much to promote the welfare of the Thre Grenier | men 00 at occasion Myasthenia NOTES BY THE WAY c Despite the many activities in e a a _— Se = which he engaged, Dr. Yeo never Gravis A fether said to his daughter, Hewsentte: ‘te neve Wallace Ward Frank Walker | seemed to be hurried or out of pati- “Your young man appraachet you dumb Managing Edi Edi j . By Dr. Theodere KR. Van Dellen | and "lt tells Publithed every week dey morning except Sue | ence. He had a talent for organtz- Most victims of myasthenia | me nee oe notte loon day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, | ing his work and for performing all oe a story about cried the daughter, “I don’t wish Charlottetown, P.E.!., by Thomson Newspapers ltd. hi bli ti ith ffici d finess. waroing to leave mother.” “I quite un- A etatistician says more cat Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton — is obligations wi . e ency an they begin to have difficulty derstanding, child,” the fether | and-dog food than baby foed is TE matensty by Themen tema | Ce: He See Mey oe ne Se ian the irae | said. “But don't let me etand in | sold im the United States, Per- nation. mson ws ' . : Z reason Advertsing ‘Services: Toronto 425 Univenity Ave. | €0US and considerate in his dealings part of the morning and more | ‘be way of your happinges, Ter tables can’ purr and tay’ have Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- with all classes, and the confidence troublesome as the day goes on. ton tor: : no tails to wag.—Galt Reporter, verity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia he inspired in the practice of his Strength veturns with a short Specta Street Vancouver MA 7037. , rest but the weakness recurs af- The psychiatrist who says in- Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers | chosen profession was proverbial. We (| t@r-the lids are held open. Dou- Our Yest da S$ | sanity is decreasing he Remtetien and The Conetian Prose. tee Conotion | recall, too, the exceptionally compet- ne ee the —_ U ere y mistaken. It could be thet is exclusive! ntitled to the use for repu ’ ’ 2 ms . el is one ait "aan dispatches = ae poy / ent manner in which hé discharged —* eyes (From The Guardian Files) owe 80 aa now as it i r t i ress ore ers | : . < ceded rt he nocd prow. Seer | is-duties in the City Council, par ens ry ints forse ovr. |" Reaner uri) > | NAO ne right or republication of special dispatches here ticularly during his years as chief Those of the face, jaws, and cee Se ot the whe i io an in also reserved. Subscription rate: magistrate. | the ewallowing apparatus are Sine near oo any ae i also susceptible. The disorder is | ¥ BX BOWS , older, country can afford »_ since $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and ares | = He lived to an advanced age, and more serious when the structur- eeetr thous an clit eee ean dda lov, per ae bade nat -seniend, ay caprer — Se ea aaa ee | was in retirement in recent years. es aepeeet. wih Neeeeens. Great War was fought in vain | —Calgary Herald. year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com | But it was an active life indeed on™ = was The vee be and said that, to the contrary, ee es ad | which he could look back, and which engaged in ee when, | it saved semnemees for a full og. entooal brokers point out i tae eae of Clin | contributed; in many ways, to our in- — ae, weal te | its resistance to force in 1940. | have windows that can't be “The strongest. memory is weaker | terests locally and provincially. given « chance to recuperate: A no opened = eee — i than the weakest ink’ : condition exists when | 4044 under the shadow of a | cleaners will be pleased, eay- PAGE 4 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1965. Cape Breton Worried Welifcult when the lage re a new war, piling wreaths and ol. way.—Ottawa Journal. We had occasion, during the re- fected and work is oo | et ee ete years be-| A motorist saw a sign on a In Remembrance cent political aign, to hail with Possible when the arms tire. fore and in the one that was lit- | service station, “Last chance Another Remembrance Day brings ok ae a ae tycholine an ceati nine mile.” He stopped bad his tank its inescapable memories of the suf- | $25 million wou expen in cicie setae Ga Gnade aber. ae coe eae oS ir eee fering and sacrifice of two world | Cape Breton upon expansion and Those with myasthenia gravis | 4+ the Mount Stewart Rem- | two cents,” replied the attend. : : : i do not produce this substance . d other conflicts in which | Modernization of the coal industry. embrance Servicés held in the | ant.—Vancouver Province. ee ‘oi It is to be hoped that no drawbacks or perhaps it is destroyed im |Tagion Hall, the speakers were many Canadians participated, and ; : mediately after the muscle | Rey Father Butler, Fort Aug-{ Sightseers touring Southern : : will be placed in the way of imple- contracts. This chemical is es- ; ther MacCormick many valiant lives were lost. The 7 . 4 Poca ge nl pte ta el nates: Rev. vehet oat battlefields in a bus listened eto hush that came over the battlefields | menting this promise, and that no tivity. No one knows why some | Ny wae” AE so a uae ically to the comment of their 918, was thought | time will be lost in making a start on the condition; the thy- | °"D'’rowther, Charlottetow,. | driver-guide. “Here on the left on November 11, 1918, oug Sloat datas te tacaal i i i ¢ | the program. , yr bone two brave Virginia boys captur- at the time to usher in a new era 0 is implicated in some, but not ».. F East ct : ; : The grant was supposed to. pro- all victims. . adiey Fay, Baltic; ed an entire regiment ‘of North- - world peace, in which the experien- id th cena th pail Tha domes at jg | Eunice MacNaught, Carleton. |. os Finally, @ woman with ces of four years of terrible slaughter | Vie, among Other things, tor the Oe calles eee. Berne the | ot 8; Mable England, West | and. devastation would serve as a per- petual warning against the futility of war. Yet within two decades anoth- er armageddon, more dreadful in its consequences, was shaping up. Sin¢e then the task of world states- manship has been to prevent anoth- opening of a new mine seam at Lingan in the New Waterford area, where in February next over 400 | miners will be jobless when No. 18 colliery is closed. The $25 million, however, it to be spent over a five- year period, and it is feared that this BETWEEN THE CROSSES ROW ON ROW This is done before and after | | OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Gave Loyal Service To Liberal Party — the use of neostigmine because victims of this disease respond | promptly _ | this drug is used. | Several good remedies are | available and the majority live | Royalty; Miriam Hyde, ow Bank; Wayne Cameron, | - | Head of Hillsboro; Donald Mac- | Donald, Morell; left by train | for the Royal Winter Fair, Tor- | Mead- | an - |ow Bank; Ruth MacPhail, Mead | win a single victory?” ‘No, Ma'am,” said the guide politely, “and they won't as long es I'm and dramatically when | onto, being all Island members | Tuaaing this bus.” —M on treal of the 4H Club. : "Cancaliell All Entertainment : ; will not be -good-enough in view: of er world conflict that could spell the ough: ) end of all our hopes for civilization, the urgency of the situation. What happens to the Back- | fisherman for his party. He eset Recently however the oll Foe etirrteal tell What is particularly -disturbing, | '00™ Bove, of political compet gns after the last vote has. been says the Cape Breton Post, is that no | counted? a long but somewhat restricted | ‘ ; COLOR ADDED Mrs. Z. writes: When oranges ‘are marked “color added” does | The fact.that the United. Nations : Often. a i ere era {ieee eae ae momeeel te | oad tn existence te eo ae | Oe has been made since the 7 . for Sune and some « lot of | some gloom to me before his | this mean the value of the fruit | at the he fact: that outhreaks. whichlave nouncement to go forward with this | their party, they are discarded | money by building such eleva- | death to criticise the call- | is impaired? MAIN BRACE is the <_ a ou project. Apparently it hasn’t yet | into the limbo. This was the un- | tors all over the Prairies. ing of “the unnecessary elec- REPLY — occurred in various danger areas have ; ., | grateful fate of perhaps the | Clarence Decatur. Howe had |4:,.% «pearscn either will not | No. Some fruits are picked been prevented from spreading dis- oo. ao by oe ereatest fisherman for the tab vot taken much interest in Ca | 221°, snstority, or he will be |€teen and color is added to im- On Nov. llth ’ landed politic was - ’ astrously. Efforts to curb the pro- a ig t abide acai an Geet catch thet poriy oun od to teen, tf anywhere, towards dominated by Quebec MP's, | Prove eye appeal. | At the Going Down of the Sun - - - liferation of nuclear weapons are | [% not yet been officially made | S write of Senator Norman Lam- | the Conservatives. But Norman | While either could destroy Pear. |TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— | And in the mo: aware of the plan, and no one in gov- | bert, who died. here week | Lambert talked him into So enrie continuing at Geneva. But there is a growing realization that peace can- ernment circles has! been in touch in his 81st year. Norman Lambert, The heavy drinker is courting | cirrhosis. ma | with any company official concerning | duated trom Toronto University |King triumphantly swept back ae not be made and guaranteed by char- it. The Cape Breton paper urges started his working life as a |into power, he appointed the ry ters and treaties alone, and that we | and with reason, that the federal | ™malist. He deat toe the old | Minister ot TReimen Cans oe , nh a are in for a long continuance of ten- | government lose no further time in | Toronto “Globe”; later he was | and Shipping. sion and turmoil, and must live with making public its intentions in this | T@msferted to the Press Gall- | Thus an American citizen en- these problems as best we can. Seek- : ery on Parliament Hill, where | tered the cabinet in which he regard. Opening the New Lingan | he developed a deep personal | would labour for the next 22 ing, by all means, to promote the ad- | mine, it argues, should not occupy | interest in the politics of the Lib- | years, eventually becoming its vent of peace on earth and good will | giv, years, Neither should modern eral Party. ‘ anesess personality although toward men, but realizing that cau- ization of ‘the existing min« os : took a ieee xctfe catch -by Norman Lambert fer tion as well as hope must be exercis- e me 7 with a remarkable immigrant | excelled such later hauls as ed in maintaining the hard-won free doms we enjoy, and safeguarding them for the future. We are still involved in military shéuld be. considered as separate projects, and both should be _pro- ceeded with in all expedition. In five years, it is pointed out, the Ontario market could be lost. In from Scotland. Jim Stewart was the son of a blacksmith in Lochaber, and he served as a Ross Thatcher, Bona Arsenault Jean Marchand, Pierre-Elliott ; Trudeau who have been recruli- policeman in Edinburgh before | ted from other ioves. HIS LABOURS REWARDED career was sensational: he staf- | Three years later, Lambert ted as a policeman in Brandon, | was appointed to the Senate. commitments; and we know that until | five years, unless more active meas- | Manitoba, and in due course was | Then came the 1940 election.and both sides in the struggle that divides | ures are taken to rehabilitate the | ppointed chairman of the Can- | he again ce managed mankind can come into common | coal industry—unless a move is made acceptor gt. gio awnees | ite, Ye eed ; ne agreement on how disarmament is to be achieved; it-would be a betrayal : in di i . But King, who could neith- |- of peace and of everything that Re- | no coal industry left in Cape Breton. oneal wie ser tcnomatai er forgive —y forget, resented membrance Day stands for if we were | In the circumstances, there is ob- | With Lambert's active particl- $e Lae * to throw them aside. If the over- | viously need for more concrete as- | LIBERAL PARTY HEAD that reward never camé. all prospects have brightened some- | surances. from. Ottawa. than have He then centered his activi | Nevertheless, Senator Lamb- | what in late years, it has not been | been forthcomi ot Ces on the’ Lateral ly, See eee woe et coming. he helped its leader, W.L.Mac- | most popular and through Western weakness but a Kenzie King, to rebuild the party politicians on through Western strength. In First Place and redraft its policies after ite | Pertiament HI, snd in the Up- ws defeat in the 1990 electioon. In | per Chamber he excelled esp- We cannot invoke the memory of The British Navy may not be the | 1995, Lambert was elected pres- | ecially in commeattine wae i those who died that we might live in | great international peacekeeping | ident of th- National Liberal | new — _ peace without recalling the need for | force that it was, but the British mer- cleats anna ta dhe aes pgp gy Roe after on : arming ourselves morally as well as | chant fleet is today the largest in the | tion of that year, which the Lib- | they drew on = mee ; materially against betraying the | world. According to Lioyd’s Register | “Si Woo | 10 | cone and wiedom, | seeking Wh iS watchin ideals for whith they stood. This | of Shipping, it has replaced the Unit- | bert became the successful | campaigns. y: g calls for a candid. reassessment of - our own aspirations and conduct, in- dividually and as a nation, if today’s to enable Canadian coal to be sold in Canadian markets—there will be ed States fleet in this achievement. A total of 4,437 merchant ships of 100 gross tons and over, aggregating they operated the Maple Leaf Milling Company. That ven- gee ved FE People Are Funny a Philips automatic TV Sault Ste. Marie Star ceremonies are to be truly meaning- | 21,530,264 gross tons are now regis- like riding in al chauffeur- ful. | tered under the British flag, as com- pa = ita jagged rare eauen the e ? : ~ pared with 21,527,349 tons, repre- | than $1,000,000 to pay for the in- | carries a piece of equipment in driven Car! The Late Dr. Yeo sented by 3,416 ships, registered in | *tallation of front seat belts as | the front toe beet to tae i i The late Dr. Ira J. Yeo was an | the United States. Last year the U.S. oan re ner deed ye ee aliat cmere. or a ae (Because you just sit hack, ; : outstanding citizen of this commun- | merchant fleet had an edge of almost | 196. , - belt to strap 2 a: young relax and enioy it.) : ity and province, and played many | one million tons over the British. ecb ing peoneeneiin Or, maybe, if he is involved in : ; parts in his time. He was a first- Large-scale scrapping of obsolete | the nae a serious accident and nothing class educationist in his early days, | World War II vessels and a slower | <iation. _ es tee ne te ce pam efore_entering upon_his_long_a'nd—|_rate-of _new-construction-are-respon- ge og og Pee eit thy | use tt to make 2 splint or use it distinguished medical career. He | sible for the drop of the U-S. to | approximately $10 on the com- reel Gl debe. Thee, potgle did much to promote sporting activ- | second place. Lloyd’s notes that thé models to about $20 on the | who have cars equipped wi th ities, and was president of the Abeg- | US. total included 9.5 million tons of |" aE ae to be money |iett, Belts and who don't use: weit Amateur Athletic Association | inactive shipping, and that its active | very well spent: $20 to prevent funny. and president of the company which | merchant fleet now ranks fourth— | 4 fractured skull or « battered operated the Charlottetown Forum for many years. He served as Councillor and lat- terly as Mayor of the City; as chair- man of the Charlottetown School Board; as chairman of the board of di- records and subsequently chief- of staff of the Prince Edward Island ~ Hospital; as first chairman of the Public Utilities Commission; as choir leader of the First Baptist Church in * Charlottetown; and, for many: years, as a leading member and president of the Liberal Association of the prov- As commanding officer of the Ninth Field Ambulance at the out- break of World War 1, Dr. Yeo estab- Jished a field hospital at Valcartier ees for the ‘first “Gvérseas contingent when it assembled there, and did oy , behind Britain, Liberia and Norway. Liberia has the world’s leading tanker fleet, followed by Norway and Britain. The Soviet merchant marine showed a considerable increase over last year, but it is still only in sixth place in world standings. EDITORIAL NOTE Washington announces that a wide | range of Americana, from Johnny | Appleseed to the paintings of Mary’ Cassatt, will appear on United States commemorative stamps in 1966. In- diana statehood, the Migratory Bird Treaty with Canada, the National Park Service, humane treatment of | animals, the American circus, Bill of Rights, and the 6th Inter- national Philatelic Exhibition are | attiong the subjects to be commemor- ated. piece of chrome or another knick-knack hanging from the back windshield. To these mo torists the seat belt ie a nuis- in the car but too boherstome to strap on, — And, ance and a novelty. Nice to have © GUARDIAN - PATRIOT CENTRAL | PRINTERY to give you the ultimate in viewing. take you to your Philips dealer—for » automatically. demonstration (automatically). f=] PHILIPS APPLIANCES LTD.—{felevision * Stereo Hi-Fidelity * Radios * Tape R Reni and Edecationel E, } Household Appliances + Lighting + Industrie! Sound Equipment + Philisheve Electric Shavers +"New-Life” Hearing Aids | ‘Trust in Phifips fs cay WW [ones] Appliances || MecAustand available at Furniture Ltd. Island Radio Centre 100 Queen St. Charlottetown —_-2-1291 Campbell's Ltd. Central Bedeque, PEL me | | Crockett. & Storey Ltd. cme...