I THE GUARDIAN .'uuIl.ned every week-day morning It In Prince street Char ioitetown. P.IJ.l.. by The Thomson Company Limited "Covert Prlneo IIIIII lllnnl LIII III Den" Editor. Frank walker General Manner. Ian A. Burnett lranrh offices at summerude. Moniatuo and Albenun. Aufho Izod In Second Clan Mail by the Post Oiffco Department. Ottawa. By Carrier: Charlottetown. ” ernda 815.00 per annum. lilaewhero in P,E.I. 19.00. Other Provincea Ind U.S. Il2.0( per annum "The strongest memory II weaker than the Iveakeat Ink." TUESDAY. MAY 10. 1955 A Memorable Date May 10th fifteen years ago was a mem- orable, Ind perhaps a decisive, date in the history of Britain and, indeed. in that of civilization. It was on that day that Mr. Neville Chamberlain resigned as Prime Minister of Great Britain and was suc- ceeded by Mr. Winston Churchill, as he was then. It would be useless now to re- flect on what might or might not have hap- pened had the change not taken place when it did: but there scents to be general agree- ment that the change marked the begin- ning of a new and more vigorous approach to the problems that confronted the Brit- ish people who, at the time,-aided by. such help as the rest of the Commonwcalth was able to give--stood virtually alone in defending the ramparts of freedom; wait- ing. as Nfr. Churchill later described it, "till those who had been half blind were half ready." As for Mr. Chamberlain, much con- troversy has centered round his leader- ship before and after the 0ut.break of war. It will probably be many years before the historiaus will find a proper appraisal of his life and work possible; meanwhile, most of his official contemporaries, including Sir Vl'in.ston himself, appear to agree that his failures. whatever they were, were the re- sult not so mttch of personal inadequacy in the face of grave issues as of the apathy and misjudgmcnts which prior to 1939 had characterizerl the political thinking of the mutitry, and especially of the Conservative Party of which he was the head. In any case. it is to be noted that the new Prime Minister kept Mr. Chamberlain in his Gov- ernment and War Cabinet until continuing illness forced the former leader to retire, In no place in Sir Winstonls memoirs is' there one word of censure or reproach con- cerning Mir. Chamberlain; on the contrary. there is much to show that the war time leader had great respect for his predeces- sor's counsel and help in many difficult situations, and above all, for his personal integrity. And when Mr. Chamberlain pas- sed away the Prime Minister took time out. in the House of Commons to pay him high tribute, in the course of which he said this: "The only guide to I man is his con- science; the only shield to his memory is the rectitude and sincerity of his actions. It is very imprudent to walk through lifc without this shield, because we are so often mocked by the failure of our hopes and the upsetting of our calculations; but with this shield, however the fates may play, we march always in the ranks of honour. "Vlfhatever else history may say or not say about thcse tcrrible. tI'eIu0I1d01IS .V98l'5. we can he stirc that Ncville Chamberlain actcd with pnrfccl sincerity according to his liizhls and strove to the utmost of his caprlcity and atlthority. which were power- ful. to save the world from the awful. dov- aslntiiig slrttgglc in which we are now en- gaqcri. lie was, like his father and his hrnlhor ,.m,Ipn hcforc him, a famous mcvnbor of thc House of Commons, and we here assninbled this morning, members of all parties, without a single cxccption. feel that we do ottrsclvcs and our country hon- our in saluting the memory of one whom l)isI';mli would have called an l-liiullslt .19 worthy. Water Problems A I'ct't'Iit issuc of the Non York Titties carricd an inu-resting rcport. of a meeting of sctniitist-.4 from many countries for thc disctission of watt-r problcms in the arid areas of the world which. from somc catisc or othcr, appcar to be E9ltln.El l)l'.'L'l'l' .V""V by your. Following are some of the prin- cipal findings recorded: Long before white scttlcrs came to Arizona and New Mexico the nativc lilti- ians in both regions had dwel')p?.'i an ir- rigalion system much morc satisfactory for the raising of crops than a.IvtniI1E'. WW l)0lIlL' done by scientific methods. An en- gine-cr from Tunisia, anot'icr arid rczion, told how water has rcrtt"1ll.V b-"9" disco” prvfl in old Roman ruins. Sonic of thcsi wclls ucrc as deep as 300 font a Id thL?.V till" still Itsahlc, nncc the rlcbris of centulrius Int but u clmmcd away. in the Umled .. . Slzttvs alonc parasitic plants n'l'lkI.' away wi.lI as much as 3.1 million acre-fol-t of ,H,,.,. R ).,.,u-. app1'.)XilllaiCly half as vmum as that used for irrigitnn pirp )s'.”i. Fun .I- -lig salt water into fresh is still an ex) Ils- V operation; but I new system now being f .. ' wt cnzli-.'i'il" expect tocuic as my my 5; 31000 per mil- : , t llon gallons. An expert on the desert reg- ions of Asia and Africa brought a fresh ap- yproach to an old pt” 'em by suggesting that in countries wlr - various species of rodents, which live ll vezetation, are plentiful, these anir. . should be used to augment the food supply. Most of these species, he maintained, provide healthful and nutritious food; but, except for the rabbit and squirrel, they have never been made use of on a large scale. Prejudice. no doubt! Those who are used to all the water they want when they want it, just by turn- ing a tap, will be surprised to learn that about half of the earth's surface is in a more or less arid condition, and that more than half the worldls population lack ade- !quate water supply. Many millions are iactually thirsty most of the time. Plight Of The Universities We are now approaching the period of ycoinmencement exercises for our colleges .-and universities across Canada. It is gen- ? erally conceded that our future as a nation -depends upon our people being sufficiently lwell educated to be in the fore-front of world progress, industrially and otherwise, and able to cope with its crowding com- plexities. Most people fully recognize that 'our institutions of higher learning must expand wit ha growing population, and therefore will have to expand particular- ly fast in the next fifteen years. as the number of people of university age jumps abnormally. And the needs of quality as well as of quantity are also pretty gener- ally understood. What, then, are we doing to meet this challenge educationally? Very little, it would seem, if the state- ments of Professor Corry, of Queen's Uni- versity, and one of Canada's outstandingl educationists, are to be credited. In a re- cent address in Winnipeg Professor Corry pointed out that a generation ago, just be- fore the depression, the average expendi- ture of Canadian universities was 55483 per student. That was in 1928. In 1953 the number of dollars was far greater: but in dollars of the same value as 1928 they would have been only 33514 per student. In real terms. the cost of university education per student rose by only 5 per cent. But the average Canadian is now 60 per cent 'better off than was the average Canadian in 1928. That is the improvement in what the economists call real income per capita. 'We are a much richer nation than we were -twenty-five years ago, but we have allow- ed our institutions of higher learning to lag lamentably behind. We cannot do so p'inde-finitely. if we are to retain ev,en the I-material advantages of our status as a nation. EDITORIAL NOTES For the first three months of this year this country's exports amounted to ap- proximately T966 1.-'2 million, up 11.60 from the same period a year ago. At the same time imports amounted to 951. billion, 21 million, I 10.3"-'n increase over last year's figures. I O 0 According to I report issued by a Uni- ted States Government office, Western ex- ports to Soviet Russia and her satellites last year amounted to about Til-V2 billion. the highest volume since 1949. Even so. it is a more trickle in international trade. Including Rod China, free world exports to all Communist countries came to only .aboul 2'; of the total world volume. I O O The -National Department of Health and Welfare wants to know what civil fscrvants eat for breakfast. "One won- ,dcrs", says the Ottawa Journal, "how far this avuncular display of-interest in the private livcs of the Government's employ- ,t-cs will go. What about, for instance. the lpcrccntage of niglitgowns to pyjamas-eand ilhe number who wcar neither!" 0 O C in order to minimrlp the seriousness of , retluccd cxpcnditurcs for defense, the Uni- pied States Republican Policy Committee has issued a 31 ptirze booklet entitled "Na- tional Defense under the Republican Ad- ministration today and tomorrow." The Democrats are charging that the publica- tion. in giving information on new wea- pons, represents a breach of security reg- ulations. One very prominent Republican -the Prcsidcnt.-seems to agree with them. He called it a blunder. I I I It is a relief to all our citizcis to kttmv. on the authority of National Health Min- istcr Martin, that Canada has not had a sin gle unfavorable reaction reported among thc 800,000 of its children inoculat- cd with Salk polio vaccine. The nation- lwidc immunization program is therefore br-in; continued, despite a United States ldccision to hold up its vaccinations. Mr. .Vl;Irlin poinlcd out that all vaccine bcirv: ttsctl in Canada's joint f4"l.4I"il-'1-ivittial prozrant is produced at. Connaughl labora- tories, Toronto, and is submitted to exten- sive testing. first at (Two l'l Hill and a suc- x Is THE wINO 8LowIN6 , iuuuct-I we-N .;V g It's. Confusin' .e...... ...'.s. . .I ........:.. PUBLIC FORUM lhll column In upon Io Ian IIIIII am by oorrupondcuta of anuliam of internal. TII Guardian Ion III neeauarlly Iru tho opinion at sponlllll. .'lrd KINGS NOMINATION Sir,-During the last session of Le Legislature an erroneous im- ,.rL-ssion may have been created through remarks made by Pre- mier Mathcson and Hon. Mr. Clark concerning the nomination in our District. Here are the facts. Mr. Hunter had been .our candidate for a number oftelections. He was elec- ted on three occasions, and lost out by only twelve votes in the "mud election" four years ago when we were unable to get a number of our voters to the polls. No district could be pruuder than we are to have a man of his calibre representing us. either in or out of the Lsgislature. He was respected and admired by all - l'regardless of politics. At our executive meeting last fall it was decided that our con- vention would be held in late October or early November. A delegation was appointed to wait on the two previous candidates to request them to re-offer. Mr. J. A. MacDonald was contacted and he accepted. Al the time. Mr. Hunter informed the delegation that, due in his health and the increasing responsibilities as pres- ident of the expanding Prince Edward Island Plowing Match Association added to his normal business duties ,he regretted that he would not be able to offer. He stated that he would. of course. be giving his wholehearted sup- port to any candidate for the party. Shortly after that. as is well known by all in this area, he went to hospital. where he un- derwent two serious operations which involved hospitalization over a period of many weeks. In Mr. Hunter's place we were able to have Mr. Walter R. Shaw, former deputy Minister of Agri- culture. consent to our unanimous invitation to accept nomination. in view of the lack of authorita- tive agricultural rcprcseiitatiun in the Legislature. this District is most fnrtunate in securing his services. Mr. MacDonald has al- ready Izlven outstanding public service. and two years ago re- ceived the largest majority ac- corded any candidate in this dis- trict for many years. This matter was discussed at our recent executive meeting. and we feel that in all fairness to Mr. Hunter. who is working very diligently for us, and to Mr. Mac- Donald the true facts as given above should he published. I am. Sir, etc. DOUGLAS MCGOWAN President, Proizressive Conserva- tive Association of Third Kings. SIGNS OF DANGER Sir,--In "Widening Educational Horizons" (The Guardian April ill) a big splurge was made about the technique of fitting the pupil into I group. The calibre of the group is immaterial. It seems that the group has I right to do whatever it plcascs, to follow its group spirit. In this connection Dr. No.-Itby says. in her book. "A Temperate Dispute": "Today there are s' r- of danger. There are signs that the conception of the group may he losing the one thing that gives it, virtue and even life in I free society . . . The difference between the group and the herd is the measure of our humanity . . . The essence of Western freedom. the whole of Western civilization re- Paris Pacts In Force By W. N. Ewer United Kingdom Information Office On Thursday, May 5, the Parisi Agreements signed last October' came into force when the signa-j tories "deposited instruments of ralificaton" in the manner pro- vided. Almost exactly ten years from the end of the war. Western Germany became a free and in- dependent republic; and became at the same time a member of N. A. T. 0. and of the newly created Western European Union. After I long and troubled period. the promise made by the British,j French and American foreign' ministers in the autumn of 1950 had been fulfilled. , What. one asks. will be the of-J feel on relations between the "Western Powers" and the Soviet: Union? Will ratification improvcl or for the moment. destroy such chance as there may be of four- power talks both on Germany and on even wider issues? The policy of the three powers has been made quite plain during the past months. They could not agree to four-power talks before ratifica- tion: but once the Paris Agree- ments were in force. then. so far as they were concerned, the door would be wide open. Sir Anthony Eden has stressed the point again and again. Why, then, since they desire negotiations, did the three powers decline all stiggcstion of a four- power conference before ratifica- tion? The reason was strictly a practical one. The Berlin Confer- ence nn January and Fr.-brtiary 1954 had been a barren failure. And one reason - it was very clear to those who watched it - was that Mr. Molol0v's purpose throughout was to prevent, or de- lay ratification of the E. D. C. Treaty (predecessor of the pres- the three R's than in developing the proper knowledge, attitudes and behaviour in social relation- ships-the basis of true Christian democracy." It is neither Christ- ian. nor democratic. The tendency to minimize the importance of the three R's is based on Dewey's philosophy of education. and Dewey was an atheist. As to democracy, every crnckpot theory expounded in and out of the academic world is labelled "demo- cratic". Dr. Neathy speaks of the "almost hysterical assertion of 'dcmocratic' as I suitable epithet for everything that it seems good to educators to do." "Democracy" is the most mis- used word in the world today. both on this and the other side of the Iron Curtain. Nobody defines it, but everybody is bandyiniz it about. If you live and breathe and sing and dream; if the sun shines and the wheat grows; if the river: flow and the wind blows. there is only one explanation for all that: Dem- ocracy! Communists shriek it with hysterical tremolos in their voices as they exert themselves frantic- ally to cnthrone it in the place of God. It has become the fetish of modern times. In its December 29, 1952 issue "Life" said editorially: "In Amer- lca, other 'spurious remedies' for the absence of God from an in- tellectual llfe may be discerned or feared. One is the Idolizatlon of democracy itself." "Attitudes" is another one of the glittering vncuities pro- gressivists are fond of throwing out to bamboozle the public. Pic- ture to yourself the kind of society we would have after the virtual by-passing of the three 11': for a whole generation. Of course that would he done in the name of democracy too. On that point also ant Paris Agreements). A: the year went on, it became even more clear that this objective was dominating all Soviet approach to European questions. even more clear that if the four ministers were to meet again, Mr. Molotov would demand the scrapping of the Western Treaties as I pre- condition for anything else. And since it would be a quite unac- ceptable condition, there could .be no useful purpose in holding a con- ference whiclf would meet dead- lock from its opening hours. SERIOUS INTENTIONS But. that difficulty is now out of the way. The Paris Agreements are in force. The Soviet Govern- ment. can no longer use I four- power meeting as an opportunity for trying to prevent something which is now an accomplished fact. So there in at any rate - as there wax not until now - I possibility that I conference might be fruitful and helpful. The three powers are ready to make the attempt. They have already set their experts at work on I pre- paratory study of questions which would probably come up for dil- cussion. That is evidence of the seriousness of their intentions. On March 27, Marshal Bulganln, the Soviet Premier, made the re- markable statement that he took "a positive attitude" towards President Eisenhower's wish for I four-power conference. The So- viet radio commented that "the Soviet Union has never declared that east-west talks would be im- possible after ratification of the Paris Agreements." And at I reception on April 28,” the Marshal repeated that he was in fvour of "a conference at the sum it". adding jestingly "ask Ei I Medically. Speaking . Herman N. Bunduea. M. D. uucaxa 'rI-uuva on wonnv" Don't worry about your ulcer? Worry is likely to make it worse. Emotional stress of any kind II had for an ulcer patient. If you have an ulcer. you've got to calm down. take it easy; don't over- work and don't become unduly dil- turbed or excited. Excessive secretion of- hydro- chloric acid In your stomach In- variably accompaniea I case of peptic uplcers. When You Eat Increased secretion of acid, of course, naturally occur: when you eat. The secretion of this corro- sive gastric juice stops after the food has left the stomach and there is nothing left for the pep- sin-acid to work on. However, the gastric function II not stepped up by eating alone. The mere smell or taste of food, or even I discussion about good- ies, will Icceleratc the process. Troublesome situations in life can also boost gastric function. Emotional Upsets Dr. Stewart Wolf, head of the department of medicine at the University of Oklahoma School of Medicine. reports that worry and anxiety can produce a continuous increase in the gastric function. In such cases, the stomach will pour out corrosive gastric juice: even when empty of food. Further- more, he points out, the stomach of an ulcer patient may pour out ten times II much corrosive gal- tric juice as the stomach of I nor- mal person. After studying ulcer patienta over a period of several years, he found. "No stimulus is as potent In accelerating gastric function II discussing with I patient some in; life-situation." He cites several instances to gestion that 1 am passing on to you. If You Have I Problem Confide in your doctor. If you're worried about something, tell him. Don't expect him to cure your ulcer pt: anently if you are hid- ing some emotional disturbance which might be I contributing QUESTION AND ANSWER B. M. H; Could a kidney dis- Iyimz down: or could nerves do it? Answer: Swelling in the face might. be due to a kidney disturb- ance. It may also come from ner- vous disorders. An examination by termine the exact cause. hh' 77oe&' Sweet Chance, that led my steps abroad, Beyond the town where wild flow- ers grow- A rainbow and I cuckoo. Lordf How rich and great the times are now! Know, all ya sheep And cow: that keep On staring that I stand so long In grass that's wet from heavy rain- A rainbow and I cuckoo'I song May never come together again; May never come This side the tomb. -w. K. Davies. troublesome. meaningful, threaten- all small combs units In the navy. prove his point and make: I sug- forcag h Tunigla in 190. "Pr: major flaw. V WIS order cause my face to swell while or at latest after the fall of Tunis your physician is necesaa y to de- worked for I peace settlement that would not cripple future progress, and perhaps could have shortened the war one to two years. French landing: have been carried out after the Normandy invasion hp! llldduadhl DIIIII Ten years ago the shooting atop pod in Germany; the war wu over. but argumonta would no on for year: about how it wu fought. From the perspective of a decade. how does it look today? Did the Allies' make grave mistakes? Could the war have been ended sooner? Some of the leader: of I-litler'I Wehrmacht lay yes. And they single out one thing which, they believe, gravely delayed Allied victory in Europe. It was the PN- norncernent issued at the Casa- blanca conference in I9-LS: "un- conditional surrender." The demand was made in re- marks to the press by President Roosevelt Jan. 7A, 1943. Prime Minister Churchill was present. Five former high German of- ficers, now pl minent in civilian life in the Bonn republic, were asked by The Associated Press. to reply to thia question. . "In your opinion, did the Allies make blunders which prolonged the war, and if they had followed some different course of action. could they have brought about the earlier surrender of the Reich'” Replies came from: Field Marshal Albert Kessel- rlng, president of the Stahlhelm. I veterans organization, and last commanderl "' ' in the west. Guenther Blumethitt a military hstorian, who was chief of staff in the west in 1944. Gen. Hasso von Manteutfel, now I Free Democrat deputy in Far- liament, who commanded the 5th Panzer Army in the Battle of the Bulge. Vice-Admiral Helmuth I-Ieyc. now I Christian Democrat deput in Flu” t, who J J one-man torpedoes, frogmen and Col.-Gen. Hans Arnlm, commander Juergen van of German MISSED CHANCE IN BALKAN5 Next to "unconditional surren- der.” these Ix-commanders listed the Allied decision to invade southern France instead of the Balkans as a factor lengthening the war. All regard the Nor- mandy Iandinga in retrospect II II military masterpiece Their replies I ' d d those le Kesselring: "After Stalingrad, (May. 1943). it was apparent that German victory could not be counted on. Win, for - alghlod Western policy-If Casablanca had not stood in the way - could have "In no case should the southern had started. An attack through the Balkan. from northern Italy, into the Iron east of Vienna would have stopped the Russian advance f ” of occidental terrain. With thin and I Ipoedup of the Allied advance in the west, the war do- ilonhtoly could have been ended In STRATEGIC MISTAKE Blumonthltt: "Had the Anglo. Amorioan Irmioa been able to mount a new combined offensive It the beglnnin of September. without I :1. Belated Post Morfom Dolaoo (Auochtel Preu) 1944. German defence west of the Rhino would have been broken down completely." Manteuffel: "The big Itrategic mistake in my opinion, was that the Allies did not land in the Bat. kans. They would have encount- ered less .eslatance than even in southern France. "The halt of the Western armies at the Elba in 1945 was a pom. ico-military mistake, which Jen Berlin, the capital, to be captured by the Russians. and did not take advantage of the opportunity to run over weak forces on the Elbg and further shorten the war." Heye: "I regard the Allied in. vaalon of southern France as . decision of extraordinary llnpm-1. anca, which In it: consequences can certainly be regarded as . missed opportunity. "Just II Churchill proposed 1, the First World War to break in. ring of central power: at one of their weakest links. namely :11. Dardanellea, I believe, In studying the Second World War, that Churchill will on the right track, not only politically but also mill. llrilit. III I" Dosllll the invasion of southeastern Europe." Von Arnlm said the North Af- rican campaign might have been shortened by months had the Allie. pursued different strategy: "After Rommel, contrary to .1. pectationl, wan not out off It If Aiameln I push by. say an Allied vision, from Tebessa Ii. rectly to the Tunisian noast would have separated tho two An; armies in Africa. Rommel would have run out of Iupplioa In ,1; day's and been forced to Iurrend- or. Lost Continent (Auoohtod Prou) The lost continent of Atlan” lug fired mIn'I Imagination for c... turlee. Ancient Greek lazenda told of I highly-olvlllaod people living on a western land named Atlantis. AI ideal political Itata flourished there. Then came I mighty dis- aster and Atlantis disappeared. was the legend true? Did Atlan- exist? After 40 yuan of study, Italiaa m . . .. ,. . . Cattoi says the anawar in you. Cnttof visualizea Atlantla II originally havin been I giant. belt of land stretch n: from Asia to Central America. Gradually parts of the land disappeared beneath the too until three great bodies remained. Those he Idantlfiea II: Lemuria linking India and Africa; Atlantis. covering most of the north-central Atlantic ocean, with an arm called Tyrhennia reaching eastward to Italy; and Mu, I giant Pacific land body reaching from the Hawaiian islands as far south as the Society islands and as far west as the Caroline: and Marianna Islands. . .. That much must be speculation," Cattoi laid in an interview. "It II patched together from legend: of many countries-the Aztecs. the ancient Egyptians. the Greeks." What force destroyed Atlantis? Plato spoke of earthquakes. Cai- tol tells of legends which indicate I series of disasters. He thinks there may possibly be a connec- tion between these stories and tho glioad of 40 days described in the e. PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS, Etc. and Eden about the date." Now that does not mean that all difficulties that might Itand in the way of a conference or of "I meeting It the aumtnit” are over; still less that one can I!- sume that whether a conference or a meeting would succeed. Ex- periences of the past. eight years have been I warning against easy optimism. But it does. xl think, mean that foreboding; that ratification might prevent negotiation have been de- finitely proved wrong; and that those of uI who felt sure that the realism of the Soviet leaders would rapidly adjust. policy to the new realities were right. It. may prove now that at last ratification in no longer an issue that can be affected but a fact that must. be accepted, "a new vista will open up" In which at least there is I chance of negotiations without the certainty that they would be wrecked at the start by Soviet demands for the scrapping of the agreements. Restoring St. Paul's (London Correspondent. Ottawa Journal) Full restoration of St. PauI'I Cathedral II now within sight. The work began in I940 almost immediately after two direct bomb hits had devastated the North Truman! and damaged the Chan- cel; If the work had not been taken in hand at once the roof might have collapud. Celllnu.wlIlch suffered from blast are now being reatored and the new ceiling of the crypt has jun been completed. The in- stallation of an expensive ampllo. flcatlon system In nearly finished. Q The Age Old Story I! haply they might feel after him. and find him. month he be not far from every one of us: for h him we live. and move. and have our being; II also of your own pooto have IIIII. For we are IIII his offspring. Work that. remain: to be done In- cludea the rewiring of the entire cathedral. The electrical Iystem in more than 50 year: old and is becoming dangeroua. Chairs. music, prayer-books, all need to be renewed and parts of the cathedral must be cleaned. Boll, Mntheoon & Foster I50 Richmond St. J. Elinor Blanchard, B.A. 165 Queen St. Phone 4338 M. EA. Farmer, Q.C., LL.B. of Commerce Bldg. Chas. R. MoQuald. B.A. 156 Richmond st. mu Inn OPTOMETRISTS G. F. Hntcheson 0 Son F. G. IIUTCI-IESON. R.0. 5! Grafton St. Dial Allison M. Glllll, LL.B. IN Richmond st. Dial 4747 A. Wolthon Goudot, LL.B. Phillipa Bldg. 111 Grafton St. Palmer 6 Ilnslam J. A. Corruthen. R.0. Kent st. Dial Hi! J. Grant, 0.D. Dial 56 12! E IN x3".I”2.. J. S. Taylor, R.0. Corner Kent & Queen Stu. II The restoration of the C , House gutted by fire in 1940. is pected to begin early this Sum- mer. It will have the same ap- pearance II in Wren's time. A more distant undertaking II the building of I new choir school for St. Paul's. The ,. t school in Carter Lane IIII to be demolished In the lane in to be widened. The new school may be built It the east end of the cathe- dral, where the bombed church of st. Augustine stands. The Cathedral restoration Fund In already more than hall-way towards it: target of s4oo.ooo; contribution: have come from many parts of the Commonwealth. Bank of Nova Scotla Bldg. Office I188; Home 4756 II. J. Mabon, R.0. Math1oJs&i::,oI:t:.ko & Monk". V P: ' 175 Grafton Street CHIROPRACTOR J. A. Mnctluigan Dr. W. R. Carson Currie mag. - Dial 9414 . Queen so. 301 Prim Sh Di” M G. E. Ma.cMlIlnn. B.A.. ARCHWECT LL-E G. ketui Plckard. in Richmond st. mo! 52:: B. Arch. M.n..A.I.c.. summerslde. P.E.I. Dill MIcPhee & Tralnor II Queen st. but an Charlottetown. by appolntmrif Dial 7815 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS MODONALD CUB . omioaiu. c-'Iomul:nm&Oo WW II. B. DOANE 8 COMPANY us om: mom 8t.. Charlottetown run out - CHI P. o. In I mmvu GIT 318.000 TORONTO (CP)-Police laid the Ukralnlnn Credit Union offices were looted of sumo h cash, bonds and cheque. during the weekend by Iafecrackn-I who may have mingled with I Saturday afumg: wedding party I; cu. sides in the conception of the Miss Nentby has . d she hllman Person. in society. sustaIn- said not long ago: "Education for ed. nourished. formed by society. democracy (so-called) is not Ind yet ” of T ' an t ” critical '” ” It in en- remaining an individual." The wisdom diffused relative to the operation of the Ioclometrh test stem: from that slnecural creation of Jurogressivism known as "Guidance". More can be had upon application to that depart- rncnl. There in plenty of it kept In cold storage there. Perhaps you would like to know where it cami- from in the first place? it arisin- atrrl in the mind of sonic unidenti- fied "expert" in I day-dream. In the Lahrte Report publish- couraging I: dislike of hard work rinatlan." Imagine what the head of I bus- iness establishment would say to an applicant for I Job who would declare: "I cannot road. nor write nor fiaure, but I have all the 'nt fitiuh-s' necessary for rlemncratir llvlnv." No employer would he if". P? "If by utch Isfhnrnal on-Iinr. I -n.- as "aiflliides." If less money was spent in Iteenimz sldt--show "sporlnli-:'s" in owl 'ime at the fcl.-val l'l . xxx: M')' 0l”ll)' time on in "wizlr-nlna F'AIlIt”"l'I""' ll-vrl1.nn.-I". Mav 2. we read this ” f I st "I-nit: "Fzr "'1 in-notation at ll".'Il. the I--at Job is less that of conceal;-Iting on circulation, lt mlizht be p:I...IIIIe in yawn tum 'nqIWni - M 3 id: Ii it-tel at I'- ' am. Sir. nir- W. J. ENRI(:iiI' .I-...;.... and a readiness to accept induct-. yr- xusunauca Since ”flrn' f"IlRl,1ITTFT'l'liWN jnrxnuan LIMITED 1872. .1l”'WFR!IDIZ MONTAGTTF usnloto I:IIIAIIc'- Ime.IIIuIu,It-up . , IIO0novOoonIIIqIUioI.Ihnoll9I I DJ-lg 4-&