750 Guardian '0IvIlIPl1uEvIlIIIiUhI.IDuv" Pubumedavuywoukdumunhadlnrnncnluvq Cbulimoinwn. PJJ. by the human canon: UL. uIIuiI.I..'lV:vmh.p Iuuirui onion. 3 Unlvuln Town nu &uI,llrInkwIlkf Gen:-IlIIIuc.ln.IA.IunIII Member Aunt Bureau of C1n:ulIuoII Branch offices ll lummeniun. Ilonuzuu Inn Albenon Authorized ll Saennu Clan lull by the Post Office Denlrunui. Ottnwn. Iy urriu Charlottetown. summerndo 815.00 per Il- Ium. Ell-when In P. L. l. IJI Jtlur Pmvineu III U I. I11.oo nu unnu- "Tbs skougeu memory is weaker IIII the wenkest Ink.” ”.gj.:;..7;; in-ic. 2."; "159: Needs Of Education A half-billion dollar grant--the largest contribution of its kind ever madea has been distributed throughout tihe United States by the Ford Motor Company to expand and further meet the obligation of industry to education. This, notes the Moncton Transcript, is striking recognition of the fact that indus- try needs highly educated personnel in the future and is looking ahead to that day. Of course. the Ford gift to education is m a d e without st.rings attached, and .no one is ob- ligated to join the Ford staff. It is I indirectly that the Ford Company will benefit through the higher standards of its future customers. Similarly, in other industries in United Statese-and Canada too- there has been a growing interest both through scholarships and dir- ect aid to institutions of higher ed- ucation to help bear the steadily growing burden of expense. And that cost is rising rapidly. Dr. E. 1''. Sheffield, director of the education division of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. has predicted I doubling of university enrollment in 1965. This prediction is based on the natural increase in population. immigration and the higher ratio of young men and women desiring university education. Projections have indicated that the percentage of boys and girls who eventually go to college has risen from 3 percent in 1941 to 7 per cent today and it is expected to reach 10 per cent by 1964. The implications are stagger- ing and demand the active consider- ation of all those concerned with the development of Canada's future Energy From The Sun The earth spins in a ceaseless glare of pure energy. Without sun- light, the planet would be a frozen cinder. In the sun, it lives. Captur- ing this blazing solar power has been an age-old human dream. Farmers transform a tiny fraction into food; forests, into fuel. But most of it goes to waste. Just how much energy pours down, science can only estimate. The total is staggering: Every day. around i.ht' earth, the sun delivers roughly the equivalent of burning 122 trillion tons of soft coal. Each square foot t of the suiface of the continent rc- ceives about one kilocalorie of en- ergy per minute while the sun shincsw-as much as is rclcast-d by burning half a wooden match. The sunlight striking loss than ;i 100-mile squarc of Arizona dtwcrt. ii cmnplctcly tiscd, would be enough to pow:-r all the industry in the United States. The roof of an aver- age house catches about 500 times as much energy as the electricity used by a typical familyr. Small wonder that science looks t.o solar power in the future as much as to atomic power! In 215 B.C., Archimedes reput- edly set fire to Roman shins basing- ing Syracuse by focusing sunlight with a mirror. Today temperatures of 3,000 degrees and higher arc pro- duccd for science by solar furnaces. the largest. a 33-foot concave focus- ing mirror iii the high Pyrenees of southern France. In 1872. to obtain fresh water fr 0 m the Pacific Ocean. a monster solar still was built in Chile. It produced up to 6.- 000 gallons a day. Nor are solar- poiycrr-d water heaters something new: they were used many years ago in both Florida and California. Solar heating plants for houses, wirloiy tested in recent years. still at-e'two to three times as costly as conventional fuel systems. Yet it lias been estimated, quite conser- vatively, that by 1975 millions of fumes on this continent will be solar heated. For centuries, men have studied the sun Inil sought to build pun- povvered . devious. Dr. Charles G. modern American solar research. One of his projects was a solar radiation station built atop a moun- tain in South-West Africa in 1925 for the Smithsonian and the Na- tional Geographic Society. Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have had solar programs since 1938 under a grant from Dr. Godfrey L. Cabot. So, too, the automotive inventor. Dr. Charles F. Kettering, a Nation- al Geographic Society trustee, has established the Kettering Founda- tion for solar energy studies at Yellow Springs, Ohio. Old As The Pharao.is keeping statistics on births. deaths and marriages is by no means a modern practice. Egypt in the zigc of the Pharaohs, ancient Ronuuis and the Incas of Peru also re('ui'tlc(i ihcni. according to a new United Nations study, entitled Handbook of Vital Statistics Meth- ods. It iyzis prepared by the UN's Slalisiiwal Office to help govern- ments dcyclop and appraise their sew-ices for recording live and still births. deaths. marriages and div- orces. This informaion is important for planning and carrying out social and economic policies. Based on data from more than 100 countries and territ.or'ies. the llandbook does not only give a world-witle cross-section of prac- tices and mcthods for gathering vital statistics. it is also the most t-omprc-hcnsive survey of its kind ever to have been made. The registratjion of births. deaths and marriages, it shows. has had a very long history. Thus, ancient Egypt had a vital statistics scheme in operation as far back as 1250 BC., and citizens of Rome in the sixth century BC... were required to report the arriyal of new-born children within 30 days of their birth. Registration systems as known today. however. really began with the Incas of Peru. They had a well- dcvelopcd records system, even though they did not know how to write. They used knotted strings called ”quipus" for the purpose. Anolhcr interesting fact to be gleaned from the Ilandbnok is thal while in most countries, parents are responsible for seeing that the birth of a hahy is recorded. in the l'nitcri States thc doctor delivering the baby has this obligation Education In Russia (me of the world's most famous and host rcporicrs is Miss Dorothy Thompson. Just. returned from Rus- sia and dclivering the Marflet Lec- tures at the University of Toronto who has Iiccn telling her impressions of Russian education. Rcports the Toronto Globe and Mail: ”Shc was most imprcsscd by the 315 DAYS TM-... ciiaisriviitsf not we so AGAIN Efliiiawa And The Provinces By John Bird Canadian Press Staff. Ottiitwn Canada's lawmakers left no his- toric legislalive landmarks in I955 but ideas advarued outside of Parliament could result in im- portant developments next year. At fedcral-proviiicial conferences the St. Laurent administration made four proposals on which legislative action may be taken at the next session of Parliament opening .Ian. 10: l. A suggested formula for re- placing existing tax rental agree- mcnts with the provinces with a plan under which provincial gov- ernments would return to the di- rect tax fields-personal and cor- poration income and inheritance. 2. A lan to participate with the provinces in the payment of unem- ployment relief. 3. A new system of payments to complete construction of the trans- Canada highway by 1961. 4. Construction of an all-Cana- dian natural gas pipcline from Al- berta to eastern Canada by govern . merit and private interests. BIG PROJECT The proposal for construction of the 2.200-mile. S350.(l0fl.(l()0 line invnlvcs building of the line to the Ontario-Manitoba border by Trans-Canada Pipe Llncs Ltd. The 675 miles from the border to Kapus- kasing, 0nt.. would be built by an Ontario-fedcral crown company. The federal government also out- lined in broad terms ihc condi- tions undcr which it would be pre- pared in enter a plan of national health insurance. llnwevcr. talks with the provinces produced no agreement-cvcn in principle. Most of the 60 government-spoii sored ntcas-'iii'c.s, passed in I95! were amendments in existing legis Iation. The main oncs were in th: fields of regulation and social wel farc. Russian school systcin. Gdiication is now tiiiiytwsal and compulsory through 10 grades with t.hc child SlJll'lIllL' ill the age of seven. The eibosltitc niitliorily of the teacher I3 t-.-i.ibli-'lit-ri at the outset. ”(lIwrlitln0(' is tine first law of th.- school a.nd industry is the sec- ond. The glorification of work he- gins in infancy . . .The. idea of learning through play-a prime concept of North American educa- lion-eis rigorously rejected. ”Miss Thompson was impressed with the behavior of school child- rcn oiitsiilc the school. It was the host she had Sfi('n anywhere. School disciplinc hail a lasting effect." Propaganrla for the Soviets? The ansu'ci' is that not; on this con- tinent is thcrc a more violent anti- (Tommttnist than Dorothy Thomp- son. But she happens also to be an lioni-st, factual rcportcr. EDITORIAL NOTES We had a lVhiie (7'hristmas-- right out of the refrigerator. I O O A young pilot hikcdout of the i Arizona desert the other day in pitiful condition. five days without food or water. In what was prob- ably the prize understatement of the year. he described his ordeal as "an unpleasant. experience." I I O ( At a Christmas party given by the Immigrants' Aid Society in Montreal. the Santa Claus of the party woke in seven languages. Even with his seven tongues, Santa clidnit get around to the languages of all 165 youngsters present. Sev- enteen different nptlonalitieg were The Progressive Conservatives opened their filibuster Juno 7 against a government bill in ex- , tend indcfinitnlv the extravwdiitary powers of Dornce Production Min- I Ister Howe. due to expire July Ill 1956. A month later. after I06 speeches and in days of tit-imtc-. the govci-unit.-tit yielded and urzrrcil in put :1 thwmmgar limit un "..H,.h all fltc soc!-i'-I powers, Tho scssi"i's biggest loll I-nm;- wlien Ross Thatcher. a Cm” mom her since 1945. announced he tw- leaving the party over policy lllf ferenccs in sit as an Tlillcnniylpnt fnr Moose Jaw-Lake Ccntr: it war the first time in more than ill had openly left his party's ranks JOBLESS INSURANCE Within a work after Parliament met last January. it had passed an act broadcniniz wintertime sup- nlementary iinemnloyment insur- ance bcncfiis. Finance Minister liIrrls' budget reduced personal income taxes by an average of 10 per cent starting July I. at a cost to the treasury of SlZ8,000.0fl0 The rest of in total of Sl48,00fl.00tl In tax cuts wenl chiefly to corporation Income tax and the excise tax on new autos and tires and tubes. Parliament voted S4.507.9N).000 for the current fiscal year in gov- crnmcnt expenditures. about 860.- 000.000 below the previous year's peacetime peak The amount will he increasrd slightly by supple. mentary estimates at the next ses- SIOH. In January. Parliament by I vote of 213 to 12 ratified the entry of a ri.-at-inod West Germany into the North Atlantic alliance. Later in the year it also ratified a if)- year Canada-United States conven- tion to eradicate the sen lamprey. I parasite destroying fish stocks in the Great Lakes. HIGHER PAYMENTS Among other measures. war vel- erans allowances were increased 20 per cent It an annual cost of 30,500,000. The starting age for 840- I-montli blind pensions was low- ered to it from 21. Salaries of federally-viii induce were boosted I . nut: to municipalities Iqrfuntad. , 4 u Y lr.ni.i pipe- . Years that a Commons member I t of total properly ----9 Pre- viously. payment was 75 per cent of the tax rate on federal property exceeding four per cent of the total property values in I municipality. A bill was approved enabling the to H000 at five per cent interest for a maximum of eight years. The banks and the credit unions are permitted to have 310,000,000 out- standing in government-guaranteed loans. Emergency assistance for gold mines was extended through 1955 and 1956. However. assistance in the mines was reduced by some 34,500,000 under a scaled-down pay- ment formula. The 1954 aid pro- gram cost about 516,500,000. TIGHTEN CONTROL Federal control was tightened over construction of power dams and other works in rivers flowing into the United States. The legis- lation provides that anyone. in- cluding provincial governments, must obtain I federal licence be- fore building dams in Canada on such international rivers. i its purpose was to block I deal between British Columbia and the Kaiser Corp. of the US. for I dam on the lower Arrow lakes of the Columbia river in BC. to feed I i government to guarantee bank and I, credit union loans to fishermen up Woed FROM ODE ON THE DEATH OF SI! 11. MORISON It is not gi-owning like I tree In bulk. doth make man better be: Or standing long an oak, three hundred year. To fall I log It last, dry, bald, Ind sear: A lily of I day, In fairer far. in May. Although it fill and die that night: It was the plant and flower of light. In small proportions we just beaut- he see: , And in short measures life may perfect be. -Ben Johnson. power plant It Bonneville. Walsh. The government objected to the arrangement on grounds that B.C. would be selling its water power I resources too cheaply. In the field of transportation. the railways received greater freedom to set agreed-charge freight rates. They now have the right to put these charge: into effect on H days' notice without prior consent of the board of transport commis- sioners. Agreed charges are special rates contracted with shlppe a in return for I guuanteed percenugr of their traffic. (luier Mongolia NaiWinalGullFHPIIIc8Iciety Outer Mongolia. land of Genghis Khan--wild as its warrior history, cold as ll Siberian blizzard. re- mote as the Gobi wastes-- has been turned down again for admission to the United Nations. The Mongolian People's republic. back door between China and Soviet Russia. has been closed off from the outside world for 31 years Very little is known of its life today, in strange mixture of nomads and modern cities. huge livestock herds and increasing lit- eracy. Both area and population are vugiic: an estimated 900.000 people in a vast indefinite tract of moun- tains, grasslands. and desert cov- ering some 600,000 square miles. They own more animals per per- son--.'i2.l at last count-than any other nation on earth. YURTS ON THE STEPPE Across their M811 Wind-swept plateau, or' steppe. most of the Magellan Republic's people still live in tents, light cloth shelters in summer and heavier felt-cover ed yurts in winter. much like Navajo hogans. Fires in the yurts bum smokily. for dried dung is the only fuel on the iron-hnrd plains. through wini- ers that can go to 40 degrees be- low. Bow-legged Mongol horsemen .warm themselves from wooden ; bowls of hot klmiss. a rancid con- ; coction of fermented mare's milk. tea. and salt. Their short Shaggymairgd Mon. I ilolian ponies are fast and tough. at home equally in prairie, rock- tapped mountains. and desert. Horse racing is sport. The Mongol system of rue. lug, however. use: 8- to 10-ye". old Jockeys, the mullet the bgi. ter. and sends than all-full til: t ed an empire mrpussing all otliq in history. It reached from the Pacific to the Caspian Sea. Fantastic palaces rose at Kart korum, now a sand-covered rui in the Gobi. The Golden Hord- eiitabllshed I Mongol state on thr Volga. Kublai Khan. lifting thc empire to its highest glory, shift ed its seat to Peiping. Mongol power eventuziliv it-ll be fore the Ming dynasty in China, and Outer Mongolia split off. In I691 it came under loosc Manchu control, lasting imtil the Chinese revolution. Mongol revolutionaries followed the Bolshevik lead and in 1921 threw out the Chinese for the lut time. Since i924. the Yiionguiian Re- public has been a Soviet satellite in economy and foreign relation- ships-of which there have been few. In liM7 it was proposed for United Nations membership and re- jected. Now the country of tho khans seeks entrance again.- I PROFE SIO Medically . ' Speaking Iylumsnnl-lIIIn.Ip.l. NEWDIUGFOBDIAIIIIA especially useful in and children, relieving than dlarrben in less than I Illllle PROCESSED FLOUR pectin. lignln and hemlcellulooe. These names mean little to you, but you will be interestedlin what the substances do. Since they are water-binding, Ib- sorbent Ind demulcent, they form I gelatinous mass which is sooth- ing to the inflamed areas. lessens discomfort and hastens recovery. The climb dour also controls dehydration. In mild cases of dlarrliemthll may do the trick Ilone. In more severe cases. it may be used in conjunction with specific medical ion ordered by your doctor. The powder is simple to take. does not interfere with appetites and is free from side reactions. For infants. you can mix 2 to 4 level teaspoonfuls to 4 fluid ounces of water or skim milk and fea'l in place of the regular formula for the first 24,t.o 48 hours. For children and adults. stir 1 to 2 level tablespoonfuls into one- half glass of water or milk and re- peat in three to four hours. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. W. E. F.: What are the symptoms of stomach cancer? Answer: Cancer of the stomach may cause symptons such I: in- digestion. occasional vomiting. sometimes diarrhea Ind later some abdominal discomfurts. As the condition progresses. there may be S great deal of vomiting with blood present. Blood in the bowel movements may be In early sign. Whenever such I condition is suspected. immediate X-ray ex- amination of the stomacr is ad- visable. The Age Old Story He that bath the Son lintli life: and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life. A Needed Inquiry" (SATURDAY NIGHT) The outcry of some Socialists following appointment of the Fow- ler Commission to study broad casting policies in Canada wa not only a childish show of bar" manners but a characteristic dis play of prejudice. They decider that because two of the thre members of the Commission, Rob ert M. Fowler and James Stewart have been active in the Iffairs oi the Canadian Chamber of Com- merce. it was all I plot to destroy the CBC. I "sell-out to big busi- . ness". Thus they managed at the one time to pre-judge without evidence. to question the integrity of the three men appointed by tlu Government. and to impute only the basest motives to anyone con- nected with the CCC. Fortunately, the country has be- come accustomed to such.snarls from the Left. It has been I long time. of course. since any respon- sible person suggested that the CBC be liquidated. But for many years, and particularly since the arrival of television. it has been obvious to all but the most fanatic believers in slate monopoly that I realistic examination by I com- petent. independent body should be made of both the powers and the finanbinl structure of the CBC. The Fowler Commission should be able to make such In examination. Mr. Fowler, the chairman, is I lawyer. businesnnln. worked with the Bowcll-Sirois Commission, and has made I special study of inter- national affairs. Mr. Stewart "Ls I conservative banker with I liberal mind. Edmond Tux-colt: was I well-informed and rolpected Jour- nalist before becoming I diplomat. SUBMABINII STUDIES Oceanography II I science-the charting of ocean depths--is less than a century old. NAI CARDS. BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. 'Efc. '”"- l,':m:,,&,f-I-tor OPTOMETRISTS G. F. I! I Sn -3-" o?-?-”S-””"””"”-:-'t-i- . .. no Ill mAggo. prising, E3” 1,, mu-.,l.g Cult. 0.D. , 0,.” H . 1. s. Iluylor s.o. AMEEIITH? m can In 5,3,”, S,,f:,",;','," mm. 0 lam. J. 3,0, Ink of New line: nu. I-I-an r. I. L, lath-cl. Pub 0 CHIROPRACTOR m"--"'""-- .....".:.-an-0-0.9.... .um.5'E' 'nT&T'nu 2'uu:.l&” Interim than I "'ci-luau-.""""" D has A III! III hilsn lid III 11' - Cl-IARTEARED -ACCOUNTANTS -WT I oo. ' Manufactured under the name of Arobou. the new drug is made from iipeclIlly processed csrob flour Ind provides I high natural content of NOTES BY THE WAY .eroruotIkawil1:uninjunlIi)ob! t-W same proportion In those of us who don't know Inythlng about itfd either. St. t Beacon-Hen one facet of the Peron dictator- ship in Argentina came to light in I Buenos Alres court action against the farmer Under Secre- tary of the Interior. Abraham Kris- llvim. who fled when Peron wnl overthrown. Krislavinfs niece got in high school. He summoned her teacher and asked Hm the Braden be changed. She refused. He had her arrestd an SEPL 15. 1958. She wu held sev- Ofll hours. then released. but the grades remained the same.she W33 IFNSNPG 3881!! a month later. Still no change in the grad", - New York Herald-Tribune. The fncf that eve. penon matter whIt his statiii or his bang: record may be. is entitled to in; day in court. is I basic right In important and as precious to the free. democratic system under which we live. as is freedom of speech, freedom of the press, fre- dom of religion. and other libert- ties enjoyed under our democratic institutions. The role of the hwy. or in the maintenance of liberty and justice, of course. in para-. mount. It is the place and the duty of the lawyer to accept the role of defender. It is well known that the court itself It time: Ip- points I lawyer when the unfortu- nateman It the bar is not in I Position to supply himself with legal help. In accepting this duty, the lawyer in no way ideutme; himself with his client, except that he is concerned only to age that the accused whatever the 0559 ml! he ...receives every protection and every benefit pro- Vided under the law. In nccepdng this role. the legal profession und- ei-takes I great service in Ivory citizen by ensuring that justice is administered in conformity with the basic tradition of freedom that has grown up through the centur- Ies. - Toronto Telegram. uevru-ow , Philosopher. .Pei-lig: ...oI:fw;,f:'. will mu. .5 Wm H. Ines of himself. - pegerbomu . CT. Manners seam I. prIcticIl turn. It has .':f.,.';.”'..";; ed extremely uuy, than I Iervietlie folded haze. knee where it will do the le sood, when it migiii better be in ad beneath the cum. No mm?! "W careful I person plans to . -1 ilfsled elbow will ruin , even 3. to say nothing or a sh, Em” T 31'0CkVl1le Recorder, Almost ce . W of as IcTETd:liiyts"iierevacsiiul;le:liJni:1. usoodn d.l'lVel'3, good in the sen; 01-; they are skilled in making C” 3”: 5'33 "P. turn comer. slip into I plrklng gnu But ', mm”! 1! ll!!! as much. I mag :fu:nentI1 attitude as it is of skill I probably more so. And , .k-1i 9d '90! GTIVIDK I car is I :41,-1, Eire:-'atid.mnu mdeei Tm” V In I re c - . Southe u c3'Iitarioma,dbl:ecvenctI;veck I out of 200 were found to have 53: mechanical faults. If lid; 1. . 1, Mmlile. thirty-five per cent of at cars in use have defects. No mat ter how high garage bills go u, . are still chespe than payu;g'0,,:3 W8! out of I serious accident A c5mP3181l to stimulate uun7 303K ll!!! line is evidently n . - - Ottawa Citizen. 3"" I south Ire coin: iii. mar?" ' I Powerful vepugu g beamllaaa” the vicinity of untied Sm” nr Ports, which bnve caused mm thousands of birds in ct"); iiolniz to be filtered or ”? ture-lo ' Great numllilen ofvli)nir'iiscatT:h.l,',' Ilnushtmd by one means oi- ”""l' I" Wimorv lllzht. Ire b . thIt breed Ind spend the sum”, months in CIuIdI.Unieu M, monuru Ire taken to prom than. we will become sun ,1 far fewer birds than formerly a C'lIdl- - Sydney Post-Record. Burke Electric Aufhord octrlcd Wiring Repairing and Supplies Oil Heating Household Appliances Television DIAL 4021 156 Great Geo. Sf. Refrigeration Benin '19 All Makes srruucrx SALE 8 SERVICE MOTORS Iowh&g and Repairs HJIOIBICAL I-is-in Pallior Electric PIIOIIOUCISM forva loan-by-phone. finance oonipuiyll lle's making u ,5l,000 phone "cull ! I This man is doing what thousands of pwplc do evfll day. He is calling Household Finance and arrangllli Later on, he'll drop in and if his loan quickly. and select it repayment plan senslbll geared to fit his paycheck . :50 to si,ooo on your promise lo repay You, too. can get bllslllf-Mil” way. Requimnonu Ill simph tend. Duns are miidt . without endonau, so you hm, friendly 55””. Phone for your lam-and guIft,p,fuhy-from "FE -Canada's lnrgui Ind moot consumd Cash for IAIQII IAIII div and M”"