.. . .;;A._mu.+, Irv—33115;“ Ebb Emeralds Cor-n Prince Edward Island Like Ill. no- Publisnec every week-day morning at 165 Prince Street Charlottetown. P.E.l.. by the Thomson Company Ltd. In A. Burnett. Publisher and Genet-l lam Frank Walker. Editor Number Canadian Daily Newspnpe Publishers Association Romper of The Canadian Pre- Member Adult Bureau of CirculatloL lunch offices as Summerside, Montague and Am Represented Nationally by: Thomson Newspaper- Advertising Service a Kin] Street West. Toronto. Out. 640 Cathcart 8%.. Montreal 1.030 West Georgia SL, Vancouve- By Carrier Charlottetown, Summer-side 30c per week. Byr'lvlall elsewhere in P.E.I. $9.00 per annum. other Provinces and United States 312.00 [12! annuln. “The strongest memory l8 weaker than, the weakest ink.” WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 24, 1958. ’ PAGE 4 Irritating Slralns The disappointment expressed by British delegates to the Common- wealth Trade Conference with respect to Prime Minister Diefenbaker's speech-is understandable. They had expected some sort of reciprocal ac- tion in response to Britian’s action in freeing restrictions on salmon, newsr print and machinery with promise of further concessions in the near fu— ture. , ‘ It may be,. of course, that the Prime Minister’s speech came too soon after the British announcement to make possible any indication 70f ‘ practical appreciation. Perhaps this is being kept back for the closing hours of the session. In any event, it must be said that the speech itself, stripped of over-worn cliches and ‘stredtyped expressions of goodwill,, contained hardly anything that might be described as encouragingto Brit- ain’s export trade with Canada. This is a great pity; and the Bri— ', tish can hardly be blamed for assum- ing that the new anti-dumping laws are, or may be, aimed at British goods pri‘inarily. Combined with the in-.- crease in tariffs on British woolen goods it is enough to make the British -—and Canadians, too,”—wonder whe- ther the Prime Ministerf’s pro-election pledge to. encourage trade with Bri-‘I tain Was anything more than a vote- _ catching device. ' An increase in Colombo Plan con- tributions; the proposal for 9. Com- monwealth Bank; a widened program of scholarships among the' various countries—all these are worthwhile. In the long run *they should help to strengthen the economic and social unity of the Commonwealth. But they do not directly improve trade relat- ions between this country an-d Bri- tain; and before that is done, the other objectives will continue to be subjected to irritating and unneces- sary strains. ‘ Government Responsibility , =:«-In' their application to the Board of Transport Commissioners for a 19- per cent rates boost the railways do not undertake to provide better trans- portation service, better equipment or faster delivery. Their only argu- . ment is that the increase is‘required to meet the mists of higher wages to non-operating employees as recom- mended by a conciliation'board. Fur- ther,vthey claim that the action of the unions “threatens a nation-Wide rail strike and thus creates a national em- ergency.” The Ottawa Journal asks, quite pertinently, whether it is for the rail- ways or the unions to define a “na- ' tional emergency”. And if there‘ isa national emergency in} the making, is it to be expected that the Transport Commissioners, concerned with rail- way charges, should deal with it? A national emergency is a matter for the national government which in time .will have the board recommendation before it for ratification and will make a decision after considering not ’ only the claims of the railways and the unions but the nation as a Whole. This being so, we might add that problems that affect the~ nation as a whole should be dealt with on a na- tional basis and not by horizontal rate increases which will penalize some sections of Canada while leaving other parts comfortably \cushioned by a highly competitive rate- structure. That has happened so often in the past that is it taken for granted in Central Canada. The Atlantic Provin- ces will, we trust, demand justice in this case and will hold the Govern- ment responsible for seeing that un- der no circumstances will long haul traffic in primary commodities be made to bear the brunt of more ruin- nus rate increases. , In this Province we have another grievance in the lack of attention giv- en to our pressing need for more ade- quate transportation via the Borden- I‘ormentine route. Depending as we are now are on one car ferry, our sit- uation is precarious in the extreme. What does the Railway propose to do about it, and what provision is it urging upon the Government to meet our requirements? None at all, that we are aware of. Instead of having to worry about higher freight rates we should be getting the service to which we are entitled as a Province and for which we are paying, goodness knows, at rates that in any other Province , would provoke howls of indignant pro- test. . I . Chlang s Nollon ‘A New York Times survey of pub- lic opinion in a number of American cities reveals that there is little en- thusiastic support for the official policy regarding Quemoyand Matsu, the Chinese off-shoreislands held by the Nationalists and claimed by Pei- ping. Almost without exception, the persons interviewed said that they could not imagine the United States’ going to war just to keep these little islands under the control of Chiang Kai-shek. ' ‘ A typical view went something like this: “If we must have a war over Formosa, well and good. But let us' wait until Formosa is actually threat- ened; We can still take Quemoy and Matsu if we have to;” This is prob- ably the opinion of the American peo- ple as a whole. There is a growing belief that what Secretary of State Dulles really has in mind when he speaks of these little islands as Vital to the defence of Formosa, which the United States is pledged by treaty to defend, .is that they are useful to Chiang Kai-shek as “jumping of ’? places for the recon- quest of the mainland. ' I Chiangseems never to have given up that notion, although without out side help—and perhaps with it—there would not appear to be the slightest chance of his being able to realize his ambition. But, surely, the United Sta- Mtes Government is not giving him any encouragement in that respect! That would be, as Opposition leader Hugh Gaitskell stated in the British House of Commons the otherday, an act of " “sheer’lunacy”. Charitable Work The Unitarian Service Commit-U tee is doings. humanitafian'work in which Canadians of ,all, classes and; .. creeds are invited lac-have a, share. In fact, 'a report from" its Ottawa headquarters revealsthat thousands of Canadians are sharing in it. From all across the country have come requests for woolto be knit into sWeaters for the people of Korea. The goal is 25,000 garments. A1» ready, 10,000 have been sent. , 7 This is the sort of; thing—and it is being carried-on in Various ways‘ by many other religious and social groups—that builds up goodwill, while relieving distress. It is far ,more impotant in a way than fin- ancial help granted by govern- ments, although this, too, is neces- sary; for it, carries a personal touch of sympaflly and understanding from one people to another—mome— thing that is difficult to convey in official relations betWeen govern- ments. ' EDITORIAL NOTES ‘ An 8-year-old boy in Philadelphia 'tried to set fire to a church because he thought the minister's sermons were too long. That, of course, was an extreme reaction. But there is no doubt that long sermons have been ' responsible for a lot of uneasiness. * t i Governor Faubus’ closing'of the schools in Little Rock is being con- tested in the courts. By the time this thing is settled—if it ever is—Presl— dent Eisenhower’s “basketful of liti- gation” will have given place to sev- eral barrels. ’ 1‘ l 1 The Western Powers are in a dif- ficult spot with respect to the “free Algerian Government." Recognition would offend France and weaken the whole defence structure. Non-recog— nition, on the other hand, will cause further deterioration in relations with the Arab world. The task of the diplo- mats is to find some non-recognition formula that will not amount to com- pletegignoring of the new regime. AF * =3 The resolution of the United Church General Council calling for “renunciation of war as a national policy” is, of course, commendable. Every Christian Church and religious body would like to see renunciation of war accepted by all the nations, as would most individuals. But until such time as an agreement on dis- armanent and other critical problems can be reached by the great powers, we must all recognize the possibility of war and try, through our govern- ments, to remove the causes of war. The General Council acted wisely in repudiating the suggestion “not to en- gage in or support the prosecution of any future war” under any circum- stances. [\ suavevm 6 Tue sure ' WAS“ 1200M ‘ FAClLlTle5 LLER LATEST MYSTERY THRI OTTAWA REPORT , llkalluit, Noumea Tammi-lee: This is the most dmamaltic oon'u munity in Canada today. lit is now a summer camp-site for around 200 nomadic Eskimos. who are still llvlug very much as their ancestons did in the Stone Age. But within five years Can— ada’s first atouhpowered City of Skyscrapers will stand on this to. st ’ years before Champlain founded the settlement which ts mow, Quebec City. the English Ex- planer Maltln' Frobishery happen- ed upon this ageold fish- ing camp .on Baffin Island. Fro- Iblisher was seeking the Nomthwest Passage to Clhllua, but he sailed his little ship up a broad uncharted sheet of water. Nearly 200 miles from the open sea, a. fllalt beach tops this huge bay which now beams his name. At thus spot, in an mumbltheutre loomed by the surrounding hills of mosstch nook, gFmblslier «found a cluster of mldain touts. ' Today, just as when the ex- plorer found them and just as for countless commas before that. nomadic Eskimo families gather to spend the summer at this warm and sheltered cove, sited nearly an the AmoticClrcle. Its name "likallult", means, “The Place of Fish," andthe expected abundance can be seen in the Arctic Char and other easily- ca-ught fish which hang outside evleryytent, drying in the hot sun but raised beyond the g teeth of the hundreds of to Husky sled dogs. N0 SEGREGATION ’ On one side of lklalult is a bust- Diplomatic courtesy is an es- sential of the British way of life. But in their expressions of sym- pathy for President Eisenhower’s rejection of the latest Russian note on Quemoy, most British sources manage to convey the strong suggestion that there are more important issues at stake in the Far East than the wounded digniy of a president. The general feeling in the edito- rial columns is that Eisenhower may have been justified in tak- ing exception to some of Premier Khrushchev’s turns of phrase but that his position would be con— siderably strengthened if the United States were defending sounder policies in the Far East. With the sole exception of The Daily Telegraph, the Clouserva~ PUBLIC FORUM This column ll open to the discus sion by correspondents of question of interest. The Guardian does not neses sarily endorse the opinion It con-en ' pondents. A GREAT AMERICAN Sin—The following may be of interest to our people. The under- signed was ingthe employ of the Belgian Government at its Em- bassy on Massachusetts Avenue in the City of Washington, D. C. It was the winter of 1927. Among the guests on that Feb- ruary afternoon was the novelist, Mary Roberts Rinehalrt, one of America’s great story writers. So popular was Mrs. Rinehart at that period of her life that she was frequently seen at a great many diplomatic receptions and at dinner parties. Today America and the Free World mourn a truly great American, equal to the late Mrs. Sarah Roosevelt and her daugh— ter. the ever beloved Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, widow of the renowned late Franklin Delano Roosevelt, wartime president of the great republic, our Southern friend and neighbour. I am, Sir, etc., KENNETH BRUCE STEWART Bedeque, P. E. I. } Cross-Rood For Jet-Liners , By Patrick Nicholson Special correspondent for The Guardian ling alnfield, rapidly beComing the most spectacular world cross moad for jet-liners. 0n the other side. threeimiles across a little pass, nestles the most modeincomlmuuity in our North- land. Apex Hill is the comfor- table home of a dozen Canadian who are. pioneering in Arctic living; it is also the novel home of three dozen Eskimo families who have abandoned their igloos to pioneer in Can- adian style living. A combination of circumstan- ces have carved out an impor- tant future for Ilcaulult. Geograp- hly has made the beach, adjacent to the deep-water bay, the most accessible supply port in our Amelie, with a long ice. free period from July to Septem- ber. Its ‘38 foot tides have been conquered by the construction this year of our Amtic’s first cause— m—type dock unloading sup- 3 ., . _ . l A long not valley pointing into the pneualliug wind pmvides an ideal site fora hard-topped air; field, luckily half way between the big cities of Europe and the big cities on the west coast of Nomtli America. Already two doz- en silliness each week fly this Arctic route to out their journey by more than an hour. Air-lin- ens on the even longer mans world flights will also fly this time-saving route, with a refuel- Iing stop at Fmbisher. ' Perhaps most important, Frob- isher, to become the Capital of our Eastern Amotic, will grow into the administrative cen- tlve newspaper that has offered tre for the immense mineral de- BriTish Press Reaction By Ed. Simon Canadian Press Staff Writer unqualified support to Eisen~ hower and State Secretary Dulles since Communist Chinese shells began falling on Quemoy, the British press has shown scant en— thusiasm for Western support of ,Chlang Kai-shekfs efforts to de- ‘ feud the. offshore islands. POLITENESS DATED While the brusqueness of the Khrushchev - Eisenhower ex- changes is deplored, Britain’s chief concern is expressed by an- other Conservative paper, the Yorkshire Post, which warns both sides against “being dragged into an unwanted war by sneers and taunts and grima-ces across the oceans.” r A generation ago, when diplo- matic correspondence was pri- vate and generally polite, rejec- tion of a letttr between govern- ments was a step that usually heralded the outbreak of war. Today, when the contents of such communicatiots frequently are released to the world before their delivery, the writer’s chief concern is the effect of his argu- Cosmic Ro An invisible rain of cosmic rays earth and space. Cosmic rays are hot—rod blts of atoms zipping in from outer space, and sometimes from the sun, with the velocity of light. They are so numerous that per- haps 1,000 times a minute some cosmic bullets penetrate your body. Human eyes can‘t see cosmic rays. But special devices can de- tect and count them, and ingen- ious scientists are learning new secrets of nature from them. LIKE TENNISIBALLS From the behavior of cosmic rays, Dr. John Simpson. professor of physics at the Enrico Fermi Institute for Nuclear Studies, Uni- versity of Chicago, figures there must be interplanetary magnetic fields and huge magnetic clouds or curtains floating in space. At times the magnetic clouds seem to “box in" the whole solar sys- tam. veloplments which are already budding 011.3%an lslano. Eve: as I write, prospectors are fly- ing thwuglh here. and their ex- tensive samples of promising ones are being air-freighted out. ARCTIC METROPOLIS‘ The Hon. Alvin Hamilton, the Minister for Northern ‘Affairs, has told me about his plans for the new “City of Tomonrow” at lkaluit.’ It will consist of six- storey buildings, moun- ted on stillts‘mbove‘the perma- frost. These bulldlngs will sur- round s sistided centnal‘ plaza, which will be roofed toease com- munication in Homes, shops. ofdlces. a hotel. School (Thumb, cinema, and Eskimo tra ding centre will be included in those tall buildings. The self-coll- tainéd community will perhaps be the first city in‘ the world spec- ially designed to use atomic pow< er. . _ The of this unusual de- sign is not just to Causes sen-- sstlon by building a skyscmapcr in the Arctic. Experts have agreed that thls type of construction will be the most omnlomtable and con-‘ venient housing, custom-made to overcome local conditions, andthe most eoononuoal’ to heal. - , This new cilby will be counp'el- ed by 1962. lit will then offer no— commodation and facilities for , 5,000 pemmanent‘residents. and as many as 500,000 moments per year.- An integral’pamt of this plan is collapsing nomadic way of life. and train them to fit into our wage economy. With their great latent mechanical talents, these cheerful and industrious little peo- ple will have few difficulties in making in a decade the sociologi- cal advance, loom Stone Age to Atom Era, which has taken Wes- tenn Civilization thousands of years. ‘ ' meuts on public opinion and their. acceptance or disavowal by the recipient has become secondary. As a result, the world is less preoccupied by the bristling'lan- guage and the possibility of hurt feelings among chiefs of state than by the danger that the PERILOUS AMBIGUITY ‘ Up to the present, neither side ls irrevocably committed to a forcible solution of the Quemoy dispute although spokesmen for each have been perilously am- biguous in their policy state- ments. 1 ’ Insofar as Eisenhdwer’s return of the Russian note may shock Khrushchev into reconsidering his position, it has won British alp- plause. But there is a strong de- sire for the United States to fol- low up this action with an earnest tough - talking statesmen may find themselves forced to trans- late their words into action. attempt to find a permanent solu- tion for the problem. 'The president’s promised curl:- line of the American position in the Far East is eagerly awaited, not for its justification of dubious points of principle but for 'ndica-‘ is telling scientists secrets of the! tions that he is ready to roceed from denunciation to negotiation. ys Tell Tales. By Alton Blake‘slee, Associated Press The clouds apparently can keep some cosmlc rays batting back ‘ and forth like table tennis balls across millions of miles of space. Cosmic rays are a main field of study during the Internlationa Geophysical Year, with scientists around the world making obser- vations and comparing notes; One of the very first jobs for Sputniks and Explorer satellites was to count cosmic rays in pure form in space. This led to the discovery by Dr. James Van A1- len of the State University of Iowa of a previously unsuspect- ed band of radiation starting about 800 miles from the earth. Cosmic rays are being counted continuously by scores of stations on the ground. Ships at sea, and balloons and airplanes are recs ording their arrival, too, to help piece together the story of where they come from. and how they get their high energy. - back straight and your shoulders to convert Eskimos loom their ' ' importance Of Good Posture By Herman N. Bundesen, M.D. ONE of the fundamental rules of good health and good appear- ance is good posture. Yet, Just look around you! . If you are reading this in .a bus, streetcar or train, you Will undoubtedly see many persons hunched over in their seats or wearlly standing, shifting then- iweiglht from one foot to the other. AT HOME OR OFFICE If you are home or at the of- fice, I’m sure you also will no tice some of your fellow employ- ees or members of your family hunched over desks or lounging very ungracefully. in an easy chair. The human body is a beautiful piece of meéhanlsm. It has grace, poise and balance-or at least it should have. 7 I have warned you about the need for good posture many trmes' . in the past. No doubt you have read or heard the same story from other sources, ' CONSCIOUS EFFORT Maintaining good posture re- quires a conscious effort. You have to work at it. Let me give youallewmoretipsonhowto achieve it if you don't have it, orto keep it if you do: I have told you before about the type of should have at the‘offioe. The seat should be just high enough so that your feet can rest flat, on the floor. The back of the chiar should pro- Vlide subunit for the lower part of your back. Of course you must Silt “I9 Straight to advantage of allthatthistypeoichalircan do for you. , The desk, too, must be just right, Sit in your chair with your ‘level. Try‘ to rest your forearms on the'top of the desk. If you can’t do this,dlhe desk is too low for you. Ask the boss for another one. SUPPORT NEEDED Even when you slitting in the big easy chair at home. don't forget your phsture. There should be no open space between the chair and your .lower back. If there is, take a pillow and place it"thore. This will at least give you some support. I , W h e n performing household chores, posture is important. Stand as straight as possible when sweeping. Keep your back straight and your shoulders down when Distribute your weights equally on both feet when doing the dishes. All these posture pointers will help you, from getting tired. ' QUESTION AND ANSWER Q; Is it advisable for a. retired person to give up his activities? My‘wlfesays retirement should mean complete rest. , A. To lapse into complete in— activity is usually‘a serious er- ror. Older pensons must develop lobbies and varied ac- tivities When they no longer up employed. a ' p ,. . Tux Lord lift up. life counten- ance ‘upon' thee, give the. peace. , , «~ . » g BIG > MOON Mitten to the north. Walk down Cambridge; Course toward the ‘moon at the river edge, ' \ , I See, this water spatial» up In a' rush ' Of light where the Atlantic wind is keeping w The ice out. At thirty, we bend to the push . 0f cold, wet nose, new cheek, leg leaping ‘ The side bush. We are young enough yet, To know river shine where a moon begins. Here, on this last ration of a cigarette, We see how' the ducks will sleep .on sequins Tonight. This much is such knowl- edge worth — Not old yet and mltten to the north. ' / Amie Eextou. In the New York Herald-Tribune MAXIMS My chief memory of life is the ingratitude oi those to whom I have given myself. It is only to- ward what they cannot have or own that people feel grateful. Give them something, and con- tempt for the gift grows in them. from 40 years of research by scientists of many nations: Most cosmic rays have travel- led billions of miles. They appar- ently come from within our gal- axy, or far distant galaxies. They likely were created in great flares on distant stars, or even the death explosions of stars, known as uovae.‘ Cosmic rays are becoming, val- uable probes or tools to explore space. They are telling new things which stretches hundreds to thou- sands of miles into space. Cosmic rays sense the location of the magnetic equator. Far more of them pour into the earth at the poles than, at the equator, for at the poles the cosmic rays haven't got to cross magnetic lines of force as they do at the The Age OldiSlorjy ‘ about the earth's magnetic field, ‘ equator where magneblc fields de— flect all but the most energetic cosmic rays. POINT UP MYSTERY Cosmic rays also point to an- other mystery, the m a g n e tic clouds and interplanetary mag‘ netic fields at distances millions of miles from the earth. Cosmic rays are found to de-; crease in number when the sun is ‘ active with flares and ‘sunspots. ‘ Cosmic ray intensity increase again when the sun enters a quiet , Some of this story is known period. NOTES BY THE WAY P Wife to husband after several rounds at a party: “Henry, dont take another drink. Your-"face is already getting blurred. —Well- and Tribune Ever form of transportation ca‘rriesyits own nostalgia. And be- fore long sentimentalists who la- ment the'passing of the steam rail road whistle will be weeping over the last airplane propeller.——W1n« nipeg Tribune If Canada has to have 13 ato- mic submarines that may cost $600,000,000. And if she has to have the CF-105 interceptor that may 'cost $1,000,000,000. And hav- ing these, she still would need money for missile development to round out her defence program. Any ne want to bet taxes Will be red com—Ottawa Journal The human mind is a much dar- ker junkle than deepest Africa Everyone should slzrive to devel- op thicker skins, stronger. nevres and more rational thinking but that advice is easier to give than to folow. Nevertheless there should be a goal. The enormous amounts of tran'quilizer pills and alcohd being consumed today are certainly not the answer.— Edmonlton Journal. It might be in the interests of safety to require that all tractorJ drivers be tested and licenced. The number of tractor fatalities is increasing at an alarming rate. Thlsyear there was a farm safety program in which, the emphasis was placed~on tractor safety. Yet the number of indw" ies and fatalities from this cause continues to pile up.—Sudbury Sta-r Lord Admin, vice-chancellor of the University of Cambridge told he Association oil-Universith of the British Commonwealth in Montreal that medical courses ought to be cut down, that med- ical students need a broader ed- ucation “Too often", he said, “a patient wants n bill when what is rellly needed is a plulosoplly of life. The doctor should; be pre- pared to fill this prescription.— London Free Press I A three-year penitentiary sen- tence was recently handedydown in a Yannouth. NS. court to a teen-aged youth who telephoned a false bomb warning, to‘Tr’uisCau— ads Lines. The pull, out fits the crime. The purveyor of ' false bomb warnings in Jdlmuy- come-lately to of anony- mous callers and correspondents who plague their fellow man: But he is just as vicious and. stlnnd as the telephonethroatem the poison pen letter onto Telegram. - ' ’ l "OUR: .rEsiERDAXs swam“ alive YE ', Anon ' (soot. 24. 1933 '- ' by Mr. AN. Saunders, Post Of- fico Inspector. M service Charlottetown and Mammal, so, into 4‘9“ con Monday~ ", October 2‘. These!- vice will begundertaken 1’37. Cm? adieu All-ways led and fol- low the same.schedule as last year._ v ' ' The Newcastle Imperlals, In- termediate title holders of New Brunswick, triumphed over the “Summerside A.A.”, Prince Ed- ward Island Champions by the score of 1340. Roy Daley star; ted mound duty for summemide but was relieved in the 7th. by J ack Schu‘rman. The return game will be played in Summer-side on Wednesday afteunbon. TEN YEARS AGO (Sept 24. 1948) ~ I P.E.I. fammers are being cs1- led upon to supply feeds for the dairy herd at St. John’s, Nfld., which has been acquired for the American military base at Hat. mon Field, it was learned yester- day. Choice clover bay, of which this province had a bumper crop this year, will comprise a 1urge part of the first shipment which is to be made within the next few days. . . Signalman Russell MacKinuon, R.C.N. is at present visiting his mother, Mrs. Russell MacKinnon, Charlottetown. Sigmn MacKinnon is sewing aboard the H.M.C.S. Swansea, which is at present marking a goodwill visit to this port. He joined the navy seven years ago and went overseas the same year. At the close of the war he returned to Canada for shore duty but went back to sea with the commissioning of the Swansea. I‘ ‘ c6 Official has been ‘- In the final return from "I. bloodless bullfight at Lindsay, On, Q tario, the Chamber of Comma.“ lost $9,349. This fact is mg. with. out its compensations, for it p339, tically guarantees that" bull figh‘ mg will not take hold in Canad —Coruwall Standardd‘reeholdér , ‘l; a, .1 Word has filtered throw-E t. West Germany, and so to m M , of the nonRCommunist world, ’j last month three Eusmn - rockets exploded hortly an“ b.” j in; launched from bases .11 815; , eria. The United States, it “a ", was not the only one to {3.11 it a ‘, attempt to reach or output-4“, Earth’s satelliteluBramfdrd u positor _ g . » * 1.“ ‘l A Communist guard firm“ ishCzechoslovaklian «, pad a cow, with a “MIME its back, from crossingqm , der. The saddlelbak w“; with fabrics and vodka. .. gation revealed that the cf :» used by smugglers. way, it brought PM and fabrics; going the “any ‘ took Czech jewelry Md *- Dle Welt, Hambtmgh. v’ ' The Soviet ' its science fiction , _, ing to break out of diatom”. f. orbit of Martian masters.“ .1 paralyzing my guns. It's so bad, in fact, that has. flu. ,scieuce ls overtaking dul’k. What is needBd. ~32- one Soviet newspaper, is 1 ha, . er approadh to fantasy wheeling imaginationsdreauunfi" up new kinds of 'mfw bats and adventurosF—Wallfstifofip Journal I _- ,‘ j _,.m I, ...\.7 1,7‘ In choosing the m1: Miss America, the serious ind. gas at Ahtlarztic City defied“ endtoto smut-en. i they ‘piokof or twins downs Were Wholesome, sweet and poised, but many of had a sllshtly mused look. as;- though they came off the “my, instead of the oldcltyt ~ hither manner. The c . y ed new Miss America is straight, from the countrysidefibe is Mary Ann Mabley, from. a village-in a" cotton gnawing ‘ar434:«Brandon!I was.‘—Toledo 3134194 'f‘ 9:. '1. «was :< mm: “x i , I: a. a m. 0‘ ‘-r‘ The Minister of Nationality-“3 enue, Hon. Nowlsn, - promised'umore - IWQ . ‘ moug tax collectors? 2‘3 W " wishes should attend ter of National Revenue"'3{5;'ll!..,; amendment. was, rowel“, .erems to Ineli- mus. But out“ 1» i in: is ever likely .to‘ choose-very”, much the truth in theyoifls at; the great Irish crabby, " Burke. Back in the! v Bathe, ' :‘jf'l‘otgx‘ Towing. 'nay ,ij e m, f’ Night Phone ~ mu ,DJM .. - MURPHY’S , ., SERVICE STATION .\' DIRECfT‘ causes 1 , I To _ ‘ ST. JOHN'S; 'bflld; ,A M-s Belle IsIeLIl'gflg Sept. 30th, Oct. 8th, oat. 17th, Oct. 25th. ‘ 1. Se 1:. 24th. oct.‘3rd,' ‘ 11in, Oct-201111, Oct. ' 28th. I v ' _ Ill. SEE. Elf‘lll‘f'lllt. l connection with C.N.R. 1 your shipments “C.N.R. to- Halifax thence N. C, 5/8 t" " St. John’s. . ~ Newfoundland- ‘ ‘ ‘Cun‘ada ‘ Steamships, Limited. Halifax , IliYOUR PATRIOT ' IS LATE OR MISSED. I. ,__‘_—-——_ r ‘ \ DIAL and a 6:00 pm. and 6:30 .m. This special delivery or missed. paper will be deIIVered right to your door. service available between 656] if your paper is late—- DIAL [73 Great George St. For the Fastest Service in Town, Call ED'S TAXI Ed‘s Slogan: “To maintain the goodwill of those whom 7' serve — the goal for which we strive!" 6561 ‘ Charlottetown ;