to the Uni- | — oes cial behavior, tomer is handed s shoehorn and no tone ts dane cate ted States in September, during Days Getting Shorter WWI ertval hearing loss, | Me, selves on which, arranged | fifty.” Perhaps. More likely j Bret Pea ning ; | according to size; are exhibited | tish husbands, like Canadi which he will spend two or The reason why the 24-hour day your first reaction would be that | the establishment's’ 7 : | others just aren't, talking loudly * mover, any | S20 Sot becoming: betige: trate: - _. days as a guest of President Eisen- | jig gradually lengthening, a fact ‘leueaah” Waaha Sen Cae ome an wea cee ed.—Toronto*Globe and Mail. ; hower. The President, in return, will | which h’as been puzzling scientists they are merely mumbling when | display while the one 1 oe | __®ake a shorter trip through Russia | for the past 200 yeats, is still a my- peed yan thaad be speaking in | left my be obtained from the UR YESTERD AYS before next December, visiting Mos- | stery according to two American | If you have noticed such a peste ton estes ie eae = cnet _ (From the Guardian Files) ‘cow for the first time since he re- | scientists studying the problem. Each German , ny TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO iewed a World War Two victory | year the day lengthens at an aver- —— 5, aon _ -parade with the late Premier Stalin. | age rate of about one hundred-thou- napiba woes last ak mon These events may indeed prove to | sandth of a second per day, say Pro- , has been appointed Rector y -be of far-reaching importance. Al- | fessors Walter H. Munk and Gordon Sasediner siealas hice. ' | ‘though it seems doubtful that any J.F. MacDonald, of the University of now of Tracadie. Prior to g~ ~~ solution to the burning issues be- | California. Thus a day is now two- to Rome, Dr. Mchiahen wes tween East and West would result, hundredths of a second longer than ere men sae we: is , they can at least be expected to in- | jit was 2,000 years ago. secretary to the Bishop. * # crease~ understanding and goodwill In ler terms, a clock set at . a ; 3 . , ? Pete ’ playing , ’ on both sides. While they are in pro- ite of Christ’s birth would now ON THE WARPATH % aeaa me hes echen aaa: ; gress, the Berlin crisis would be kept about two hours fast. This is be- Seer hi-fi? Old beeches stir, buds needife thin | © take the lead in the first round |” ’ found from experience that it of the Provincial ion. well under control. And there is hope | cause of the gradual slowing down | OTTAWA REPORT pays to wai for better and bet-| ss racer cords or pheenct Are] Gi nee oe AV beanie Oe dueae that a first hand look at the United | of the earth’s rotation, the scien- He a A pe ray at ici wie bothered by a ringing in your | While slanting, lilac-scented rain ae Seema _— seco:d with States might ae eon of — - say, but they have not yet found F ederal Loa ns Criticised ees of Sena ome heres ee aaeeetae — stndaae anne with ao aad ot Sauniorsdde cate? ; ' ; nohey ene. rates are high, and our bonds are| po you have trouble hearing at | Are prinked with trees that pir- | ay about American life and about U,S. Changes in the length of the day (Patrick Nicholson ts on vaca-; surance Account. This amounts | selling on world markets almost | he movies or at church or other | - outte. se te tion. His guest columnist today | to $3 million a day of $125,000 | al the bottom ‘of the scale in the | public gatherings? sien Wine TEN-YEARS A determination to stand firm against do not, however, pursue a regular | is DR. W. H. McMILLAN, Lib-/| an hour i: srenneitiias Inves- ee World. +——Do-you pr at times ae ee ( “df . Soviet threats. ; rhythm. There are fluctuati f yt po bp bly Bo sxgenec’ tors took a dim view of this situa- | ALLERGIC TO SURPLUS to locate the source of a sound? | To crown.with love the pansy air.| Lieutenant Governor Bernare The futility of ; with : a =e ub tons Irom If you or I were overdrawn at | tion. Our people also know that the; you have to answer “Yes”| “| and Mrs. Bernard have as their ; ity of dealing any- | year to year or even from month | the bank, the bank manager | SHORT TERM BORROWINGS | Conservative party seems to be| 1. more than a couple of these —Dorothy Lamb | guests ‘Dr. Fred Christopher and — P one but the top man in’ the Soviet | to month. This it is thought, is due | Would soon refuse us further cre-| To meet the problem, the gov-/ allergic to a surplus, as they! questions, I suggest you see you. | in the Christian Science Monitor | Mrs. Christopher of Boston. Dr. ; hierarchy has‘ been demonstrated | to the fact that the earth is not a at aon mabry vine oe verte Sanit Seve wnbindy ase 9h ders eo ie tee. Coaletenatinn : a aman one Ale atone eR NATO TREATY SIGNED trom Theale bas sad ee many times in recent months. This | stable body but is compsed of a hard | ed. This was exactly the position | to a year or so, at rising interest that the sum total of these sur-| % onal Alggr ce roll | noms iAP nk seven-power pe ahi tenga for imp fact, apparently, is now ; outer t and a soft i : of our government last year and rates. These new short term loans pluses would not be sufficient to was born with congenital sychi- | treaty on stationing of North At-| forty years, and has never mis x c ce crus : a nterior which | we, the people, like the banker, as | or bonds were sold mostly in pay the interest on the estimated | jig che has bean married for five | lantic forces in West Germany | sed an Old Home Week on any | at Washington, as it has been for | rotate at different speeds. I predicted would happen, simply | large denominations up to $1 mil- | deficit for this one year alone. veut sak ae clbaaen toe |abd“dieiad hale fede. Gere lacie: @ wome time by the British Prime Min- The first scientist to notice the tes ral aries thee Bt cei easeuh tins thee ae | on our federal debt aisne-miit be | doctor advises an exploratory op-| thick documents, which have ; aa Colcitent . with President | lengthening of the day was Edmund | bonds as fast as the Sai sold so much below face value, | $106 million 0 nearly $25.00 per ee oer ee fetail seatiate ot ee eee eae - Eisenhower's invitation to Myr. / Halley,- English astronomer of the | 8% Spending it. for short term issues, that a big head . each —e oh a Do you think this advisable and | governing the die te ar ae poms he tees Tees ini Sey ri j Late last had $4.4 | corporati ing 530| year\this amount is bou oO in- : > - é Khrushchev he has appointed a pro- 18th century. Halley found that the billion nai at 9. or ae Vie- per pe ‘leouies ta weal. bet crease greatly. | oe gj Salo aes cist is un- The Sat aa tee by offi- or ianedtic & reotic Eau: a eae minent Boston lawyer to undertake | dates calculated by astronomers for 1 tory Bonds coming due between | the same net return on the bonds | It is imperative that our govern-| 110 'tg have children, a careful | cials of West Germany, United | there from ugust 15 to 2%. The. mew studies of international disar- | eclipses of the pre-Christian era did | {uv 2nd 1h, Te Prime in snd in Febuary a4 the would ena ncp tamper nine | sg of both the husband aod | gaat, Britain, France, the | couree tain hose who atend to mament possibilities. It will be re- not agree with dates indicated on | made’s patriotic appeal of tele. to over 8 per cent. The govern- | market with our municipalities for | - aha cg papuiad to determine a aes oe present = ye —— = re called, also, that he made a special | early Babylonian tablets and G vision and persuaded manv Can- | ment is thus paying more than| money. Hf they do, the. govern-| ‘ta ‘the case of the wife, num- in ¢ Na ou : of “ll t ° é . reek adians to trade their Victory | farmers or corner-store grocers | ment will ereate confidence, whie eiie cee ani” taatndied | are is. Germany. : restiee. '_§ seep canpipencatertend gr onde Bonds for thoes of eiter-of two | pay the. bank for loan. Becayse | ri in tun, help bond prices | aation ofthe tubes and pethone 2a 4 une visil : rt t bonds coming due {n | short-term loans gov- | the: provi . 2 y Pe ts later investigating the oT - a ‘ernment must keep coming back | with cheaper money and lower ee ee ae bra ae Verbalizing The Lang vage 5 1961 and 1965 or of two long term bonds maturing in 17 and 2% Christian Science Monitor oa While frivolizing our way |wanted to make sure that she for more hundreds of millions of federal, provincial and municipal | @f the tubes, surgical correction problem decided that this slowing may be undertaken. to the Soviet fair in New York. Last week, at the U.S. exhibit in Moscow, - Vice President Nixon practically committed the President to invite Mr. Khrushchev to the United States. A further impetus to the same end was given by a group of nine ocean tides. Data gathered by Pro- down was due to loss of energy in fessors Munk and MacDonald, how- ever, have shown that the energy of the tides is not enough to account for the phenomenon. They intend to years. In spite of great inducements only a little over half of the bonds were converted to the long term ones and nearly haif into the shart term issues. These latter will embarrass the government in many cases more than if the con- | version loan had never been un- dollars, and investors hav ei taxes. ~ Good American Diplomacy By Arthur Gavshon The first impression of Presi- dent Eisenhower's arrangement ° __ Camadian Press Staff Writer perilous possibilities of a nuclear explosion, will remain defused The congenital syphilis, if treat- ed early and intensively, may have fio bearing on this situation. do not always remain so; not in- frequently (under the mysteries of health) they are found among the chronically ill. Only the doctor through the amusement columns of a paper that sometimes com- es our way, we came upon & sen- tence that made us realize we are behind the times in turning other parts of speech into verbs. It read: “Michael Rennie, in the role “receipted” it rather than ..r-. ely received it? Curious, we watched the play. © But nothing out of the ordinary | happened Miss Rush did not at __ any point furniture her room. De- bonair as he was, Mr. Rennie did not investment in any stocks, . sad es for the. | dertaken ith Nikita Khrushchev to swap | fo time. This will allow 1 h j i . : : with 3 0 r some . 1s is in a position to learn when any ? oo , from a tour of Russia. Calling on the | cause COST $70 MILLION visits suggested Monday night it | East - West negotiators to think | of his patients has developed a|% @ debonair man-about-town, | subscription to any expensive .. condition which makes him no/| 8s Barbara Rush with @ neck- | magazines, or even donor to any . President, they urgéd an exchange of visits between him arid Mr. Khrushchev. Meanwhile from Geneva it was reported that the U.S. had been sounding out Allied” govern- ments on their reaction, with ap- parently encouraging results. Considering the tense situation which prevailed last November over the Berlin situation, these friendly approaches are highly encouraging. As the British Prime Minister has | War. bills this year and next to rea-| given Khrushcher said: “We were talking then about ° ° e lize that it has cost very consid. | chance Herargmacennys~ 1 ggomeg Germany, for instance, bitterly to serve is gM (OO HD] i ultimatums. T 7’ ; : erably more. a way in never did, as the! rocist Britain's pet project for an | conscientiously thinks so, to take , = &F te f oday we 7 talking in The 5th of August was once ob- It seemed unusual to most of us | first Soviet muler to eneter the | carly East-West summit meeting. | some step to take a ‘dangerous rms of personal visits.” All will served in England as holid : that a bonus should be paid for | White House. At 65, Khrushchev | pisenhower has set out to driver off the road.” hope that these visits may prove to th a — ay, IN | trading a bond paving 3 per cent | is a man in a hurry who is be- | please both the British on the one | NOT EASY : he the tinet olen toward a 1 e@ same manner as the 5th of No- for one paying 4% per cent. In | lieved anxious to leave his mark | side and the French and West This recommendation from the p a long truce vember, and for a cause of the same | ™Y Mind this helned to focus our on the pages of history. Germans on the other througli his | council was adopted by the As- FIRST INOCULATIONS in the cold war. nature. On that day, { ee 5a minds on what was taking place; 2 The president has set bhe | display of leadenship. sociation. It was not an easy de- Stur dis f a , In year | elsewhere in our monetary man-| stage for direct—talks with the| ‘The exchange of ‘visite sets | cision’ to make. But it was felt geon and surrounding districts a Teacher. Shortage 1600, King James, then ruling Scot- | aement. man who lords it over commun- | back, but does not kill, Britain's | that the decision was hot one } land alone, narrowly escaped death The former government had ism's millions. These exchanges | plan for top-level talke. Indeed, | between the rights of the patient AT STURGEON SCHOOL : 1 One fact brought out very cleatly | ay bake oc o at paid off nearly $2 balsas in net would be uncomplicated by the | Foreign Secretary. Selwyn Lioyo | - those of oe ; it eee : of two conspirators. ebt since the war. buf last vear | nce of sensitive outsiders. confided to associates here | ther, one in the best interest o ; at the recent Commonwealth Edu- his own people—the Earl a : - the present government was plung | Soe has made it possible for aoe that coe sure a summit | both. The patient cannot hope Thursday, Aug. 6th—7 to 10 p.m. 4 cation Conference at Oxford, Eng., and his b - ° Gowrie, | ing into debt at a rate of over $1 Americans and Russians to get | will follow the Khrushchev-Eisen- | t0 benefit by being allowed to Z ) me that in oll counties Ot Hs Com. is brother Alexander Ruthven. billion a year, including the de-| petter ainted with the | hower visits, probably taking | dtive when he has become unfit 2nd and 3rc._ inoculations will also be given 4 é : : * ® e ee pletion of the Unemployment In-} sources of(each other's industrial. | place in November or December. | '° do so. The very life of the _. z monwealth there is a pressing short- see . a ; ‘ scientific And popular power.| At the same time by agreeing se (as “2 i the lives f= j age of teachers. Very large numpers Whichever party wins the provin- ’ Greater nfutual respect might fol-| to visit Macmillan, de Gaulle | hers) is at stake. « ; are needed——many of them most ur. | «!@!.general election here on Sep- | PUBLIC FORUM |iow. sgt tederaatonas | tt, deaane afore Khrush-| , Tere remains. of course, the . \> 4 gently—over the next four or’ five | ‘m™ber 1, we hope it will do so by | ais coma to open te the disces level pede dh egy nage a pees tha wn that their in. | Might be held that the right to IF YOUR GUARDIAN ~ _ years. 500 teachers are required im. | ‘Re skin of its teeth rather than | ‘Stren ‘Tne Gvardin does not newee | 4, Bisenhower has ensured that | teresis will not be prejudiced in| drive should not depend upon the ‘ | mediately for tgaining institutions, with another topheavy majority. Ev- sarily ex‘orse the opinion of corres | the Berlin powder-keg, with its | any way. soeaustien ee eae apie aoe ‘ well over 1,000 a year for secondary en from a narrowly partisan stand- ‘ a soe pene pate iS LATE ee OR MISSED ‘| schools and 200 a year for technical | P&S too large a ‘majority is. bad ne eee i : Should Doctor S Tell? velorees fer inal dacletee: lie a colleges. Universities also need staff, | fF the party in power. It is worse mean Yess built. in a - i f in high ae i for the country at large. There | cur Province~the trig Prince | 74. for generations, had rais- is such that he is no longer able But whatever the final adjust- eften in highly specialized subjects. beti ree. vi EL Meee te ae 174 ionn ty ed one of the greatest questions | to drive safely, should his*doctor | ment or procedure may be, it is 1 No conference recommendation substitute for a strong ‘Opposition. R. Ceasedl. Imaaudide. the | @ medical ethics. It has always | remain silent while his patient be ee fact that the British 2 DIAL 656 : : , “s . ' , inciple of | continues to drive? | Medical Association, at an an- : could change this picture overnight, ee sailed from your City, January’| been # fundamental princip ‘tn | ; ‘: ae . ar medicine that the knowledge a| This is a medical problem in! annual meeting, has come to the but it ‘has clarified and defined the The Canadian Underwriters Asso- Selena Mee i: — doctor receives from a@ patient | the deepest sense. For the ability | conetaniae that the memes Pro- and a paper will be delivered right to your door. needs of the various Commonwealth | “lation has announced a new plan | of mine in Auckland wants some | ! the course of his practice is a | to drivé a ear safely requires & le ie teaicaunty tue Ok Special delivery service available between 8:30 . cs ee j ; ii secr veen them, unless this | sou co. ion alth, eis s J - countries so that the available re- om Somes automobile insurance rates - pia vont ne knowledge Is: disclosed with the | senses of driver must be alert| ing dangerous drivers off the a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is late — or sources may be directed to “key for drivers least likely to become in- The captain of the ship was wees corlsent. ee i for his ns What is | roads. missed. e 3 » Capt. N . Hi a ut duty is never simply in-4 30 less important,-a driver must posts”. It was felt that the interests | Vlved in aceidents. Under the new “29 —— ota Hs certity | ed. What should @ doctor do if he | have the mental capacity to make é : cate is in the register he : ‘ i ‘ MAXIMS of teachers serving abroad should be | “!T@Mgement, effective Sept. 1, a | owned in 1860. My friend would | learns that the condition of his | the innumerable judgments that . safeguarded in such respects as | iver will be entitled to an addition- | like to have \@ duplicate of this bag ; to himeell ae oe Scie keniinen Sigvier sab the | Never bear more than one ee . ee fe : . ojury e | , ‘ housing, children’s education, re-em- ; 20 percent discount if he can show: | "ie was in command of (or an | €Fs?. Is the doctor to remain| problems of driving become, ‘ind of trouble at a nine. Some 1 ‘ ; rst, that Sart officer of) vessel, ‘Majestic’, | passive in his silence, no metter | more exacting. If there are those cople bear three—all they have ’ ployment and secondment rights, : cS he has been driving five which pent yong —— | what tragedies may result? Boes who are physically unfit to drive,; ‘ad, all they have now, and ; superannuation and resettlement on years, without an accident; second, of Newfoundland. The father of | the doctor's duty to his paiient | there are also those so lacking in| all they expect to have. Lt return; also that everything possible that he does not drive his car more Capt. Nolan’s wife was Thomas | transcend his duty to society? emotional balance that their judg- should be done to promote a climate than 10,000 milés a year; third, that om . pilot of a m&an-of-war = — tas oe ee = cannot possibly be relied ‘MSGR. CABANA SEES POPE e ‘ ; , m yo ity. a real one. ’ of opinion in teaching circles in | he does not use his car for business 1 "hsae wniies ‘wantin places | mew urgency in the era of the | EXAMINATIONS CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy DI AL 6561 which lois of el i é or for driving to and f : in P.E. Island but have received | automobile. Driving a car fs not; When persons apply for licences | (AP) — The Pope Monday e- periods of service in other rom work; | no reply. Perhaps some of your | only a convenience or-a pleasure | to drive, they may be medically | ceived in special audience Msgr. Commonwealth countries are recog- “nd fourth, that there is no male | readers could supply the infor- | for the driver: arsine 2 Sar be- pr yao eer ng a may be examin-| Georges Cabana, Archbishop Be : -: driver 55 a mation. comes a social respons y. | again when reaching a cer-| Sherbrooke, and Msgr. Jos 173 Great St. Charlottetown ; mized as an asset in subsequent under 25 in, the housshold and I am, Sir, ¢tc.. MUST BE CAPABLE tain advanced agge. But impair-| Albert Martin, Bishop of Nicolet. |] pay siogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those whom we |” employment. - not more than two drivers of the “ \BRUCE, M. SCOTT The driver has to be capable in the ability to drive may | The audiences ‘were held at the ween: 8 Oey a : Some delegations made definfte | vehicle 178 James Street, | of fulfilling that responsibility. | avpear in anyone. at any time. | papal summer residence here in qarve,-<— the-goel- Tat SR Oe: eve J _— New Gissgow, NA his physical er mental eondition | Even those in the best of heath | ihe Albea Hills south of Rome. |" _ 4 . s . EDITORIAL NOTES Sir Winston Churchill has helped christen his tenth grandchild, a baby boy who is said to look just like him, “except for the cigar.” e es On this date 1914, orders went forth from Ottawa for the raising of the First Canadian Contingent for ‘werseas service in the First World The conversion loan cost over $70 million in bonuses, commis- sions, advertising, etc., plus a fu- ture cost of millions in extra in- terest. The Minister of Finance said provinces and municipalities would be able to borrow morey to better advantage, but I and oth- | and concluded the visits-deal with ers argued that the conversion | Khrushchev in about a month. loan would cost our provinces and municipalities more to __fin- ance every new project such as new roads, sidewalks, sewers. schools, hospitals, etc. We have only to look at our municioal tax , might go down as a_ master- | again. stroke of American post-war dip- lomacy. It appeared to climax one the most delicate exercises in in- ternational politics since the cold war began. President Eisenhower initiated | CHALKS UP GAINS In so doing, on the strictly Am- 5. The president will have chance of spelling out vita] Am- erican and AliMed interests in| such tension areas as the Middie East and the Far East. This does not mean he will negotiate any deals for he has power to speak only for the United States. OVERSHADOWS SQUABBLES The Eisenhower - Khrushchev agreement overshdows the | dern problem. Though the Asso- erican-Russian level, he chalked up these gains which could trans- form the world scene: 1. He has given Khrushchev the squabblings of the European Al- lies over the general issue of East-West relations. Rival assessments of Moscow's | aims have led France and West | longer fit. for the wheel of a car. The British Medical Associa- tion has faced this pressing mo- ciation has always jealously guarded the principle of profes- sional secrecy, it has concluded that the larger duty must not be neglected. At the annual meet- ing of the British Medical Asso- ciation this month, Dr. C. E. Daw- gon, speaking for the council, made this pronourncement: “It is in the interests of the patient.’ as well‘ as of the com- munity, that a doctor should re- Mees Previously we had thought this verbalizing (sic) movement was confined to such Madison Avenu- isms as ‘formalize’ and ‘“‘final- ize’ (which have led us to won- der’ where from); “capsize”’ and such show-business came talk as “Jack Benny guested on the Dinah Shore show,” or ‘‘Per- ry Como hosts the Ames Bro- thers.’” international charities. The two of them didn't even speech to. each other or conversation back _ and forth; they just talked. We suppose that ever since the — Great Vowel Shift, linguists have been worrying about the changing of nouns into verbs—which, after . all, is the way we got a great ,. many of our best verbs. So it’s probably foolish to fret about con- tinuing the process. But making Well, anyway, we were puzzled at the verb “gifts.” Why didn’t Mr. Rennie just “give’’ her the necklace? Was it ‘because he | just gift up! a noun into a verb when there’s already a parallel verb in exis- tence—that’s too much for us. We apr woseereess > sensei AOA RK AD ALK MR RES eee < sas reoneeesenereeeeere ssa I EYE ee