Canada to Build Ship To Explore Arctic Waters o'1'rAWA, (CP)—~The men who mrt Canada's coastal waters will on have s new ship specially ed to explore Arctic waters. The attention of both economic |nd defence planners for some time has been directed to the little- gnown channels. reefs and inlets glong Canada's northern coast and m are Arctic archipelago. me keel is expected to be laid my you’ for the dream ship of the Canadian hydrographic service, M first in 40 years. -renders are expected to be call- “: shortly. says Dominion «hydro- grflplI¢l’ F. C. Goulding smith. If .11 goes well the ship should go into service by the summer of I956. STUIIDY (‘RAFT cl no design The flagship of the hydrographlc fleet will be a 385-foot. diesel ves- rel. designed to withstand the pres- rure of Arctic ice and with s draft 5; 15 feet to enable it to chart mallow waters. It will have ii. flight deck and hangar admishign for two helicop- ms, and will be the mother ship for six diesel survey launches. The crew, plus survey woifkers. will rumber 102. It will carry new electronic de- was for fixing the ship's position. operating with two portable shore beacons with a range of 300 miles. Mr. Smith says the vwiel has seen in the blueprint stage for mm-al years. It will be the first (laughed and built for hydro- graphic service operations based on the east coast since the old Aradia was launched in England in 1913. There have been other sur- vey ships since then but none have been designed for the job. Mr Smith says the job of chart; xng the Arctic seas will take 50 years to complete. But the more immediate sinis will be to meet Deficits Remain W Despite Efforts 0f U. S. Gov'i By HAROLD MORRISON (‘anadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON. (CF) — The El- r\PllllD\Vel‘ administration is faced with anguished cries that a. suc- i‘Ps5l0|'\ oi buclgctary deficits will Iran‘ the country to ruin. But try as policy-makers will to_ erase them. the deficits continue. The excess of government spend- ing over tax receipts has been .-sumaied at 33.300.000.000 for the li5(‘al year ending June 30 next, nu officials say the actual red- nl: balance may rise to $4.000.- The rise will depend largely on American farmers. Under govern- nsnt price-support programs. they have borrowed about $980.tXl0.000 on last year's wheat. The govern- me-nt-guaranteed bank loans be- come due May 1 and farmers can either pay the loans and get back their wheat or let the government pay and take the wheat. The budgetary experts feel that most farmers will take the latter course. causing another run on the federal treasury and a pue-up nf more wheat in govemment,stor- agr- “W:-‘re concerned with this def- im all right." said one authority. “but we don't think we are on the brink of disaster as some have suggested." HERBERT HOOVER.‘ CRITIC Most outspoken 4'l'iLlC has been former President Herbert Hoover who warned that the U. 8. may be courting economic disaster un- the pressing needs of defence and industry. | Defence planners want safe sea lanes in the Arctic that will en- able them to reduce their reliance on air transport. And industrial-I ists seeking to open up the mineral wealth of the North want good parts and sale sea lanes for the future. NEED SAFE ROUTES The importance of safe routes is seen in the cost of marine insur- ance. If safe routes can be found. such as the onr. to the Hudson bay port of Churchill. insurance rates will go down and. perhaps. further economic development“ of the North. In the last few years the hydro- graphic service has been busy with special _1obs—fiiiding safe harbor: for titanium at Havre St. Pierre on the St. Lawrence and for iron ore st Sept Isles and along the Labrador coast. While looking for harbor facili- ties in the southwest corner of Un- gave. bay last year. hydrographer D'Arcy Charles and his party found the highest tides in the world. s. 545$-foot rise which beats the Bay of Fundy tides by some two feet. On the Pacific coast. hydrogra- phers have been charting safe routes for ships which will carry aluminum ore to the Kitimat pro- Ject. This year surveys will be made for it nickel ore port at Rankin inlet on the northwest shore of fltldéon bay. below Chesterfield in- e . The service took over one of in biggest jobs with the entry of Newfoundland into Confederation. Charts of the coast of Newfound- land's Labrador were largely ob- solete, and Mr. Smith secs 5 year's work there for his ocean searchers. Business ilpturn May Have Arrived long job On Crimina|‘Code Faces Committee OTTAWA. (CP)—-A social Com- mons-Benate committee studying three controversial segments of Canada’: criminal law plans enough work to keep members busy for months. perhaps years. The committee of lo senators and 1'! a were -, ‘ last teries should be amended. Don Brown (L—E'.Isex West), co- chairman of the committee witl senator Salter Hayden (I.--0» tsrio) figures it will be a long pill to sift through the evidence die committee wants to gather. Mr. Brown. chairman of s In- mons committee which pr rlrod the final draft of Canada’: vised criminal code last year. Eh! committee probably will com- plete work this session. In that event. the dimmitioe would report progress ild recom- mend re-establishment rt the next session. The procedurv Oould be repeated for another canton. INVITES OTIIEB CIKOUPI When the committee started work it extended I stsldlnl ll1Vllvl“0D to the provincial Attorneys-gener-l and any group at individual who might want to give their views. Now, said Mr Brown. 1'» appear- some witnesses who mlihlv ll" valuable assptancs are reluctant to appear. The commitee has held 13 hear- ings in the last two months and heard elgfl witnesses. NOW the committee has prepared a. 28-page qua.-monmlre and members hope expert; viii provide the answers. The greatest public reaction—25o letter; and more are coming in every day-—comee from men and woman who have set opinions abow lotteries. Those opposing lotteries have I. 3-i edge. The majority of letters cone from ministers of the United oiurch of Canada backing the anti- bttery stand taken before the com- In United States wssinnoaou, (AP)—'I'he eg- erly awaited United States bul- ness upturn may have arrived. Dr. Courtney a. Brown of Coluxibia University said today. but it may prove only a temporary my "in a longer period of slack sitivity" lasting a year or two. Brown. dean of Oolumbws grad- uate school of business. said in remarks prepared for the U. 3. Chamber of Commerce convention that there are encouraging signs that .. revival "startad a month or so ago." And a member of the federal reserve board of governors. A. 1.. Mills Jr.. said in .4 prepared talk that there is inaeasing evidence of “resurgent builnesa activity" to cal , ll es in "Per ps th turnaround has al- ready begun Brown said, but “there is no convincing evidence’ that the incipient revival will be more than an improvement of sev- which. he said. dmlnistration in-' give added vigor.| mittee by the Canadian Council of Churches. GOEMAN IN FAVOR T. P. (Tommy) Gorman. Ottawa. sportsman. in among those who support the principle of govern- ment-run lotteries. a stand put for- ward by the 580.000 -- 11191711791‘ Trades and Labor Council. The private opinion from letter- wriiers on capital and corral‘!-1 punishment cuts through the mid- die. Ontario administrators of Justice have told the committee calillu and corporal punishment is I. de- terrent and mould be retained. An opposition view is expected to come later this month from Thorsten sellin. sociology profes- sor at the University of Pennsyl- vania and a director of the Ameri- can League for the Abolition of Capital Punishment. He testified .before a United Kingdom royal 'commission which urged retention of capital punishment two years ii 0. ‘The committee also plans to ex- eral months‘ duration. It could turn out to be merely a period of stability/It present levels." "It ml?’ be more realistic to rs- gard the present prospect of im- t as a period of rally in period of slack activi'ty_ prove n '1 INF! If w are wrong. so much the bet 1." Il£VAL MAY BE LIMITED wn questioned whether the nine-month-old business lag had been caused so directly by the adjustment of overloaded business inventories as most administration officials have contended. less it curbs spending and bal- ances the budget. "Do no tbelievs that inflation has been stopped." he said recent-I 1!. "It will continue as long as we have a deficit". Administration siithorities. in/re- ply. say the red-ink balance, even if it reaches u.ooo.ooo.ooo this year, will be less than half last years peacetime peak of 30.300.- 000.000. But it will boost the outstanding national debt to about em.ooo.- 0m.000. dangerously close to the local ceiling of $2’75.000.000.000. The president already has asked Con- gress to lift the ceiling to 8290,- Cenads's national debt. succes- “V01! reduced by post-wsr budget- ary surpluses. is about 811.000.- 000.000. Since the U. S. has about in times the production of Canada. this would be equivalent to about tiii.'s.000.000.000 in American iemis. The painful thing about the lifts American debt is that an- nual interest charges amount to about s7.ooo.ooo.ooo. far greater than all the money the Canadian imvernment spends in a year. These charges. which must be taken out of current rev-hue. con- “YHJE Mar atfer year. And as the debt increases, the chsrge- rise. BOBBOWING "POISON" "Tho borrowing medicine to cure lhs deficit is easiest of all for the xpsyers to take.“ and Hoo- ver. “But it is the deadliest of poi- sons that can be poured into the nation’: system of life." "It is a far greater e c Mn than higher taxes. For an the federal government borrows to make up a deficit. it must do one 0! three thinge- print currency. borrow from the banks or borrow from investors. “The latter 'is the least evil. hut there are never enough in- waters about. Printing currency and borrowing from the benlu have 0111! one end-inflation." One of the great problems of 010 U. 8. is that. as leader of the free world. it has many commie- Mgite. The experts say the coun- trye economy is in “good shape” mi“ Inendinc on defence is sim- I. ' y In osmperieon with Canada‘: 33-000.ili0,flI)-I-year defence bill. "I8 U. 8. bill comes to about 006.- W0.fll).iln—iriore than half, the es- ‘-lmlted expenditures this you of "The nation's‘ economy may have passed temporarily from s poet-war period of replenishment |temi an invitation to Justice Felix Frankfurter of the U. 8. supreme Court. Erie Stanley Gardner. the American mystery writer and law- iyer, has written the committee. but he offered no opinion. :_j.? and exipsnsion to a period that could last another year or two. during which replacement may provide the principal source of new demand" This would not necessarily mean "a weak economy growing week- er." but it did cast doubt that any revival "will represent a new and sustained movement to new heights of prosperity." four €64/311 =1 / Lniiin-an 0 February to determine Cvheuiu the 75;, qumd -1-.,,,,.,, ., ,.,.i..., 3.,“ ""'““'l °°d°" ‘°°"l°”‘ 1“ °'P““1 II the bell rang lor the brief en- and corporal punishment and iota count"; “"0 . 0'I4.0W.U”.0|7l-\ DON'T C-FT A ROTAIYPOWII MONIR Thowllololomilyivilbegvemovlilvo lawn with the eoly-as-breathing. new lawn-Boy. |t rolls like 0 ball on mbbev fired wheels. Juooeors. ooeMch...¢ cum forward: or boekwwde. Rotary action means Io», efliciem ooeniion. eliminates hand irimnin¢,roI:ing. Powered In/wet“ famoue Iron-Hone. Made In Canada by the mowfoeknve of Johnson. Ednevde and E090 Qnbooed Motors. ,1,» rs slrqieone-aserelfore--1flInt.IL—Pbene8lll ‘Turpin Reported T"°“b." will’ Elf“ To Royal Society Roan: .AP) — Britain’; Randy Turpin 5 he saw “a whole bunch of Mn ' Sunday night just be- {org 1 ‘an middleweight Tiberio Mu;-1 ttened Randy in 28 sec- onds. , ln's manager. George Mid- dlgip. said Monday that the first mtg; Randy will do when he re- 1 to London in three or four 41?? will be to see a medical rue i “My eyes are queer-1 can't see anything." "I told him." said Middleton. "to make sure he saw Mitri and noth- ing else." A moment later, after the knock- out. Middleton said Turpin told him: “I could see five or six Mif.i'L1—- all in I line. I was all right if I looked at the floor." Four Canadians Awarded Grants NEW YORK. (CP)—Four Cana- dians have been awarded Rockfel- ler Foundation grants for the first quarter of 1954. Dean Rusk. presi- dent of the foundation announced Tuesday. The largest grant. 86.150. goes to Keith B. Callard. associate pro- fessor of political science at Mc- Glll university, Montreal. Caliard, will study the role of the executive in independent Pakistamand India during the formative years of those- states. Dr. Abram l-foffer. of Regina, director of psychiatric research, department of health of Saskatche- wan. receives 32.700 to visit psychi- atric centres in Britain. Scandina- via and other parts of Europe. Prof. John W. Wevers of the University of Toronto was granted $2,000 to enable him to visit the Near East and gain a direct ac- quaintance with contemporary Mos- lem thought and movements. Miss Rae Chittick. director of McGill university's school for grad- uate nurses, got sl,000 to visit uni- versity nursing schools in the ‘£7 i Pound At Highest 32 New Fellows OTTAWA. ((7P)— The Royal So- ciety of Canada announced wed- nesday the election of 32 new fei- lows. bringing its meinborohlp to 2. Society Pruident Jean Bruchesi. under-secretary of Quebec prov- ince, said the new fellows will be officially welcomed at the society's annual meeting which will be held at the University of Manitoba. Winnipeg. May 31-June I. The new members ‘ ‘ " : French - language humanities- Jea.n—Oharles Bonenfant. commis- sioner of the parliamentary li- brary. Quebec: Benoit Brouilette. geographer. University of Montreal: Jean-Charles Falardesu. socia- scienoes professor, Laval University: Jean vallerand, secretary of the Quebec provincial conservatory. Montreal. English-language huma.nii.iee—Dr. G. I. Duthie. English professor, Mc- Gill university: George V. Ferguson, editor of the Montreal Stu: Dr. it. S. Longley. dean of arts and science faculty, Acadia university, Wolfville. N. s. Mathematical. chemical and physical scienc Dr. Roger Gau- dry. biochemistry pmfeuor. Laval university; Dr. Paul E. Giguere. chemistry professor. Laval: Dr. Jas- eph Rlsl. organic chemistry pro- fessor. Laval; Biological sciences—Dr. M. Dunbar. zoology professor. McGill university; Marcel Raymond. botanist. ‘Montreal botanical gar- dens. =4 Level Since T949 LONDON (AP)-—The pound sterl- ing hit its highest point on the London money market Friday since the currency devaluation of T949 and traders report the demand is still continuing. Main reason behind the spurt is a rumor current in British banking circles that the government in- tends shortly to raise the present ceiling limit of $2.82 to the pound. This is the amount of money a British seller can ask from s for- eign buyer needing sterling. Trad- ing Friday touched the $2.82 ceil- United States. ing. Leafs Acquire Rights On Top Junior Player TORONTO (CPI——'l'oruntu Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League announced Tuesday night they have acquired the rights to centre Brian Cullen, one of junior hockey’: most sought-after and highest scoring players. The Leafs said in I statement that they got Cullen, I member of St. Catharines TeePees of the On- tario Hockey Association Junior A League. in a straight player trade with Buffalo Bisons of the Ameri- can Hockey League. The exchange sends C h a r 1 e s (Dusty) Blair, Jackie LeClair and Frank Sullivan to the Bisons. Blair was the all-star centre with Ottawa Senators. Leaf farm club in th 9 Quebec Hockey League. LeClair was voted the . most valuable player in the QHL two years ago and Sullivan was I defenceman with Pittsburgh Horn- ets. Leaf farm club in the AHL. Cullen set two OHA Junior A scoring records this season and captained ’I‘eePeea to the Oi-{A title and the eastern Canada Me- morial Cup finals. He scored 161 points during the regular sched- ule and fired 68 goals. Probes Treatment Of Newspaper Men At Fire VANCOUVER iCP)—Wing Com- mander Donald Macdonald. com- manding officer of the RCAF‘ Sea Island base here. opened a per- sonal investigation Friday into al- leged instances of manhandling of newspaper men by service police. Two newspapers, the Vancouver Sun and The News-Herald. com- plained that their photographers were mistreated at Thursday night‘: $2.000.000 fire which de- stroyed hangar No. 8 and six sir- craft. All newspaper men were halted at the gates to the station but a CBC television truck was ushered through. ~ Tiinnday. May fl. ‘I1 TORONTO (CP) Caliadian women would like to see good taste in clothes combined with a moderate price tag, Madame H, E. Vauielet of Montreal told Canada's siorekeepers Tuesday. The average woman operating within a budget doesn't expect all the qualities in s low-priced gar- ment which she would get in s more expensive one. she said. But she does want it to look attractive while it lasts. Madame Vautelet. ).\rf‘Sld(‘l'il of the Canadian Association of Con- sumers, made her comment in an address to the Canadian Re- tail Federation and added: “I would like to see (‘am-idian styles and textiles with more em- phasis nn smart line and appear- ance snd less ‘high fashion’. less slavish following of the United States. They might even impose themselves across the border." Wartime earnings created a young inexperienced buyer who went in for frills and extremes. The Guardian Retailers Told Moderate Price Siould Not Be Bar To Good Taste In Clothes although they are a diminishing Iacior in the market. OPPOSES BLIND CUTI The CAC. Madame Vautslet stated, doesn’t believe in merely a blind bringing-down-of-prices. because benefits obtained at the expense of legitimate profits of other groups. ultimately perialiue the consumer. On the other hand. any price tag that is too high simply takes money which the customer could spend on something else. She termed price sale mainten- ance. I practice now banned in Canada under which manufactur- ers suggested the prices at which retailers should sell their goods. has been "visible and cynical ex- plniiatirvn." J. William Forsey. president of Dominion Stores. Ltd.. proposed that the federation assume as an immediate objective establishment of a chair of merchandizing at the University of Tnronto—a liberal arts course majoring in merchand- izing and culminating in a bachelor Retailers are still catering to them of merchandizlng degree. GROG|(ETT'S ANDISE AT ALL MERCII ‘ DISCOUNTS at SELLING OUT SALE AT 105 Kent Street Watclies — Silverware — Crystal — Rings — Brass — Jewellery. All Work Left for Repairs Must be Picked Up Once. ALSO ALL FIXTURES FOR SALE JEWELLERY ROCK BOTTOM PRICES UP TO 60% .9 Outstanding Specials--Shop Early! Be Early For This Terrific Value! Headline Feature ! . . . Factory Clearance! 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