92.0! lcrwnnnnnr; Ab -E"Tbo strongest memory In weaker in: the weakest ink." MONDAY. AUGUST 6, 1856 Agricultural Research The Canadian Federation of Agriculture's board of directors, meeting recently at Port Arthur, ex- pressed uneasiness lest. in the ef- fort to train young men as indus- trial scientists and technologists, the needs of farming should be over- looked. Following a study by the CFA policy committee, the board made several recommendations with the aim of keeping agricultural" pro- gress in .step with that of the rest of the economy. The CFA calls for expanded and improved agricultural research and extension programs, particularly at the universities and agricultural col- leges. It would like to see young farm people receive at least two years of vocational training in their own business, besides whatever ad- ditional secondary and university training they may wish to take. More undergraduate scholarships are suggested. The Federation considers that both federal and provincial govem- ments have responsibilities for fin- -ancing additional research in agri- culture-ovf an economic and social nature aswell as scientific. At the same time, it sees a need for I non- government Agricultural Research Foundation for devoting money to research in what the CFA board re- gards as the greatly neglected fields of economic and social studies. A special committee is being set up to go into this question. "As I. farm organization of na- tional scope," comments the Ot- tawa Citizen, "the views of the CFA are usually listened to with respect. Not to be taken lightly is its user- tion that there is a dangerously small number of new ngriculturists being graduated from our colleges nnd steps need to be taken to at- tempt to correct this situation. The Federation's comments are timely, because in the midst of I great in- dustrial boom there is some danger that agriculture may be lost sight of. Farming in still the industry on which the Canadian economy large- ly rests and, as such, it too must take every advantage of modern research and technology." British & German Exports According to an "article in the British Board of Trade Journal the greatest single ihreat to Britain's . export trade is West Germany's al- most miraculous industrial recovery from the damage done to its eco- nomy in World War Two. In fact, the Journal reports, West Germany is taking the lead in practically every field of commerce, even in those fields where Britain was pre- dominant for many years, textiles and shipbuilding. In the two year period from 1953 to 1955, the Germans increas- ed their export trade by 40Ct;. The value of German built ships sent abroad has increased so rapidly that at the present time it is more than double that of British ship ex- ports. In the automobile business German exports more than doubled in the two year period, while British exports increased. less than one- ' fifth. The situation is even worse- from the'Britlsh standpoint-in tex- tiles. Front 1951 to 1955 Germany's rate of exports doubled. In the same '- period the British share of the world ; markets declined by one-seventh. There',ht've been more labour f troubles in Britain than in West Germsny in the post-war period, and this may have had something to do with" the German advance; but apparently not much, since fig- uresquotedbythehurnalseemto Indicate that wage! have risen at if About the same rate in both coun- .tries. Evidently, it is greatly in- , dressed Ilbtluctfon that is It the . West German Cdmmeb I so-min. 'l'his-has been helped .,.-'..; :isotrequirlehln,1'tos.'utlhorthlsl7- 'W.'Pi”W W West Germany appears to be well on the way to undoubted supremacy in European commerce. Timely Warning "Never, Never Be A Dodo" is the title of a new children's safety- first booklet being issued across Canada by the Canadian Bank of Commerce, this booklet, which aims at impressing on children the "do's and don'ts" of safety in the home and out of doors. uses cartoon illus- trations featuring the dodo as n duliard who gets hurt because he has not enough sense to obey safety rules. Children are urged to "Never, never be a dodo" by obeying the rules, and the cartoons help to show clearly how they can avoid acci- dents while riding bicycles, crossing streets, playing at games and sports and in many other day-to-day sit- uations. The main causes of death from - accidents for all children from birth - to age 14 are listed as ranking in the following order: (1) Motor vehicles. (2) drownings. (3) fire and explosions. (4) poisonings. (5) Falls. Inside the home, fails, cuts and burns, in that order, constitute the major hazards. Sounding a special warning to parents, th e booklet emphasizes that children are great imitators, so that their safety habits will often be directly related to those of their parents. During the early years, no other form of protection can com- pare with home protection and training. Copies of the booklet are avail- able to the public on request at any branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce. Cancer's Newest Weapon The steady advance in scientific research has been so often demon- strated in the past few years that we have ceased to wonder about it and have possibly lost our apprecia- tion of its meaning to mankind. Cancer, that insidious disease which within our memory was a sentence of death to its unfortunate victim, is now largely controllable thanks to the untiring efforts of scientists. The latest weapon in the fight against cancer is a minute instru- ment that has been given the name of ”electrogastrograph," an electri- cal device that records the fre- quency of electrical impulses in the muscles of the stomach. By this de- vice, Dr. Harry S. Morton, of the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, its discoverer, has been able to get cancer tracings a year before any symptoms have occurred. The importance of this can be appreciated when we realize that cancer of the stomach does not an- nounce its presence by any definite symptoms until the growth has pro- ceeded too far to be cured. For'this reason it is the most fatal type of cancer, accounting for more than 3,000 deaths yearly in Canada. The ”electrogastrograph," con- sists of a tiny electrode on the end of a wine inside a long, thin tube. The tube is passed through the pa- tient's nose down into the stomach and connected with a pen-writing recorder to I graph. The emotions recorded by the instrument are easily read by an expert. Dr. Mor- ton's work is being supported by the Canadian Cancer Society. EDITORIAL NOTES It used to be hard enough to get anyone of great political stature to run for the Vice-Presidency of the United States; for ordinarily it is I thankless post with relatively little prestige attached to it. This year, owing to President Eisenhow's ill- nesses and the likelihood of his hav- ing to retire while in office, assum- ing he is re-elected, almost every politician wants it-just in case. 0 O 0 Defense Minister Campney hasn't added to his stature by the ostrich- liko view he is reported to have taken of the Suez Canal crisis. "This," he is quoted I: saying, "is primarily I European matter. It is not I matter which particularly con- cerns Canada. We have no oil there. We don't use the canal for ship- ping." These were his comments on the emergency proclamation sign- ed by Queen Elizabeth which sum- moned British I i-age:-vigulm the colors. The Minister, who was inter-vicwed' ”on Prfdsyltn Vancouver. sold the situation does to returntoob ,i WOW . tn the-disnntef. mi! , rat 5, It in.” "A ".,i' The MOWUN TAINEERS Was The Press Biased? - Ottawa Journal It has been known for some time that I government tactic in the coming election will be to tell the country that in the pipeline- closure debate the Liberals were the victims of I "biased" press; that newspapers across the coun- try were false to truth and re- sponsibility when they reported that the Government debnsed Par- liament by trampling on its rules. Among the newspapers which reported that the Government trampled on rules and debased Parliament were the Vancouver Sun, the Winnipeg Free Press and the Toronto Star, Ill staunchly Liberal, and among those which condemned the Prime Minister for his handling of the Speaker's res- ignation was the Montreal Star. staunchly Liberal. Actually there was hardly a single newspaper In Canada, Liberal, Conservative or Indepsndent, which did not stig- mntize the Government's conduct on the basis of the facts. NOT OUT OF THE All! These newspapers didn't pick facts out of the air; they got them from independent, impartial news agencies like the Canadian Press and British United Press, from their own experienced Press Gal- lery correspondents, and from the official reports of Hnnsard. They got them also from the factual re- ports and comments of disting- uished Llberal observers like Mr. Grant Dexter and Mr. Blair Fra- S('I'. Alas, that wasn't good enough for the Government and its sup- porters: the newspapers hnd no right to report that this Govern- ment wns or could be wrong- ihey should have known better. They should have realized that Mr. Harris and Mr. Hows couldn't possibly be in error; their plain job was to fall in behind the Gov- ernment's bnck benchers, chnnt hosannns for Mr. Howe and Mr. Harris and report that Drew and Knowles and Fulton and the others must be mad to question the wisdom, the virtue, the om- nlsci z and omnipotence of the Government. EVEN TIIE CBC And to think, say these Liberal gentlemen, to think that even the CBC-nnd it owned by the Gov- ernment-should have turned us- ninst them! Mr. Russell Reinke. Liberal for Hamilton South, spoke the won Ind chagrin of them Ill. when he said thst"mIny might think "I state-owned news service would be rnther partial to the Government." Yet it hadn't been; had dared to join tbe newspapers in suggesting that the Govern- mpnt had been wrong-whnt I pass we had come to! Thus are little dictntors born: thus spawns the mood which not only thinks that I state-owned ser- vice might be "rather partial" to the Government. makes it. part of the law. just as Mr. Hitler nnd Mr. Mussolini did and as Mr. Khrushchev does now Ind Mr. Franco snd all the bin nnd little dictators wherever they may be. Thus what happens, too, in the cnse of any government anywhere which holds office too long; it becomes the victim of arrogance and towering concelts. demands obelsnnce regardless of truth, thinks criticism monstrous subver- sion. Tire Seekers In India National Geographic Society Two kinds of fire seeker-s'are meeting today in the Knngra Val- ley of India's western Himalayan foothills. Less than ten miles from the old ilindu shrine Jawalamukhl- where the Goddess Vajresvnrl re- veals herself to followers as I small violet name issuing from the earth--government drilling crews will probe for oil to supply more fuel, light and power to modern India. The Jawalnmukhi temple stands near the town of Kangrn, I farm center and holiday resort of the northern Punjab country. says the National Geographic Society. The lighted gas that seeps from a pit inside the temple is believed to represent the deity'I mouth. MAGNIFICENT SETTING Few shrines anywhere on earth have a more beautiful natural setting than that of .lawnlnmukhi'I fire worshippers in the vale of Knngrn. Built ngnlnst I bold cliff face, the temple looks down on fields of rice, corn and wheat spread out in hnimonious Orientnl-rug psitsrns. He and there are scat- tered flowering orchards of apples and pears, and broad green pat- ches of ten plantations. In the background, blue and purple hills ri. snow-capped Himnisynn peaks. The present shrine to the horn goddess is I modern restoration of I glitdomed nnd ' ' C structurn that stood at this sit for unknown centuries. A Sunn- krlf inscription it contnined was estimated to date Mill about ID. The earlier temple was partial- ly destroyed in in! by In earth- qusko that also watched much of Knngrn town and its ancient fort. More than moo people, including I lm their llvu. Together with the s&lne's spout- lu ssushsilnossnbotinissssl IP11 I the lust mukhi. They still come by scores of thousands each spring and fall when festival-fairs Ire held In nearby centeres. From time tmmemorlsl various forms of Hinduism--nature wor- shm E L . .. .... Jainism-have been associated with the Kan rn Vllley. Even when the Mos em conquerers of northern India controlled the hill territories of the Kntoch rnjss. the people continued to make sacri- fices and offerings to the old gods and goddesses. The Jawainmukhi temple was famous for.its wealth in gold and silver, jewels and money. Now Ind than the treasures were confiscat- ed by local Hindu princes or plun- dared by successive wnvos of in- vnders. At one time Moslsm over- lords collected I head ins on all pilgrims. The attendants It Jawslnmukbl todny Ire reported to fear that their sacred fismo may be for- ever extlnqulshed by the mundnnb oil drilling. Government officials have snnouiiced that than is no cause for worry. But whatever its future. Junie- mukhi's light in the past has of- ten gone out briefly when tho spurtlng us in the shrine bu died down. When this hIpPI'0d. legend sold the firs goddou fall- out to manifest herself bocnou of the essence of I sinner. TIC fire was I'ellgIl&. MAXIMS lspplnoslo soon" not -i:-:: .:'.-: but decrees it, . .nnd. ONCE MORE THE SEA Once more the sea, and salt wind Ill about us, Wide src of sandy Sllorl, and boulders in the sun, The beach-side maples shiwlng shine and shadow. The haze of heat on hills across the Bay. This is the day and season long nwnited, The undulating of the purple wave, The gleam of cloud along tho wide horizon. The freedom of the hours, and time for play. -Clara Hill Maunsell. in Regina Leader-Post. The Age Old Story Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord. nnd he shall lift you up.. First White Potatoes On I Spring day in 1719. In Irish immigrant carefully drop- ped : small seed in I field It Derry. NH. and the first white potato .Wll planted in North America. Now- 237 years lnter- plans are under way to erect I lasting memorial to the white or "Iriiih" potato. The field is on' the Murdock farm near West Running Brook, owned by Mrs. Caroline Murdock White. whose nncestors settled on the land. There has never been I perma- nent shrine to the potato. so I ' we was or ' -A "to pro- mote plans for I memorial to the United States potato industry at tbs site of America's first potato field-Derry. NH", In 1719, the Rev. James Mao- Grciior I ' I flock of 16 Irish im- migrant families to Derry, bring- ing with him I package of seed potatoes. The settlers ' t J I two and one-half acre clearing, and the following winter pumm- kept them alive. NOIISE KING IS 84 OSLO (AP) - Europe's oldest reigning monarch. Kins Hnalton VII of Norway, quietly celebrated his 84th birthday Friday in his Oslo cnstle. He had I tnrt mes- sage for those who've been y- in his health was failing. grin message from Hnakon was broad- cast over the Norwegian network: "I nm getting better. The doctors Iro satisfied and I am satisfied. I extend my thanks to" all those who have circulated Ill those well- mennlng rumors about how bad off I am." Proclamation Civic Holiday The following is I copy of I resolution passed by the, City Council on Friday, August 3rd:-- WHEREAS on the 8th dnyof August -in the you of Our Lord one thousand eight hundrld and I five, Charlottetown became an incorporated City, , AND WI-ERAS the said Cit h pssped its one huilldrc.-dEt'h year of minor: poi-stlon. - . them .Amanitas-Ire hluhly nctive.potsonous nlknlnidl. , DBFINITETIIBEAT . While you're. vacationing ' so mlcnloklng tn the country this,suns- its threat to n up who Isn't fo- mlllnr with tbs. ers of must!- .room-gstheqlnx. ' There's only one. way to. avoid this danger--recognize Ind nvold the poisonous types. If you can't recognize the Morel and the Amnnitas. don't pick any of then, And above all, don't eat nny,un- fnmillar types of mushrooms. es- pecially if they have been gath- ered by, an amateur. The safest thing to do in: such I c e is to throw them away. If you shore this advice and devel- op slgns of illness after eating mushrooms, call I doctor right away. , While there are numerous dif- ferent types of mushroom poison- ,lng, the worst begins with n series of gastrointestinal symptoms in from 10 to 15 hours nfter eating phalloldes. a type of Amanlfn. The victim suffers either con-' stipatlon or diarrhea. vomlts'ex- cessively and develops I paralys- ing abdominal pain. In most such cases, comn and death follow in from three to eight days. We know of no Inti- date. PLAY SAFE So, it's best to play it safe. If you're not I mushroom expert- and I don't imagine many of you are--don't go picking mushrooms for yourself and your friends. And. don't eat any they might pick for you. QUESTION AND ANSWER C.L.- My child is now recover- ing from I liver infection. Should I disinfect his room? Answer: It is not likely that the infection can be spread by ob- jects in the room. Therefore. dis- infecting the room would not be of help. our Yesrekoms I1-on The Guardian Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Aug. I, 1981) Mr. Vincent Windsor, Charlotte- town. has recently been promoted Ford Conrpnn branch superin- t d t and ranch senior man- nger for the Maritime Provinces, with headquarters in St. John. Last evening the Canadian Leg- ion Band provided I very interes- ting evening to the guests Ind visitors at Stsnhope Beach Inn with an excellent programme of selected music. TEN YEARS AGO (Aug. 6. I946) While the proposed new arm- ouries for Charlottetown In high on the priority list. the possibil- ity is they will not be constriidt- ed until sufficient building mater- ial is available so thncliomss may be provided for all Canadian vet.- erans desiring housing Iccomodn- tions, Major General Ernest 6. Weeks. Adjutant General of the Canadian- Army, told I Guard- inn representative last night. After 37 years ll Superinten- dent of the Dominion Experimen- tnl Station at Charlottetown. Dr. .I.A. Clark has retired from not- ive service. Mr.l Frank Tlnney, senior Issistnnt to Dr. Clnrk for the past few years. is taking over Dr. Clark's duties pending the sp- polntment of I pen ' nent suc- cessor. CBC LIBRARIAN RETIRE! HALIFAX (CPJ .. John Mcm. mee. Canadian Broadcasting Cor- porntion music and record librar- ian here for the lust u years, so- tired Tuesday. - WHITE mdy l l to smolu: J 'At but two, In lnct-botlilsjr dangerous. They contain met ' mes. dooit become an amateur, ushroom picker. Just resnanbn! - that mushrooms represent I dean-i , lingo.-Nlngsrn Fnlls Review Inbelroltnnsnnlssnlnglln wife for divorce because she hnl been uuowin. thins: at him for is years! The danger is that soon- er of later she may set him with s wild pitch.-Ottswn Citizen Scientists have produced tem- peratures nppronchlnl i.W9.0N degrees Fahrenheit. The experi- ment can be duplicated in the back yard by leaving I metal chair In the sun Ill day.-Strntford Beacon- Herald ' A young mother wns changing her baby with I gallery looking on. namely her four-yonrold son. when she neglected to sprinkle the infant with talcum powder. the young klbituzuwu indisnnnt. "Whst?" he slid, "Aren't you go- ing to salt him this tine"-Gnlt Reporter Thu Ilttlo elementary school of Portigilols near Locri. on the Ion- lsn coast of Cnlnbrin. claimed among its most diligent pupils Rocco stints Rocco bad start- ed in the first grade three years no and, come July, he would have hsd I "llcenxs elementnrs" in his pocket to show that be hsd renlly learned to rend and write. Alas. Rocco will not be Ihle to take his final exnms. He died I month tod soon. He was ninety-six.-Tbs Ital- isn Scone Among the brighter news info iy has been the nnnouncamcnf thst the-California LIII Insur- ance Compnny of Onklnnd has gotten out I "plain lnngungn" pol- icy which is now swslttng the ap- provnl of state lnsursncs author- ities. One of the changes reduced "Party of the first part" and "Party of the second part" to Just plsin "we" nnd "You". This Is pretty drnsttc stuff, but if it should go through. there outh to In I spectnlculsr rise in lnsursnco pol-, icy readership.-hos Anselns Times NETHERWOOD Tllli RDTHESAY SCHOOL FOR. GIRLS FOUND!!! lull - Colnon Irons - EIIEMENTABY GRADES to SENIOR IIATIIIOUIATION - Kigbut ncsdunlc stnndnrds achieved by personal attention. with special sinplnsts on the development of character nnd individual talents. SCHOOL OPENING SEPT. 18, 1966 .. . . Prospectus Sent on Appllantlsn to Road Mlmss HIS ALLAN 'ORIMMlNS- Bothosny, New Brunswick. Chronicle ' As okinsws ssglsr says be H. cIped to no island nfur I glam "undersea monster" pulled his boat for .11 miles. This is one css, whgse til0.i:l.ShEI:IIIIl was glad he. n . o n I .- .s....":... F W V Police in I Mlnncsotn town ..-. rested I molo who engaged gm girl friend i kiss that imed through two sfteeitlisbts and a red light It I busy intersection. The driver was booked for careless grtxinz Ind fined 5:5.-suiibury Eighteen lsds from Scotland, all under 22, recently arrived in Winnipeg to learn fur trading and eventually to manage Hudson's Bny Company posts in the north. land. They follow in I long and honorable Scottish trsdltion. Many of our northern pioneers cam. from above the Tweed. and while trapping and trading in the once remote nren to-which these youth: In headed. they filled our then blank map with Scottish names of rivers and other topographical fsnturos.-Bi-notlord Expositor Records-Music Everything musical, Pianos to Harmonicas Sheet Music Hit Parade to Classics. ,Records, all speeds. best known makes. Radios, Record Players to suit your needs. P. E. Island's Oldest Music House. MILLER ssoh-lens LIMITED ' Established 1868 Dial 3535 small classes Ind . Money on terms' you select T i - i when I customer borrows HFC. he is shown what we call I psyinnit tools. This ubis (ssnipls below) tho” exsctly how much you my borrow. how min? "10'"''' . you may tskgvto npny, and tln'cxa;a soIoI.IIIfy0" PW . Ysysslsuiyouown-snpsynsnItplIn.i0 no d-imiinbh sstvics myoaawi-tum -Pm.iW",li?