P-“bi .3003‘ I i Yrii o: G uiTR DLAN l llurntul Daily (Fllllllldlol la 1M1) lnllsrorliinsl al hn-uuu Uluu lllll, Pun Offloe lseparlsiiniig tlisawa. -’l‘lie lslisuil (illlfllltlh ruuliiilslnl Co. ldltur ailil Managing llin-i-lisr, J ll. Burnett. Anna-lulu Editor, Frank Walker. "The Strongest Memory rs Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.“ ’ UHARLOTTETUWN. TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 194s ll Forgotten Group ' One of the noteworthy political events of the present Parliamentary session has been the relegotionyof the ‘CCF-ers to the position of an almost forgotten group. Concerning. this develop- lmen-t, Arthur Blakely writes from the Press Gal- cry: "The temporary eclipse of the C. C. F. is a dynamic force in Parliament is probably due as much to the emergence of Prime Minister St. Laurent as to the entry of Mr. Drew. Mr; St. Laurent is certainly a much more vigorous and colorful and active Prime Minister than was his predecessor, Mr. King, in his later years. "ln the unremitting St. Laurent-Drew war- fare, which has been the outstanding feature of the present session, the C. C. F. has no place. lts 32 M. P.'s sit and listen, unable to do much IHOII in the way of participation than to -give occasional applause to the new Liberal leader. For the most part they are being ignored, as a group, in the general excitement. “There is no doubt that in the Parliamentary battle their sympathies are entirely with Mr. St. Laurent. They regard Mr. Drew, the new Con- servative "sti-ong man“ with an antipathy scarce- ly less violent that that indicated by Commun- ist leader Tim Buck for the same Mr. Drew. "But their sympathy for Mr.-St. Laurent does not com-pensate for their political eclipse- a state of which most C.C.F. members of Parlia- ment are uncomfortably aware. Inspiring Success Story ‘A remarkable story_of courage ln surmount- lng difficulties is told_in one of the brief big- graphical sketch furnished newspapers fo_r re- cord purposes by the Canadian Press Bureau. Here it is, plain and unadorned: _ i. A. Baker, B.Sc., Ernestown, Ont., enlisted ' as Lieutenant with 6th. Field C_°|'"P°'"Y, cflllcld‘ Ian Engineers, at outbreak of First World War; proceeded overseas and was wou-nded at Mt. Kemmel, October, 1915, completely losing the sight of both eyes; gazetted Captain and award- ed Military Cross and Croix do Guerre. Upon his discharge from hospital Captain Baker en- tered Sit. Dunstan's Hostel for Blinded Sailors and Soldiers, London, England, and‘ on his return _to Canada was engaged for about {W0 W!" Wll‘ the Hydro Electric Power Commission of Ontario. During this period he was one of the chief or- gqriizers of the Canadian National institute for the Blind which received its charter from lgtlh; Dominion Government in ‘March 1918. In _ , at the request of the director of Vocationi-H Training, Captain Baker took charge of o training and after care arrangements for Ca- nadian blinded‘ soldiers under the Department 01 Soldiers’ Civil Reestablishment._ln September 1910 he became officially connected with the Canadian Notional institute for the llllml <15 general secretory, having up to l"l'llS.lIl'l'lG be? a member of the National Council; in 1931 is n". w, dyqnged to. that of managing" director- lrs the New Year Honours of 1935_conferred by His Majesty King George V., Captain Bakea go! made an Officer of the Order of the Britis m- i." i939 the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel was hblrfferred upon_him_; in the sumo Wig, gotten’? University made him an Honorary ocor o ' eceived the same d9?" l,§',',,°'.',',:du'.',',,l.gi, hi; ‘Toronto. He is a member of the Forest Hill Village School Board; a mem- bq of the Dominion Executive, W" Amlilllll‘ . _f * cdnfldu- secretory of Sir Arthur Pear- homAo iation bf War Blinded, and chairman zznl-hgssllcational Council of Veterans Associa- tions in C¢I\°d_‘:-_________.____ _' Moro llnnultalits "of," fhql- Prince Edward Island showed r q substantial 0" ciol operations “we we were one t with the Do _ gag, foregoing the righ years to collect income, su tion taxes. v the Sydney Post-Record recalls of seven Provinces to sign 0 minion Government, two your: t for a period of five ccession or corpora- Now comes a similar report from Alberto, i " inces that sold or leased $3031‘:gbrhlirlidrivegoillziiiiment their right to 9O er cent of the field of direct taxation. Premier ‘Manning presented his budget for the next fis- ggfyggr 'Morch 31, i949, to March 31, 1950, i" which hb reckons for a-deficit of $2,427,009- 55' tlmated expenditures are placed at $56,659,000- as against revenues eXPFdWl 1° 099F999" _" 132,000. Premier Manning explained that this ‘deficit would be absorbed out of siirPlllies "S" cirmulated in previous years. _ Alberta's record for the present fiscal year terminating March 31, 1949, is even worse. x- penditures are estimated at $53,349,053 v l" against revenues of only $47,042,185. Thisleavos an estimated 1948-49 deficit of $6,306,730, fllw for from ast sur luses. N bhiiniiililid appears," p says tlie Post Record, "that in the first two yeorsof the operation of the Dominion-Provincial contract, Alberta has built up a deficit on revenue account olone ag- gregating almost $9,000,000. Quill °llYl°ilflY "'9 agreement the Province entered into with the Dominion did not make anything like sufficient allowance for fiscal needs, and Alberta seems ‘ Idestlrted _to face annual deficits of varying amounts while the agreement lasts. It need hard- lyiie pointed out that what ls grove and for- nlldalleln-this. situation is the inability of the Province to lim recourse to the riioior sources gkreveineeear-rhorked for Its use the B.N.A. l, for. the simple reason that t sources‘ ' . ' , badger leosbd or-sold. to the f ,. ‘fora period of five years. ‘ti; frigiihig Provinces, includ- roll deficit on last year's finan- ing Nova Scotia, are in the same predicament, although not all of them have yet run into-the red. Th-ere is reason to believe that Nova Scotia‘ for example can show a fair-sized surplus on last year's financial operations, and that it may be able to corry on without any deficit for some tinie, possibly for the whole term of the improvi- dent agreement the Macdonald Government modewith the powers that be at Ottawa. But as surely as night follows day, the time will come when every one of these Provinces, with ‘ the possible exception of British Columbia, will discover tliat~their allowances from Ottawa are entirely too small‘ to compensate them for the revenue sources they have relinquished. No such agreement should ever have been made by the Dominion with any of the Provincial Govern- ments. It is intolerable that the right of these Provinces to collect revenue from sources ear- marked for their requirements by the Constitu- tion, has been bartered away to the Dominion, under a scheme that reduces them to a status little better than that of mere anniuitants of the Federal Government." ./ (ZDITURIAL NUIESA Equinoctial gales due. i I i The Legislature. i I The ides of March. Julius Caesar died this date 44 B. C. awn Canadians, like Britons, are expecting a cheerful budget—and not forgetting Prince Ed- ward island. i I i The alternate frosts and thaws are playing havoc with our secondary streets so for as cars and footpaths and concerned. . P . Q_uee_n's_University,kingstoii, is the most re- cent_institution to enter the field with on op- peal for funds, its objective is $3,175,000 dol- lars. I I _ Films of sex education have been withdrawn in Ontario according to the Toronto Board of Education. e, I The city of Saint John, N. B., has no inten- tion of hiding its light undera bushel in the mat- ter of tourist attractions. Already the mayor lias announced the commencement of a strong prom-otional campaign to assure that city of a large share of the tourist dollar. I i i Ir e There was lifting of eyebrows among the sons of Erin when Dr. Cecil P. Martin, professor of anatomy at McGill University, on the very eve of St. Patrick, said in a lecture that there is no such thing as an Irish race. The present population of Ireland, he said, was made up of threedistinct races which had migrated there. J I § i Canadian writers got a boost the other day by Will R. Bird, the Canadian writer. Mr. Bird was amazed, on his recent cross-Canada tour, at the output of native authors. Their market, how- ever, is almost entirely in the United States and Mr. Bird was of the opinion that Canadian books ar not being well adevrtised or promoted. l‘ t A car manufacturer has taken issue with critics who claim that the larger parts such as fenders, hoods and doors on new models make for larger repair bills. According to the Hudson Motor Company these parts can be removed with greater ease- than ever "before and, a-re conse- quently some 20 per cent less expensive to ser- VICE. lea The Dominion Government's prosecutionof an alleged baking industry combine in the Western Provinces again brings out how muddled is our thinking today in this connection. On the one hand governments are themselves engage in monopoly enterprises or assisting in their es- tablishment. On the other, they pursue the would-be monopolists with all the rigor of the law. The Pharmaceutical Association is to be congratulated on its move to protect the stand- aids of the profession by requiring, among other things, that chemists-to-be take a course at a recognized college of pharmacy. With the enor- mous advances in medicine in recent years the time has gone when adequate training can be‘ acquired while working as o chemist's assistant. Q I I General Andrew Jackson, seventh president of U. S. A. born this date 1767; he helped to frame the constitution of Tennessee; arid in the war with Britain in 1812 obtained a command in the U. S. army;~ he occupied Pensacola, and defeated the British at New Orleans-in 1815. Six years later was appointed governor of Florida and in 1828 was elected President, being re-elected for a second term in 1832. "A man mode by God and not a tailor." i Filibusters in Congress have always been a source of astonishment to Canddians, accustom- ed to parliamentary procedure in which the ma- iority always has the whiprhand. The present fili- buster to retain the right to filibuster gives some indication of how the practice has happened to be retained. Under the rules a member may talk everlastingly in order to delay pr defeat the passage of a measure or the appointment of on official. President Truman wants the rules nl- tered making a time limit for speakers, and the present filibuster: are attempting to frustrate lrito meal immediately which writ t» the proposed change. n o o , Govprnment officials in Ottawa have ex- pressed regret that the Austin Motor Company has decided to postpone the complltion of its motor plant at Hamilton, Ontario. The reason for this decision, according to a statement by the company's chief engineer, Mr. Duncan Brown, is Britain's continued rioeil for dollar exchange as well osthe company's position en- der the Canadian excise and soles luxregulatlolis. The company would have to pay l0 ‘per "cont. excise tax and 8 per cent. stilettos, based on the best wholesale price of the company's goods _in Canada n .7. I Old Charlottetown (And r. e. s.) ’ * SELKIBK’! LFTTEBS The following letters from Lord Selkirk to Dr. Angus MacAuley, his agent in Belfast, written during the full of the year 1808' shortly after the arrival of the Dykeii arid Polly, are published from ‘transcripts in the possession of Mr. Donald Muc- Klnnon, M.L.A. Lord Selklrk's let- ters are dated from Charlottetown: "Aug. 11: The baht. which is to take the smith to you, ls ready to set out early ln the morning, & with tolerable weather will. I hope, reach you before mlddiiy. Mr. Mac- Donald wha is to go by it wlll re- main 8: act as clerk & slorekeep- er. I had been in hopes of being down to Belfast tomorrow, but. the ship, is not yet fully cleared which I must first see done: but I hope to be down on Saturday. The boat. besides the smlttfs tools & some coals, is to carry some boards which I have purchased (tho' rather deer) to be oused ti-i our first buildings. and they may be useful in the merin- time ee they may be put up as is temporary shed. I rim informed that there is a considerable num- ber of settlers ori Vernon, some of them Highlanders: it obcurs to me that some of their barns d: out- liouses could be got for putting up the women & children lri port till the huts are in forwerdness. i "If the boat which these things are sent by ls of material use it may be kept-it ls paid for at a dollar a day-if not it should be sent back d: if any of the men who navigate lt are anxious to remain & look about the country. perhaps some of the indented men may be put in their place to bring her beck. Preparatory to the laying of the lots I desired Mr. Wright the Sur- veyor to examine Lots 57 d: 58, as to clear 8: marsh lends which he is to measure. & protriact. He pro- mises to be on the ground tomor- row, so that if anything else ac- curs which you wish to be done in that. time you can send for lilm d: point. it out. O O "Aug. 19: I have been anxiously looking for word of the progress Mr. Wright tirade in the survey. I only wait to hear of that in order finally. In the meantime I trust there has been no _ want of em- ployment for all hands between the birch bark 8r the marsh hay. "I found a very intelligent settler up Vernon River who promised to come down 8c give assistance to our people if he was assisted by their work to make up for the time he would lose. I have therefore de- sired Mr. Cameron to take two of the indented men, & go up tomor- roiv to work for him. I shall be obliged to lend him your canoe, & let him have two tolerable hands to sat out early ln the morning up the River. __ "The Post sets off from this on Monday. I am told the postage is 1/ for n single lctler & 2/ for a double to be paid on putting into the office. Pray mention this to Mr. Shaw. “Mr. Cameron brlngs- my tent (faded) ready for me wlien I come down next." eee “Aux. 20: A short time after Capt. Barby left Mr. Wright arriv- eil 8: brought your letter. I shall certainly come down and mark off the lots as soon as ever Mr. Wright can furnish the requisite materials. I am sorry to find that his pro- grass has not been greater and that n0 part of this side of the Point ls surveyed: but I will at any rate come down in the beginning of the week, & fix those on the other side. I hope by that time you will be able to give me a guess of those who are inclined to be purchasers 8r aLthe extent each aims at. Pray make a list ln this gbSpelfl, as nearly as e guess can o. "In settling with Capt. Darby ll. is by Sterling money d: British cur- rency that you must reckon. I paid him 55/ here which he was to account. for with you. I under; stand he has'not said lilir boat as I liad imagined 8: would willingly purchase it from him. He offered ll. to Mr. Stewart for 25, and I he- lleve came 2 or 3 lower. If you can get it onder 25, I will be obliged to you to bargain for lt &-eend it here with is crew as soon as DOI- sible. Most. of the people here are dispersing, so that I cannot trust to them for manning her; only two families l believe will settle. "If the Oughton comes lrito Or- well Bisy I wish you to lend ward on board (before ehe drops anchor) that. she is to come lrito Charlotte ‘Tovyn provided the wind will allow 8c at any rate not to land the peo- ple tlll I see the Capt. d: Mr. Wll liams. - ‘ "There is no need of purchasing water casks as a-sufflclency have been landed from the Dykes. "I received the desk safe by Mr. Nicholson. ~ ‘ O O O "Sept. 3: As I am likely to be detained for some deye, I shall send the canoe back 8c forward dolly, .9. you will send me each time a single line to mention how tlilngsisre go- ing arr, S: anything material that requlreii my attention. "The MacMlllans it MecFee have I believe some barley rlpo it out‘ down. but. they must be too buoy to thresli. l be: you however to vpurchese it for me on, the foot at 13/6 per buehel-celh-ae well, as {any that is at Primitive, Inmen's k Fraser's-it to employ some of ‘our own people to tliresh it out ,on my account. I can get lt around ‘a reasonable supply of cheaper pro- visions for the people. "The flat with the flour I meal- wlll go down tomorrow. Jasper lilo the keys in ii parcel for you.” "Yours, » “Selkirk.” I l , I to came down d, lay out the Lots . e. 2- citohl". b. mended oenoslistion of Jll denier" I . s nivtlhorry. f‘ q Freon is»? Mill - . Dooolifevt‘ .4) //. // 4- o // . _ s I e ' , wait. 1F = , rue worm comes to ‘Ml ‘NQRST- moon" L081‘ _1.ovu's Those earthly godfather-s of heaven's lights That give a. name to every fixed star. , Have‘ no more profit of their etiln- tng nights c Then those that walk and wot not, wtiist they arc. -Shel:espee.re. The- Pattern Of Soviet Policy (By W. N. Ewen . Two voices came out, of Mosww almost simultaneously lest week-- end. Stalin, after his habit. issued a pronouncement 1n the form‘ 0f answers to a journalist's questions- Molotov issued an official state-- merit from the foreign office. The two have been regarded by acme people as contradictory. And it is true that. Stalin is brief and nearly courteous. while Molotov l5 verbose and quite insulting. But. there ls no contradiction‘; the two pronouncements are complement- ary. And between them they make tolembly clear the pattern of Soviet-policy at the beizliirilflx 0f 1949. . They both follow on Marcel Cis- Chin's speech Bl the, vpenlr-rz of the- French Assembly, when the communist leader announced that “Stalin still believes all differences between the two psi-ts of the world can be settled by peaceful mans." ‘There was the offer. Now Stalin himself repeats it in another form. He 1s ready to cooperate with the U.B.A.. - and presumably with the other powers -- "in odoptllf; measures which would lead ww- ards the realization of a peace pact and to gradual disarmament". But. at the .88-i.llE.llIIlE, h; arid Molotov in their various ways in- dleete the nature of the "meas- ures" necessary lr there is to be ii move "towards the realization of a peace pact". Molotov makes it plain that, the continued existence of West-cm Union, the negotiation of an At- latlc Pact. and the development of Ein-opean unity‘ must all be re- garded es incompatible with any rapprochement. between East and West, or indeed with friendly P¢~ lotions between the Western Pow- ers amLthe Soviet Union. Britain and tha USA. are charged with “adopting 4n openly aggressive course. the final aim of which ls to establish byJorce Anglo-Ameri- can domination over the rest of the world; is course fully in oc- cord with their policy of aggres- slori rind of unleashing a. new war." And this is described as the "ab- andoning of a policy which aimed at consolidating the forces o1 rill peace-loving Blllbidh. order to prevent the resurgence at sures- sive forces sitter the wet”. ‘K inference is plain. For any new "oomolldstlon" to be possible. the Westem Powers must abandon the Atlantic Pact, abandon Eur- openp unity, put en end to West- eni Un and to the Marshall Plan aid. It Ls suggested these are the major obstacles in the way of settlement desired by the "Soviet Union, by all peace-loving states, end by all those‘ umborlu- sup- porters of universal democratic peace who vole; the genuine sen- timents of peoples who bore on their shoulders the burden of the lest world wu". O O minis. in mi, iiouiit be pro- pared to discuss possibilities of e peaceful settlement it the West- em Powers will poi-up everything done In ‘the put two yosi-s to- -ttie economic restoration end political integration of tho Woltphna both Btslln end Mala,- mltlde scrapping of all that hes been done to restore ind reorien- y V Western Germany. eteliri; er niomllll. only upsets of the gpostpoiissrieiii of the creation 9r separate Most German amm- llut tie hll ‘nu-early do [one Q leet. year's lronaonflanfer- , , ‘IDYOIMIOH at Clllrllllf, "lit - rend surmount or trio aeir Moi- otjanlebtlori. ‘chatlneeilt run, into-inure,- holhfil.'m‘flhlfllr _ , .3 but, it pleln that this u co W“ Lenten Meditations- The TEIIAIHIIDII THE INNER LIFE As en unforeseen result of his endeavour to order things wholly from without, modern man has re- discovered the inner llfe. But ales! having lost lt as a source of power, he has found it again as a con- gerles of problems. A sophisticated age knows only an inner life divided agiiihsi itself, a prey to fees-s and obsessions, haunted by memories, for ever seeking revenge for the suppression that has to be endured. It is not the least pert of the efficacy of prayer that. it constitutes a discipline of the soul, that. lt err- ables one to reckon in quiet and ln advance with the forces which one must encounter afterwards ln the open. He who prays thus en- ters into llfe with a sense of direc- tion and with all his powers mar- shalled for the effort required of llim.- , _ It may be only a moment that. is so spent, as when the soldier pre- paring for action lifts lils heart to God with the wards: "Lard, I shall be very busy this day; lf l forget Thee, do not Thou forget me." But if the whole self is behind such is commitment it gains there- by a clarity and fortitude not other- wise obtainable. For, having made its peace with the God who is over all, it can face unperturbed the ac- cidents and vicissitudes of life, The right ordering of life re- quires the achievement of a certain harmony between the inner and tile outer. It calls for a rhytlimlc move- ment, by which the vision granted to llie soul tn its lonely meeting with God is built into the fabric of the warkaday world, where man must share with mun in the dis- charge of appointed tasks. This en- sures that prisyor is no retreat from reality but n creative exercise. But equally lt calls for what has been done in the world to be recon- sidered and recast before God, ln gratitude, penitence, and new de- cisions. This ensures that the soul is not mastered by its tasks but can subdue them to the highest erids. Such a harm ny of soul and world will reveal llsef In action which ls as unhurrled as it in resolute, ln responsibility without anxiety. and in is deep peace of spirit which ls charged’ with tireless energy. There is an unwritten saying of the Lord which gives memorable expression to what can be achiev- ed lri this way. It runs: "When the inner is iis the outer and the outer as the inner, then will my kingdom come.” the Soviet Government requires for ltii egnemenbto is lifting of the Berlin blockade, and an erm- lstlce in the Joold "iv-or" and for its "cooperation" in attempt to work "towards e peace pact". On “lg other hand, it these terms are rejected the cola war goes on, "Ir the Anglo-American bloc" says a newspaper of the British Oom- muntet party, "persists in driving ahead with its North Atlantic Pact, than retaliatory sctlon mes" be expected fran Moscow". It should be noted. that ell this goes on simultaneously with the consolidation of the Soviet bloe The signing of the Polish-minion- lan pact completes the net-work of military alliances. The formation of the economic council integrates the economies of the satellite coun- tries (er more closely with that of Soviet Union. The process beiviiri e week or two after the Yetta Conference ls very nearly oom- p1ete.. ‘Itiroulh the machinery ol the communist parties, the Soviet Union and its "allies" are being worded, into _e closely organised, strictly disciplined rrholq acm- plgtely coins-oiled from Moscow. y _ . riim, rim.’ n‘ the lltoolstsmg picture. The West. is asked to nu- ornrilse luélr u ‘e prelude end preliminary to endeavour to oome to terms with Ill. closely crun- lllb-i- eelollllhlm 2' r Deep ltelln perlouely believe the Westernifloverriaienle would silopi siren e policy, 0!‘ um nits viii n» been! u: ei-mlt of poiiiio opto- lili-lee are often veuonslvo. Stalin 1:“ vegkleolsted and‘ bis living ~- llleooog. um "are" ‘ enthusiastic ' “ welcome" truths. stoic, uieii. ll the mo, my _ n rm be thatths ‘ bonds. —- Part Arthur News-Chron- tori lrito irlopttne it? mm may ooh ‘lotlet estimates of posto- lllhl llth. ‘ e _ Q15._1949‘ i ‘ m: - Notes Byfrlyfllt?‘ w... . i -A also lays many olty dwel- lers walk about with their eyes on the ground. Is modern architecture that bod? - Guelph Mercury. ' Oil lg makl Alberta n wealthy province, with e probability. that it will not again, as it did e few years no. tieve to default on its lcle. _ . A revolution tools place in Pure- guay while the cabinet members" were at a wake. Their successor.- wlll undoubtedlymtrlve to stay more awake and away from wakes. — Woodstock Sentinel-Review. While it never riilnii in Lois Arizeleri. heavy dews that flooded the sewers were occasionally re- ported from there. This yeaq, how- eventhe/dew froze for a few days, and the Angelerios may now claim to be the only city in Southern California where the dew is three inches deep. — Kingston Whig- Standard. In the light of the Speech from the Throne, it looks as if the drive towards socialism has come to a full stop in Saskatchewan. tempor- government message. reed by Lt.-Gov. J. M. Uh- rloh, was undoubtedly the dullest Throne speech yet brought down by the Douglas administration. Unless one knew the nature of the present government, one would have been herd put. to guess from the speech - that it came from a group whose avowed elm ls ttieextenslan of so- cialist principles. -— Regina Leader- lrlly at least. The Post. The United States now has n golden opportunity ta make a new General Clay start lri Germany. hes asked to be relieved before July, and he deserves to have his wish fulfilled. Once General Clay ls out of the picture, the State De- partment can have no further ex- cuse for ducking its German re- spanslbllltles. peatedly that it is time to put a civilian high commissioner in un- challenged contral, subject otily to the instructions of the Secretary of State and the President. It ls time to end the present division of authority and to bring our policy ln Germany lrito line with our pol- icy lri Western Europe. - Washing- ton Past. _ There are two ways of looking at the retirement of Joe Louis. The world's heavyweight c h a m p l o n could have gone on meeting rill comers, and inevitably and prob- ably before long succumbed to some second-rater. Having waii his title the hard way, Joe Louis apparent- ly felt inwardly a logical com- pulsion to go down ta defpat. the same way. As tie says in his let- ter of abdication. "This is the way champions should be made." What actually happened was rather huni- drum. The Alabama cotton-picker. who honored his race and the ring alike by character and superlative performance, chose to write a letter and retire undefeated lrito business. Joe Louis, near 35, defender of tits rank 25 tlmesfhisd been one of the really great champions for almost a dozen years. The decline was due. and after some months of muddllng, ‘the decision came to get out of bdx- ing while still comparatively whale. In this course there ls distinguish- ed precedent in Gene Tunney, who retired happily lnlo tho country- side. _Whlle Joe Louis chooses lo remain 1h‘ public view as a boxing between the Btiilln tone and tho Molotov tone is significant. That Stalin believes that this is a cun- ning ruse which may have a chance of success; while Molotov yrltli his greater knowledge of the outer world knows the thep is loo crude- ly baited for success but must “go Through the motion" hoping that at. any role the move will cause some confusion of thought, some hesltpncy of purpose from which he might be able to profit. SPRING grropiotonbeu VOCIIEOR it, e we e eve i the bliemplonshlpl: erriuenmon l” 83g‘ 82:11’ sensei‘ Elie l l I O!‘ BO uswqftoi-icmreic eniiniiiiilripion" associate of DrvFrederlck in the discovery of insulin betes, addressed e‘ gnthgym: - medical‘ men in Toronto 0' subject, of medics sold this: medical research clol tYPE-filke mlnllten of Del. I‘do ,no.t rrenn but they must. be so interested | their work they will devote rim: ifilves to it day rind night. w-ltlinu; l Pmlliect of more th living wage?‘ an a b“ worker who burlel himself 1,, g laboratory working and mentln! endlessly with test. tub" and materials ofpll kind; "ll! re ct of gnu Clllmplon Dr. Tciiiiriefn. Beet, who h, u Banting for fills on 1h. y research, ‘my afar‘: ns who my" must be of g "m th the semeetg: It l! the Teggnch experi- Who We heve argued re- makes the great discoveries ti,“ contribute to the saving o! mum, less lives, or the prolontstlon ,1 lives of sufferers from diseases u,“ usually have Intel ending; part1.“ mercifully soon, or cruelly drgxxd out. Tho public know nothing about this work unless and until l|| rni-‘neu a valuable discovery. Th. public never heard of Drs. Banting and Best till they announced in. sulln. The public never heard at Dr. Archibald Fleming until lhg discovery of penicillin was m“. known and given to the world for nothing. And there have b“, many others, These men are usu- ally puld e straight salary whlgfl does not amount to much. Th. general practitioner, whose work l; greatly simplified by the findings of research workers, makes a mucli larger income every year. and earns the gratitude of the patients wlig think him a wonderful man. — 3t. Thomas Times-Journal. The Port Arthur News-Chronicle, which has Just about come in b. regarded as Lrske Superior‘: offl. clal okeemen, seems is little eon- cerned over the possibility that its protege may lose its distinction u the largest body of fresh water lii the world. The question ls pre- dicted on a news story from Britain telling ‘of plane for developing of the River Nile for water power and irrigation purposes, usln: Lake Vio- torlii Nyariza as a reservoir. The lake ls to be dammed at its outloi so that the water level will be raised. and at the some time coir- trolled. Whether the lake would exceed ln size Like Superior ls de- pendent on the extent to which it would be, raised and extended by drimmlng. The claim lies been ed- vanced ln some quarters that Vie- toria Nyanza, as lt ls, lias e our- fuce slightly larger than Superior, but lt ls also admitted that much‘ of the urea ls shallow water, in which tliere are weeds and marshy growth which create is doubt wheth- or it should be Included in actual lake area. . No one has denied that _Lake Superior with its mean depth of 900 feet is a larler body of writer, by volume. -— Sault Ste. Mnrle Star. Dr. J. L. Zwlnlle. president of Park College, told a story of two partners who were doing all right but not setting the world on fire. One morning one of the partners came walking ln wearing s bril- linnt. and dazzling diamond as l sllckpln. It looked as bl! l" l ‘lemon to the other partner. who visloned a raided treasury oi- bunk ilCCOllnL. “What in the world." he sold. "Where and how did you Ill that sparkler?" "My uncle died last week, you remember," the parlnct answered. "Well, tie left $4.000 l9 be used in purchasing a stone com- memorating his memory. This ll the storieP-Wali Street Journal. SPRING SAMPLES NOW IN .l. P. MacPhorsoimSoii floss‘: Msde-to-Menssire loll Slofi Clothlnt SAMPLES From I THE HOUSE OF HOBBERLIN Just Received Come In And Select Your New SUIT or TOECOAT NOW i , The Besti Showing Since A i939 llAllllY ll. Maclllllllillll PBETTER MEN'S WEAR" - tragedy in ill lrlllr-e careless ol , toot youroell .0! tlre l! the jsellsble Oonipestlos. i {I voa would like to know g tel aavofl. In)»; lleonufrl‘ n. . - K’ i ck lloii t Take Ills s rm lrs men's oldest ‘imsiic iiiit ll, tellllllll ant-moi! tepsolieroae ee e tiger. It. strikes will!!! Wlflll], ls, enoleh to set It tree-don't business-pro ealytigown ineene-erleqisele we will welcome your hriqalq. é iiviioiiiiii s, co. i iiiiioi luiiuaniscsirirro: 1m g gamers. mmmmmr soyntlllms iron-rm" AIJJION LIoLlAN-nlssrlel u leriimlfll" oimrsxc B. lllAI-mtesrlet M WWI" TIIOIIAI lleAtfflllf-ii-IQQON linmiofltl" 410""H"'n=‘9%~°""".' . . m” '55‘ _ ' ‘ -_ -r. 5nd ll unexpedtndli. W153i“ or even e tilt of 0°19?" rlek your hoaiaorhilm - reeeii egelsrat the ma“ In mm mlwlt. more ‘about lire ‘and liillllm"" .“1