THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1951 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE . PAGE FIVE TV Telephone Expected In 20 Years Fort Wayne, Ind. (AP) --A tele- vision-telephone calls will be com- mon within 20 years. He also predicted large screen picture tubes may end up as Pmuseum pieces. The coming thing is a giant picture by projection from powerful cigar-sized TV pic- ture tubes, he said. Also you may expect future television cameras to be 100 times as sensitive 'as at present. Now they are as sensitive as the human eye. In the future they will see what you can't see in the dark. These predictions were made by Philo T. Farnsworth, a pioneer television scientist. He is vice- president and director of the Cape- hart - Farnsworth Corp, which makes TV setscat Fort Wayne. He spoke at a dinner attended by Fort Wayne area radio and electrical engineers. Farnsworth said telephones of the future will enable you to see as well as hear the fellow (or the girl) on the other end of the line. Educational TV Show Popular Baltimore stations have been doing some interesting experiments in educational TV. One of these is the Johns Hopkins Science Review, presented by the Johns Hopkins University staff on subjects of a scientific nature. Here are two shows on such widely divergent topics as (1) The preservation and resto- ration of ancient statues and paint- ings; (2) The psychology of mind and js functions. The show is planned, written and presented under the guidance of the Public Relations Director for the University, Mr. Lynne Poole. Poole's chief problem has been to get the indivirual professors to al- low home to dress up (or should it be dress down!) their material into simple, visual demonstrations. That's going to be our problem here, too. But it's been extremely successful. It would be interesting to see a race between Toronto and McGill to see who can produce the first PRESCRIPTIONS Quickly and Accurately Filled MITCHELL'S DRUG STORE 9 Simcoe N. Phone 48 MASONITE a = ? j & ERNIE CAY LUMBER S3 ALBERT ST. PHONE 127 Stafford Bros. MONUMENTAL WORKS { [ 2 318 Dundas St. E, Whithy 3 4 i 4 ) ) ) Phone Whitby 552 MONUMENTS AND FINE QUALITY MARKERS Precise workmanship and careful attention to detail .are vour assur- ance when you cl from J. A. MORPHY Vice President and Factory Manager G. R. PEDLAR -- Calgary Director in Charge Company Operations for Western Canada W. R. GEIKIE "hairman of the Board D. M. COOMBS Director and Purchasing Agent J. G. GEIKIE President J. .B. REID Secretary Treasurer EXECUTIVE APPOINTMENTS THE PEDLAR PEOPLE LIMITED, OSHAWA, ONT. ZB. J. BROWN Director and General Sales Manager W. E. CLARKE -- Montreal Director in Charge Company Operations for Eastern Canada At the annual meeting of The Pedlar People Limited, held at the Head Office of the Company in Oshawa, Ontario, on April 9th, 1951, the above and Mrs. Helen Chisholm, were elected to the Board of Directors. Branch factories are located at Montreal, Winnipeg and Vancouver. Branch Offices at Mon. treal, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary and Vancouver. / educational show on TV, and after that which show can draw most audience. Apart from this public-service educational show, suited for general listening, programs for in-school listening or looking, corresponding to the CBC School Broadcasts in radio, are another possibility. In Baltimore they have quite an ex- tensive schedule of these, all three TV stations co-operating on cer- tain days and certain times. Again the bulk of the work in planning, writing, and performing is done by the teachers and the Board of Edu- cation, the stations providing free time, and the dealers lending re- ceivers to the various schools. Now these two shows have sprung from the educators, but WAAM has another show of an educational public service nature, which is purely a station idea and effort. It's called 'Baltimore Classroom." In this case the station manager reasoned (quite shrewdly) that most viewers are parents, interested in what is happening to their kids in school, and also that children have a great deal of natural audi- ence appeal. You know, dogs and cats and children, they're cute . . . ) | you can't resist them. So the idea of this show is to re-create what various age levels and in various subjects. In this case it's easier to transport, the classroom to the studio then to take the studio equipment to the classroom. Rivers, Man, -- (CP)--The first automatic telephone system ever goes on in a typical classroom at | Wife of Allied Supreme Commander OFF FOR DEFENSE MEET Ottawa, April 19--(CP)--H. R. MacMillan, west coast industrialist, will leave for London today to at- tend his first session as Canada's representative o n the North At- lantic Defence Production Board. The British Columbia shipping and lumber magnate spent all day in conference with defence production department officials "getting edu- cated" he said. Want to buy, sell or trade -- A |of 1950 there were 25,395,200 wo- classified ad and the deal is made. men, 22,403,200 men, Find Way to Spot Cancer In Time to Provide Cure By LOU PANOS Baltimore, April 19 -- (AP) -- Three doctors have announced dis- covery of a way to spot cancer of the cervix early enough to wipe it out as a killer of women. Cancer of the cervix, or neck of the womb, is generally recognized as the cause of 15 per cent of all cancer deaths among women. The new method of detection in- volves observation of the way tissue cells are arranged. In heathy tissue they are lined up, row on row, like soldiers. In canverous tissue, the doctors found, their natural order is disturbed, they "break ranks." Until now, the cancer was iden- tified principally after the sur- round healthy tissue was attacked. Often that's too late to save a life. Discoverers of the new detection method are Drs. Richard TeLinde, professor of gynecology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and chief gynecologist at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Gerald Galvin and How- ard Jones. They studied the case histories of more than 700 women admitted to the hospital with advanced cancer of the womb. Of this group 13 previously had been in the hospital and had un- dergone examination for some ab- normal or unusual condition of the womb. The examinations were given from one to 17 years before the pa- tients were found to have cancer. Doctors had taken biopsies, or ex- amined samples of tissue from the affected areas. Although they had seen no symptoms of cancer the disease manifested itself later in all 13 cases. They re-examined thousands of sections of tissue originally taken from these women and noticed changes that occurred in cancerous cells from the cervix before other symptoms appeared. Besides falling out of their na- tural pattern, they also noted that cancerous cells sometimes can ac- tually be seen dividing. Reproduc- tion of normal tissue cells can rarely be observed. Dr. Jones said when such changes are observed in the cells of cervix tissue; the cancer can be removed by surgery before it becomes fatal. MATTER OF HOUSING Huntington, Worcester, England-- (CP)--A hospital received a steril- izing machine which was so large that it would not go into any room. So it was decided to leave it in the hgspital grounds and build a room around it. LACK MEN 'IN GERMANY Bonn, Germany, April 19--(Reu- ters) --Women outnumbered men in | West Germany, government statis i tics showed Wednesday. At the end Jail Cardinal Man For Hit-and-Run Brockville, April 19--(CP)--John MacDonald, 29-year-old resident of Cardinal, today was sentenced to 20 days in jail and prohibited from driving anywhere in Canada for a period of four months as the re- sult of .a hit-and-run accident of April 1. Mrs, James Reid of Prescott suf- fered multiple injuries when struck by a car while walking on the road. 'ALL SUSCEPTIBLE Pneumonia, fourth in the list of major death causes in Canada, strikes any age from infancy on. Waves Flood Homes On Hamilton Bay Hamilton, April 19--(CP)--Beach residents were battling the waters of Hamilton Bay today with sand, slag and sweat. But waves from the bay continued to pour over shore lines. Flooding cellars and backyards as far as 250 feet back from the bay front. Fifteen persons at Station Nine face immediate evacuation from the flooded area. Stations Eight and 10 were also bearing the brunt of the pounding waves. Hamilton Bay began roughening up on Sunday, but early this morn- ing high winds lashed waves against frame cottages and shot spray 40 to 50 feet in the air over many of the tiny homes which dot the shore. v Wilnecote, Staffordshire, England --(CP)--Police were called in when flowers disappeared from the ceme- tery. The watching officers were surprised to see a rabbit pop up, grab a bunch of flowers and dise appear. YOUR WHISKERS ARE DEAD! NEW 3-WAY SHAVE 75 YOUR SKIN THAT HURTS WHEN YOU SHAVE Naa 4 Fast-Smooth-Painless SAVES YOUR SKIN! No matter how you shave -brush- less or lather -- you're in for a grand surprise, first time you try new 3-WAY SHAVE! It's the new "wonder shave" that takes up where other shaves leave off -- does more than just soften your beard --it's medicated --good for your skin! Here's how it works. 1. Prepares whiskers, skin. Softens toughest whiskers. Pro- vides lubricating film for smooth razor glide. Protects tender skin. 2. Painless shaves. 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