' one of which is 3000 feet deep. As for the of flfty.:yeax-o met violent death at the THE GUARDLAN Published ovary rook-day morning at no PHIIOI strut. Cha- lotulown. P. B. 1.. by The Thomson Company Limited. I "Conn Prhu Edward Island Lilo the Dow" Editor and Manager. In A. Burnett. Auocilla Editor. Frank Walker lynch office: at summenld . M t d Albe . . ind In Second Clan Maitlglzx-lg: (;&lco De;r;mIAu':h.r n. Summeulda 015.00 per nnnum. Elu- Iy Carrier: C. rhen in P. E. I 89.00. Other Provinces and U. 8. A. Slim . per annum. "Th0 llmllltest memory is weaker than the weakest ink." THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1964 Wisdom Prevails The railway contract dispute is not settled but the means of settling it have been agreed upon. The representatives of 145,000 non-operating employees and the railway heads are, perhaps, almost as far apart as ever on what they would consider a just settlement on the question of fringe! benefits but they have agreed to submit, their differences to government abritration. The decision will be greeted with relief from coast to coast and not least by the raiiwaymen themselves. Nobody gains by a strike, except perhaps business rivals, and the fruits of wise labour diplomacy arc sweeter than those of industrial strife which bears much the same relation to lab- our relations as war does to diplomacy. The power to wage war is one of the tradi-I tional prerogatives of sovereignty as the right to. strike is a cherished power of lab- our. Both, however, represent a failure of normal relations. Prime Minister St. Laurent is to be com-I mended on his successful intervention ini the dispute. A less vigorous Prime Minister might well have permitted the situation to drift into deadlock from which a strike might seem to be the only escape. The lab- our leaders also might easily have lost their heads and forgotten their objective off bettering the lot of the members of thei brotherhoods in their enthusiasm for the- fray. That they did not indicates that they understand the art of industrial diplomacy and have the ability to practice it. Protecting The Lobster The way of lobster poachers and those, taking short lobsters is going to be harder, according to a recent announcement from the Department of Fisheries. The Coastal Fisheries Protection Act, 1953, is to be im- plemented immediately. Penalties are pro- vided for the master of a fishing vessel entering territorial waterssillegaliy; failing to heed the signal ”K" (heave to) from craft wearing the Canadian Blue Ensign;. jettisoning or destroying anything after such a signal; or refusing to reply to or obey a Protection Officer. Fishermen who see a patrol vessel ap-I proaching and either flying the square flagl with yellow to the hoist and blue to the, fly or emitting long-short-long signals will be wise to ”come quietly." Those who have nothing to conceal will be helping to add to their own incomes by saving the time of the patrol by thus per- .mitting a better job of protecting the in- dustry to be done. Wrongdoers will find 310,000 and one year's imprisonment, desirable not to multiply offences. ; The wholc point is, of course, that the? protection is for the. benefit of the fisher- men themselves. Thcy rely on lobsters for their livelihood. Poachers and those tak-I ing berried or undersized lobsters arei robbing the honest fishermen. l They are? also robbing themselves if they propose to continue in the fishing industry. The fish- ery patrol vesscls are the fishermen's own device for keeping the industry prosperous and should be treated as such. Dream World ln'The Northwest Until quite recently Nahanni Valley (better known as Headless Valley) in the themselves open to a fine of as much as! 8. causes. Gustave Kraus, who came to the valley from Chicago in 1934, is monarch of all he surveys in the sense that he is the only white man in the region. He gets along well with the Indians, he says, and what's more, he's never coming out. Not much longer, however, will Mr. Kraus be only representative of white civilization in Headless Valley. Now that the clouds of fear which have hung over its reputation for so many years have been removed, tourists will flock in to the area from all sides. And some enterprising fellow-per- haps Mr. Kraus himself-will be able to do its a good business selling souvenirs of mythicaliy mysterious past. A Teacher Speaks Toronto is a long way from Hong Kong, ' the home of Prof. K. E. Priestly, and it is understandable that the professor might un- burden himself more candidly than perhaps-; is his wont. At any rate he must have caused some eyebrow raising even at anif international congress of mental health when he suggested that parents might do: M better to play with their children in their 5 back yards than attend lectures and inter- fere with the work of the schools. We are accustomed to admire the com- munity spirit and energy of the people who take an interest in education as exempli- fied in the local school. It is frequently possible merely by looking at it from the outside to gauge the extent of the interest shown by parents. Teachers welcome the opportunity of getting to know the parents I of their charges at Home and School and other meetings. The exchange of views and information is apparently useful and welcome on both sides. Yet, here is a teacher who, when on the opposite side of the world to his students and their parents, sounds off to the effect that too much adult activity in the educa- tional field can prejudice the work of the schools. How long has he been harbour- ing these thoughts? Did he secretly think as the new library of classical phonographic records was presented that it would be bet- ter if the parents paid more attention to, their children's musical experience at home? , There are many possibilities, and theyi open up the question of what our own teachers would say about parents' partic-, ipation were they voicing their views in Hong Kong. EDITORIAL NOTES The first really kind thing said about the present summer is that the weather has not encouraged swimming accidents. 0 O O Canada's record grain carryover has its disadvantages and presents serious prob-. llems, but they are of a different order from those of the years when the West raised dust storms rather than crops. Congress has approved the sharing of certain atomic work and information with private industry and with allies of the United Statesg There can be no that the official American projects benefit from the relaxation as well divulged. O I Trout and other game fish may have cause engineer who has devised a substitute for the "fish ladder". Designed very much like a hose with very small nozzle, thcj water descends in it relatively slowly ex-I cept at the lower entrance. There the irapidiy escaping water very effectively at- itracls the fish. Its special merit is that it wastes much less water than convsntional arrangements. Jan De Witt. Dutch statesman, died this Northwest Territories was wrapped inidale 1572- H9 0DP0S9d. UllSUCC9SSfUUy. WHY mystery. Great have been the tales told about it-of hot springs with tropical growth, of weird rites performed by Indian tribes, of unexplained and sudden death to white intruders. Now, most of the mystery has been unveiled by a party of geologists, surveyors, sociologists, and other special- lots, from Edmonton. They report that, 51. though the tales have been much exag- gerated, there is a great deal of wonder to be observed in Headless Valley. Said one of the group: "It's a dream world, majestic and enthralling." The valley, 200 miles long, is extremely fertile. Potatoes, planted in the fall, come to bloom with the first sign of sprlng;. vegetables of every description grow rapidly and to enormous size: there is plenty of game, and fishing in good the year round. The scenery is magnificent. At Virginia Falls on the Na- buml River there is a drop of 316 feet"; the riveltitself flows through two canyons, Indian legends, there is very little to them. it H can that three persons over a period hub-.,of but man of the deaths with England and was elected grand pen- sioner when the war proved unsuccessful. Despite his best efforts war broke out again and he conducted it with vigor and skill, even personally taking command of the fleet. He was the organizer of the triple alliance of Holland, England and "Sweden against France. Charles II was bribed to desert the alliance, however, and a sudden attack by Louis XIV could not be resisted. The two brothers De Witt were murdered by a mob. - O O O The average Canadian hen eggs in May to produce a total of 36.2 mil- lion dozen, or 5 million dozen more than the year before. Heaviest producing hens were those in the Maritime Provinces where Prince Edward Island, with only 504,000 layers averaged 1,964 eggs per hundred hens, exceeding Nova Scotia by only six eggs and New Brunswick by 84 eggs. Ontario with the most layers (9,- 614,000.out of 25,253,000) was fifth in num- ber of eggs per hundred hens. Ninth and last on the list was Alberta with 1,572 eggs per hundred and next to the last, Manitoba with 1,575. Saskatchewan, with 1,067 eggs per hundred hens, was slightly below the national average of 1,675. ,, the imass into and beneath the water. doubt? will- as- sufficiently drastic maximum to make it,those to whom information may now be: to be grateful to a Massachusetts; laid 16 8 be I little irkod at the lending such material, not merely to the fishing areas in the Mori- Old Charlottetown and P. I L SUBMERC-ED FOREST "At the extremity of Gallows Point, which is a small peninsula between Pownall Bay and Orwell Bay, and opposite a low tract. of peaty ground, there is a submerged forest. Upwards of three acres are occupied by slumps and roots of the spruce, fir, and hemlock, which are covered by every tide, being from four to eight feet below high water mark. It is certain that these trees grew upon the spot where they are now seen, as their roots and the soil that nnurished them are all present; their trunks have been broken clown by the ice, and at low water t'..e tract resembles the clearing of the new settler. ”In this instance the barrier of a neat swamp might have been broken by tho occan - the soil drained, and consequently rendered more compact so as to fall beneath the common sea level, or there might have been a land slip, by which the trees growing upon the bog were moved with the general But from a variety of facts, it is more probabl that there has been a submergenc of the land itself, of which there are proofs in dif- ferent parts of the Island." -Charlottetown Herald, Oct. 19. 1864. 9he .cs;”xi 7oe&' Qwzeiz A PORTRAIT I am A kind of farthlng dip, Unfricnrily to the nose nnd oyes; A blu:-behlnded ape, I Skip Upon the trees of Paradise. At mankind's feast, I take my pine? In solemn. sancllmonlous state. And have the air of sayingtgraoe While I defile the dinner plate. I am 'the smiler with the knlfe,' The bnttcner upon garbage, I - I Dear Heaven, with such a rancid life, Were it. not better for to die? Yet still, about the human pale, I love to scamper, love to race, To swing by my irreverent tail All over the most holy place; And when at length, some golden; day - ."---all the world will -R. l.. Stevenson. The Age Old Story And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man his brother, saying. Know the Lord: for they shall all know me. from the least of them unto the gradient of them” saith the Lord. Prairie Lobster: Edmonton Journal The officials who run the Fed- eral Government's enthusiastic and costly information services seem to be curiously ignorant of Canadian geography, and particularly of the distance of certain localities from the brlny deep. This is the only explanation we can offer why the Journal-l:n common. presumably, with all other Prairie newspapers - has Just received a, bulletin from the Department. of Fisheries, setting out. detailed new regulations for lobster fishing. If any of our readers are on- gaged in catching lobsters in the North Saskatchewan, we must warn them that the department will be very, very irked if they use trap: "which do not have a con- tinuous and unobstructed space measuring at least one and five-eight: inches between the two undermost. laths on each side of the trap." Canadian taxpayers. too. may idea of lime): in shape. . viz snm-':man. aiming uni times but all over the country-at DHNMOIDOXID. I NOTESBY "Growing trees is I cinch for anybody with the patience to wait 40 years." - St. Catharines Stand- ard. soviet scientists declare they will build a space ship to carry people to Mars. How welcome it would be if they carried all the Russians up there. -Times Gazette. The office cynic declares that if comic books are controlled there will be pothing left on which to blame juvenile delinquency.-Times Gazette. T Russian students visiting Britain say they wouldn't, like to live there. Their reason is a sound one-"the weather is so bad."-Brantford Ex- posltor. Tests show that the average life of an automobile tire today is about five times llonger than it was twenty years ago. But. the same can't be said for drivers.-Toronto Star. There is still the strap or the paddle. And from what we hear from penoligists the toughs and zoot-suilers don't like either. It hurts not only their bottoms but their vanity. They don't feel so tough when their pants are pro- perly warmed. - Vancouver Prov- ince. Golf is what letter-otrryinty ditch-digging and carpet-beating would be if those three tasks had to be performed on the same at- ternoon in short pants and color- ed socks by gouty-looking gentle- men who require B different im- plement for every mood. -- Aylmer Express. The really during part. of that colonel's order to American army wives in Frankfurt was his insis- tence that blue jeans must. not be worn by "mature women." What armed guard under pressure or what firing squad is to decide which are the "mature" women? And who will notify his next of kin?-Boston Post. As therapy for convulesclng housewives, the municipal hospital at Durham, England has built. in modern kitchen, specially fitted to accommodate crippled patients. Hospital authorities have found that working in the kitchen keeps a woman's mind off her illness and helps get long-idle muscles -Time Magazine. speaking of spelling, you are good if you can do this one with- out a bobble: ”Bnslde a cemetery near the srmlnary sat on embar- :-nsscd cobbler, gnawing on a des- slcated potato and gazing at the symmetry of a lady's ankle with uparalleled ecstasy." When a col- lege professor dictated that to 208 students, not a one scored perfect. The average was five errors.-Ala lantlc Constitution. Recently the in. you of Chester, Cheddar and Roquefort sat down at lunch with the chief magistrate of the Netherlands town of Alk- maar, cheese-making center which is celebrating its 700th anniversary. The mayors of Parma, GUI ' Edam and Gouda were absent in the flesh, but present in spirit. For among cheese fancier: there is an affinity of souls of a kind to which only skiers and chess players may aspire. - Ottawa Citizen. None too soon come: a report on two years of research, showing penicillin to be "no better than an aspirin compound" in thwarting the common cold. some of us had luspected as much, but lacked the scientific evidence for the belief now supported by experiments completed at Syracuse University in New York. Penicillin has been misused and over-rated as I cure- nll for almost. every sort of all- ment. It's high time that it is re- garded in proper proportion. The researchdndlcated that it is pow- erless anlnst the cold virus and will not ward off sore throat or other "non-lpeciflc upper respira- tory infections." - Sydney Polt- Record. SHIPI-'-ER I-IILLMAN on non mu of Cloth at .00 per suit J. P. MccPH!I3ON I SON" ' - An running I. 8 THE WAY The average Weoternor fails to realize that freedom of expression and thought have little meaning for a starving peasant not guar- anteed freedom from want. . . . Burma, in poor country. has been able to contain Communism with- out military aid from the United States, Burma has not merely re- gained self-respect; it has regained: its soul, and Pakistan by seeking military aid from the United States has lost its soul and sold. its self-respect for a mess of pot- tage. - Barn Jyoti, Delhi, India. Since the economy of Canada is closely linked to that of the United States. it is good to learn that there has been no increase in unemploy- ment in tin United States for the last three months. The figures is- sued for July show that unem- ployment held even with the month of June. This is important because the month of July usually shows an increase in the number of job- less. Actually the total number of employed in July increased by 50,000 over June, an indication of the increasing size of the working force in the United States. - Mon- treal Gazette. The governments of Denmark, Norway and Sweden have conclud- ed agreements with the United States for the operation of trans- polar air services. Similar agree- ments must be obtained with Clan- ada, then flight certification ob- tained in both countries. After that. Scandinavian Airlines System will begin regular commercial flights over the route it has already pio- neered in two years of experiment- . I The Passing Scene 3: Observe: lnrrouu. Alilvlol, 1366 The Gunman, I bone bustle in women's skirt: and - very unhappy about the ' lowing style of dress be X place in a woman's dress." 0 O O i plenty of it, to put the like of that ' in an editorial column. and evan . retain much of their natural dis- IOWA: cept that white looks better. Recent experiments, prove the truth The reason is that wool more moisture from the body than any other material and, by so doing. keeps the body (Continued) It I'll tho 90104 of tho-wbolm writer was whole situation; in fact. Judging from the tons of his writing, one might go so far no to say he was furious about it. "This evil, together with other physiological errors," he wrote, "la doing much to shorten the lives of our women and to com- promise the health and life of the whole race. To avert these and re- sults it is proposed that the fol- adopted. The waist should be several inches longer than the body. a little shorter than the present fashion, and full in front. "The bands of the skirt should be much larger than the body, but.- tons to be plkoed on the bands of the inside skirt, Just as they are on a man's pants for suspenders. and the same elastic suspenders worn, crossing behind. Make but- ton holea in the bands of the other skirts to correspond with the but.- tons on the inside skirt and button on: thus one pair of suspenders will carry three or more skirts This style of dress is attended by no discomfort and at the same time is sufficiently fashionable to es- cape observation. Of course cor- sets should never be worn; and whal-ebones, especially. have no at least one editorial It must have taken courage, and more for the following which ap- peared on the same page: ”Glris are early taught deceit and they never forget the lesson. Boys are more outspoken. This is because boys are instructed that to BE frank and open is to be manly and generous. while their sisters are admoiilshed that 'thi.s is not. pretty" or ithal. is not becoming' until they have learned the art. of deceitful- ness. The result. is that. while men position, woman are made-up characters." It must be that women were not expected to subscribe to newspapers and magazines in -those days. "Why are colds and other respir- atory troubles so frequent?" ask: another writer. He then proceeds to answer his own question as fol- "Bccause of the fashion to wear cotton garments. The very best thing to wear next the skin in summer as well an in winter is common wool flannel. one colour has no advantage over another, ex- carefully concluded, of this assertion. absorbs drier. Hence. less colds and similar diseases." It sounds simple enough; never- Lheless, 100 years later, scientists are still looking for a way to pre- tho steam engine to mo plough and making 1 earn the bread or minions. increasing tho enrllr; pi-oductlveneu to an almost bound. lea extent. dispensing with horses and turning cattle out to nun "Yet, the nctieobllity of mg, momentous c o in Igrfoumm has been proved th in nigium and this country. In Inlluid they even have machines which um plough eight some I day. Tm. surely will inaugurate a. new er; and is an event of the vary hlghegg importance." one writer devoted a column on what. he called "Useful Rocebts", Here are a. few of them: A red-hot, shovel held over varnished furn. lture will take out white spots; 1: your flat from on rough. rub than with fine salt and it will make them smooth; out straw in the but flu. mg for beds. but care should be taken to change it once u you- snuff (preferably Scoich) put of, holes where crickets mine out mu destroy them; wood ashes and com. mon nit. wet with water. will llop the cracks of I stove; 3 gallon or strong ire put in a barrel of hard water will make it so soft us run water. (By way of what would np. pear to be an unnecessary caution he added: "Don't. drink it." 0 0 0 Another writer, s focotlouo felloy no doubt, entertained his yuan; with some "modern definitions" .3 follows: Belle-A beautiful but use. less insect without wings: Heart,-A rare article, oometlmeo found in human beinu; Houlewlfcry-An ancient art, said to have been fun. ionable many years ago ungn, girls and wives. It is now entirely out of use; Doctor-A mm who kills you today to save you tho trouble of dying tomorrow; Editor- A poor wi-etch who every 4., empties his head in order to hug fill his stomach. And here. Probably the work of the some writer, is I. dosc.rlpl.ton or A fashionable city phyglglw--; 1,; is his theory to keep delicate pal.- lento in such I condition that tho your bill will be plathorlo. He does not tell madame that nothing ex. cept laziness ails her, but gives her a. good dose of the latest gossip um a little harmless medicament. He lives in I good aunt-nr. drives a fine Clrrlnse and, on the whole, 1.. kn amiable man. when his die he lets them down funeral manner is superb. patients Guy. ms TILI.-SONBUEG. Onto (GP) -- What does A man do when he wakes up to find his bad on any Firemen who had trouble rousing 8 guest at an auto court before extinguishing the small fin hm the answer. The man found .11. other bed right away and um back to sleep. i FOB vent. the common cold. 0 0 0 Under the caption "Miracles never cease" there is this treatment of the wonders of science: "When we come to look back at it through the vista of history, we find that the century which has passed (1754- 1854) has been allotted to more important events and discoveries than any other which has elapsed since the creation. Take steam ploughing, for instance. what. a magnificent idea is that of yoklng Tailoring and Alterations RITE - WAY 7387 al flights. The pl ,. d service will offer flights from Los Angeles to Copenhagen, via Canada and Greenland. at a saving of six to seven hours flying time. The shorter route is of particular in- ierest to Canada. for it will es- tablish Edmonton, more than ever, as an important international air terminal. For polar flying in either direction, to Asia via Alaska and the Aleutians. or to Europe via Greenland, Edmonton is the logical take-off point. - Montreal Gazette. Year: after typhoid fever has been all but stamped out in the more advanced parts of the world, Michigan scientists have discover- ed what is claimed to be a cure for the disease. If the new anti- biotic justifies the claims which are made for it, it will be a boon to those large areas of the world where typhoid fever in still a real threat to human life. If it can be produced cheaply and in large quantities, the new cure could pro- vide another healthful link between the scientific advance of the West and the backward nations of the East. In the firstlquarter of this century, typhoid fever epidemics scourged Canadian cities from time to time. Sanitation, the chlorina- tion of water and pasteurization of milk, combined with the develop- ment of inoculation: against. ty- phoid, have removed this threat. The newest development may write the end to deaths from typhoid fever on this continent. - Wind- snr Star. Refrigeration APPLIANCES saws o snavloa Repain To An Makes Morons Rewinding and Repairs ELECTRICAL Repairs . Palmer Electric PhoneoIMI IIM ONANEW POSSIBLE - o - g1879 - Our 75th Year As 53-” Attownncc son YOUR OLD BRACELET on snuxr In-ens-up Your Watch! with our smart A SPECIAL rvnomsia ms mom -i-ms 1-unnmc vows muons JElllELLEIls EXPANQCN - Q-may Jewellers - 1954 Awollod 1'0 Yul? W: Wllllt YUI ' w .- I'll -aamnsooo A-stash I-.3-duos. c..n-1- x... fa. -. . -