Mere Men Much can be done with I knowledge of soft solder human nature. I 16 PAGE as‘ It Maxims ' of 8‘ and i Founded 18 WN, CANADA. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 2. 1064 ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew ‘ PBICE50\; Return To Form Of Price-Fixing Urged Before Restrictive TORONTO. (UP) -— The federal ;ul'f'l’l'll"ll(.‘I‘lD was urged '1‘i.icsday to worn to s form of price-fixing that would offer greater protection to the retailer who, in turn. would _-.-zain the confidence of the buying ‘t .f‘. I -stifylng before the restrictive -was practices commission meet- ... in Toronto this week. Fred R. (‘"i‘.'PI'fl, president of Cavers Broth- era Ltd, St. Catharines, ont., Ip- y‘..1nce dealers. said the retailers ,»,.;.r,-lily “re.-,e.nt“ the attitude of .3» government. They think the pjrfllid go back to where it was hr-fore when it allowed A certain aiiiriunt of vertical price fixtures. Tr-v think the manufacturer ,3.-.-iiri have the right to moderately I... '.(‘P his own product r. Cavei-s proposed the repeal- nf iv-gislatinn which made it il- al for the manufacturer to set prices on his product. SFICIDAL PRICES government He outlined to the three-man mmmission three types of loss I-‘aricrs currently used by some trailers in Canada: 1 The "nail down" loas leader .'ha' was never meant to be sold. It is merely advertised to bring pmplia into the store in order to sol them something else. 2 The "nebulous" ‘loss leader. fictitious advertising of something the dealer never had in the store. 3 The loss-leader merchandise tl'il!r‘il the dealer has ready to sell at ;css than cost. \ir. Cavers pointed out that loss leaders were essential to the iiealcr in order to meet present- Believe Wreckage Of let Sighted FHATHAM, N. 13.. rCPi .— A e jet plane was missing from . RCAE‘ base here Tuesday niid was hclievrd to have crushed in tlin Gulf of St. Lawrence. \Vrec.k:igo tricntificri as that of a Sabre was locatcri by s. searching ftaii.-n aircraft from Greenwood. N. S. off ’I‘rat:inic. a fishing village 45 miles north of here. and a team of naval riircrs left for the site. The Rf‘.-'*.l~‘ irleiitined the ini.-using pl.1nc's pilot. its only occupant. as F0 Robert Martin Calrney, so. of Wtaira. Ha was last. heard from Mr Point Escuminac, 36 miles -~ ' or hrre at the mouth of Mira- iv. “ii lin.i'. Coming Events "ilcrcrve July 21st for St. Tor- cm .= pxciilc. "soc Bedeque "Calamity Kids." \\.:.'=l4Ie Road Hall, June 2nd. "Your Saturday night Jamboree, ‘ 1:‘Iotlf‘l0\\'fl Forum, beginning - l2th. --F-.-reii Mile Bay Hall Wednes- l iii‘-_ June 2: Kelly's Cross play, ‘The Meddlesome Maid". "Dance in st.‘ Andrews Hall, .\l' stcwart_ Thursday. June 3rd. ri"‘iii music. Canteen service. “(int your steaks. chops and ‘~..ps at Woodshed Restaurant. iiiinier River, open week days only. "Come on Vvhcatley River Hall :m.i-lit and see North Wlltsbire prrsciit their Concert at 8.30. "Dance, West Royalty Hall, Fri- tin". June am. Good music, door p.'.7.o-s, Canteen. "i‘i'apaiid Women’: -institute “rt ‘art at Frapaud lfsll, Wednes- rl-ir. .liine 2. "Cake sale, 5. A. MacDonald's. Jiina isth. 2 o'clock. Central Royalty Girl Guides. "lfa.niptnn variety Concert, in "‘:'--c Cove Hall, on Friday, June ‘rn Auspices Oriingc Lodge. "Come to Rose Valley Hall to W‘ "Aunt Jerri.-hy on the “Mr- .‘=‘h ‘. on Wednesday evening. June -“vi Curtain il.l5. "The following places of busin- "-< “ill be closing on Wednesday Wcrnoons: D. R. Cummings. E..f. \lflrDougsll. Vernon. "t".1rleton Players present three "" ill-’-i.\' "Aunt Jcrushy on the. ' l\.'Iii‘l", in New Glasgow Hall. '. .liine ith. Curtain 8.30. "Dance tonight and every “Ninesday night at South nus- iim llall. Rollie MacKenzie's Orch- f.<‘:.1. F: “Harrington Play, ‘Uncle Josh Prrkins" in Iirookfleld Hall. Thurs- ililu June 3rd. in aid of Brookileld (‘omnntinn Calf Club. "See Wellington Dramatic club D-Wnt. their 3 act. play in St. Ter- "-‘BS. Wednesday. June 2nd. i\.1:‘.rc after. "Carleton players present their "Ft Dlay "Aunt Jeruahy On The “iI‘l'mth" in Rose Valley Hall on Wrciiic=da.v. June 2. Curtain 8.30. "Regular ‘weekly dance in "':‘uul rink. Thursday night. mi"-Ilning dances will be held "‘-'i"‘fl-1.\'s all summer. Burns Crrhrstra. "At St. Mary‘: Hall, Sourls. on 3crlr.csd:i,v. June 2nd, Summerslde --ivcrs in "Come Out Of Your Coma '. Curtain time 0.15. am of ‘Ike and candy. Trade Commission day competition Percy Wsrdle. executive secret- ary of the Canadian sporting Goods and cycle Association Inc. presented I brief which called for the return of I price maintenance or fair trade policy and the estab- lishment by registration of various groups such as manufacturers. wholesalers and retailers. to an- able proper price policy at the var- ious levels. John Jardine, Canadian sport.- inl Goods pruldent. said condi- tions for the retailer were "des- perate." “We are meeting prices that we know are suicide I.iu'l...are forcing us-out of buslncu. The large opei- ator is losing money on every article he sells. lie is doing it solely to end our competition." Gets Fast Drive On Bumper Of Grandma's Car WICHXTA. Kan. (AP) —!'.‘rancis Greenfield gasped when a car went around him travelling '15 miles an hour near here Tuesday. Perched precariously on the rear bumper was I three-year-old lot holding I large cowboy hat. Tramplng his accelerator to the floorboard. Greenfield overtook the speeding auto and flagged it to I stop. “What do you want?" man driver asked. "Do you know there's I. little boy on your back bumper?" “A little . . ." The woman stepped out to the back of the car. cried, "Patrick. what are you doing herei" and almost became hysterical. Greenfield said he learned that the driver was the tot‘s grand- mother en route to her home in California after visiting Patrick and his parents here. the we- HALIFAX (CF) —- Education Minister Henry Hicks said Tues- day Nova Scotia will pay the tui- tion of student teachers as part of a plan that will revolutionize teacher training and raise the status of the profession in the province. The plan be outlined has three main points: 1. Students enrolling in I new training plan It four universities and the provincial Normal College will have their tuition paid by the government; system: 3. An advisory teacher education council will be set up this year. IMPROVE QUALITY Mr. Hicks said he thinks the plan will “improve the quality and status of the teaching profes- sion." and result in an "increase in the number of persons entering" it Four years of professional and academic training beyond high school will be required to reach full professional status.. Present regulations stipulate five years for I high school license. six years for the highest - an academic license -— but only one year for In elementary license. Mr. Hicks said he hoped univers- Heallh Minister Martin Announces Gov't To Ban All Imports Of Heroin OTTAWA. (OP)-l-feaitb Minis- ter Martin says the government will bur impot-tI.ef herein. the nilrcotics most popular among ad- dicta. He told the Commons Tuudly the ban will start Jan. 1. 1035. under obligations to -the World Health Organization. At nketlngs of the organisation, Canada was among countries which unani- mously voted to outlaw manufac- ture and IIle of this hablfnforrning mrootic. He said the ban on heroin im- parts will not prevent use of pres- ent stocks brought to Canada le- gally. But, since it is not manu- factured here, the narcotic will be unavailable legally onoe present stocks are exhausted. He said he agrees with Dr. Owen Trainer (PC—Winnipeg South) that narcotics are exported from at least one country with the con- nivance of that country's govern- ment. Dr. Trslnor, speaking during de- bate on I measure to increase pen- alties for trafficking, said I great proportion of illegal narcotics or- iginate in Communist countries. Considerable suspicion existed that there was I certain amount of de- liberation in this. 3,000 ADDICT! Mr. Martin said that the num- ber of narcotic addicts in Canada is not likely more than 8.000. They were concentrated largely in Van- couver with others in Toronto, Montreal. Hamilton. Windsor. Win- nlpeg_ Edmonton and Calgary. narcotic problem in public schools has been greatly exaggerated edd- lng later during the debate that he would place the number of ad- dicts under 21 in Vancouver It fewer than 25. He rejected sugg ‘.' that one treatment for narcotics addiction be provision of unlimited amounts to addicts under medical super- vision. This had been tried in clinics in Los Angeles and the re- sult was an increase in the addic- tion problem there. All opposition parties in the House supported the measure which incrcasu the maximum penalty (Continued on Page 2 col. 5) Spectacular Fire In Dock Area EDGEWATER, N. J. (APT — A spectacular fire roared out of con- trol for two hours Tuesday in a two-block Irea of this congested industrial city‘: Hudson river we- terfront. Damage was esfimatcd at $l.00fl.00fl. The blaze burst through I five- storey warehouse where the Ford Motor Company had I store of rubber. ruined at least 95 new cars in and outside the building and destroyed three old raw sugar docks. At one time. I 26-acre tract was ablaze, sending I rain of sparks that ignited two houses several locks away. The borough hall and other buildings in the centre nf town were threatened for I time. Earlier. he said the ‘teenage l.O.D.E. Delegates Approve New Scheme Of Scholarships For By PAULINE KENNEDY SAINT JOHN. N. B. slbillty of bringing I doctor from India or Pakistan. or a nurse from Pakistan. for post g r I d u I t e courses in Canada is being inves- ligated by the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire. The new scheme we approved Tuesday at the national annual- meeiing of the order here. The IODE is already financing Mlu Gnanaselvam David of the Christian Medical College at Vel- lore. India. to nursing courses It the University of Toronto. Natlnnsl president Mrs. Kathleen Drops of Toronto said the order wants to continue bringing foreign students to Canada for study. The idea was framed in I re- port of the Common caith and Empire committee read by Mrs. G. Graham Sinclair of Toronto. AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS The president Innoun u‘. that I national life membership will be given in Mrs. Lawrence Grout of Toronto. national convener of Ech- oes. TODE special rnagasine. Mrs. Grout has 10 years of IODI order work behind her. AwIi-d of Icholsrahlpa to seven Canadian students for stud! Ill (CP)—Pos- 'Que.. Foreign Students Mrs. A. R. Jawitt of Lennoxvlile. reporting on First World War scholarships. said the failure of many scholars to complete their theses should be noted by the or- doc. She IIid the record of those scholarships were renewed for the second yeIr is often no better. "It seems that re-appointments are not achieving the expected re- sults." Mrs. Jewitt said. “if more of our scholars are to obtain .- post graduate degree from English universities in one or two years. we must demand higher academic standing from applicants." 2. Teaching licenses will be re-. classified under I more uniform‘ N. S. Plans To Revolutionize Teacher Training. Raise Status Of Profession lty students would be attracted to the shortened course because their tuition would be paid. Those new teaching would be encouraged to continue university studies. He said the provincial Normal College at Truro will be afllliated with universities for professional teacher education. PLAN RE-CLASSIFICATION A major step will be the re- classification of teachers’ licenses in 1955-56 into graded professional certificates and teacher's licenses. Lowest grade of license will go to teachers now holding permissive licenses; the highest to teachers with two years of general univers- ity work and one year of profes- sional education. Minimum requirements for the lowest —- Grade lll - professional certificate would be three years of general university and one year of professional training. Universities will award junior diplomas in education to students with two years of arts. science or commerce and one year of teacher training behind them; senior dip- lomas to students with three years of university and one year of train- ing. The bachelor of education de- gree will still be awarded only to students who hold bachelor of arts, bachelor of science or bach- elor of commerce degrees. Universities participating in the scheme are Acadia. Dalhousle, Mount Allison. St. Francis Xavier and Mount Saint Vincent College. lawyer Ordered , To Stand Trial MON'I'R.!!AL tCP)—Luclen Gag- has been ordered June 14 in criminal court on a‘ charge of receiving 821.829 stolen‘ postage and Unemployment Insur-.' ance stamps. l The court rejected I defence re-. quest Tuesday that the cue be postponed to the fall term to per-| mit Gagnon more time to prepare’ his case. i CHILD DIES OI‘ INJURIES PLASTER ROCK. N. 3., (CP)-- Gall Goodine, 4. hurt in a street‘ accident Sunday. died in hospital here Tuesday. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Gondlne of‘ Plaster Rock. she ran across the road into the path of at car driven by Henry Corcoran of] nearby Sisson Brook. Decision‘, on an inquest will follow an au-'- lopsy today. By LARRY ALLEN‘ HANOI. fndo - China (AP) French tanks. artillery, infantry and planes drove Vieiminh troops six miles back from Phu Ly. key road junction 30 miles south of Hanoi. French urmy headquarters announced Tuesday. The Red-led rebels fled in sam- pans and junks across the Day river to seek protection in the llmestonc hills as French bombers pounded them with 1.000-pound high-explosive bombs. French armored units reported killing 24 Vletmlnh. The big French sweep along the southern rim of the Red river deltn's defences followed a sudden offensive last week in which 8.000 or more French Union troops broke the long Vieimlnh enclrclement of Yen Phu. defending Phu Ly on the south. The French reinforced Yen Phu. which had been harassed for lli days by about 1! rebel battalions using mortars. heavy machine-guns Ind recoilleu rifles. The continued French drive KEY MEIYIINGS SCHEDULED FOB TODAY BY STANLITY PRIDDLI GENEVA. (Reuters) — Foreign Secretary Iden of Britain played host to Chinese Communist Pre- mier chou an-lat at dinner ‘rues- dsy night on the eve of two key meetings aimed at settling the Indo-China war. no nine-n conference on fndo-China wil resume today at the same time that representatives of the opposing high commands Britain was announced earlier in the day. in the war meet for the first time to draft details of I cease-fire and regrouplng of their forces in Vlet minutes of Nam. it was understood lden hoped to talk Chou out of the Commu- nist proposal that Poland and Csecheslovakia sit. on I neutral nation commission to supervise an fndo-china truce. Western deleg- ates plan to introduce e counter- propoeal today. Eden saw Chou afur the Chi- nese leader called on lovlet Per- ‘gsnd (1.320 for a married person ‘with a blind spouse. non. prominent Montreal lawyer,’ to stand triali [of 510 for I three-day Memorial l French Drive Rebels Back Six Miles’ from Threatened Key Road iunction ‘throat of attack on those towns OTTAWA, '(CP) ——Spokes tween the ages of 18 and 65, provincial governments. Mr. Martin said eight prov- incee—sll except Quebec and Prince Edward IslInd——are ready to take advantage of the legislation and he In confident all provinces will want to en- ter It shortly. He also said it is estimated be- tween 25.000 and 35.000 persons will qualify for the allowancesoon a means test basls—-and that the over-all cost. will be between 512.- 000.000 and $16,000,000 A Y9”. PTO‘ vided all provinces enter. DEFINITION LEI-‘T OUT Dr. W. 0. Blair (PC——Lanark). chief Progressive Conservative critic on health and welfare mat- ters, said his party hails the bill but he was sorry that the crux of the whole measure_—thc definition of “totally and permanently dis- abled"-—had been left out of the measure. Mr. Martin explained this was. a conference of health ministers. Generally, Mr. Martin said, al- lowances would be paid when ap- plicants‘ disabilities could not be corrected in the foreseeable future and when they could not carry out the ordinary activities of daily living Ind self-care. Under the measure, the max- lmum,snnuai earnings for recip- ients will be——includlng the allow- in the Commons expressed general approval bill to set up federal-provincial allowances for the totally and permanently disabled. But they were critical of some specific sections of Health Minister Martin's legislation as it came before members for second reading. The measure, drafted after a ference. provides for maximum $40-a-month allowances be- gins. Payments are on a. 50-50 basis men for all opposition parties Tuesday of a fedei-al-provincial con- when old age assistance be- between federal and creased to $60 a month. 2. The federal share should be 75 per cent instead of 50 per cent 3. The means test. should be eliminated. or at least the earnings ceilings increased considerably. 4. Something should be done jabout the gap left between the 16- ‘year-old maximum for family al- lowances and the 18-year mini- mum for disabled allowances. HIGHER LIMIT Mr. Knowles proposed either a tl,00o or H.300 top for single per- sons Ind $1,500 to $2,000 for mar- rled persons. For the Social Credit party, F. D. Shaw, Red Deer. said his party approves the principle of the legislation. l-lowever. he as id the House should have more information cori- cerning the proposed definition of disabled. particularly if the federal to be defined by regulations Ifter.‘K°"°mm""'- “id "*5 Pl‘°Vl“¢"-5 "P ‘to now had reached any degree of agreement on the point. Good Word to? insurance Agents STEGNIORY CLUB, Qua, (CP)——- Norman Bethune of Toronto. retir- anee—~t'Ill0 for single persons, ll.- 200 for ,or married persons (COl"—-Winnl- aald his partyl but he proposed Stanley Knowles peg North Centre) supports the bill, these extensions: 1. The allowances should be in- fatalities in U. S. Hit Peak CHICAGO. (APi—-Vioilent. deatiis in the United States during the three-day Memorial Day week-enil hit I. reoord 530. The period covered from 0 pm. local time Friday to midnight Mon- day. The traffic toll reached 362. only one shy of the all-time high for the holiday set in 1052. The over- all toll broke the previous record l Day holiday set. in 1952. There were 9.’! drownlnge durlnff the holiday this year and 84 died in miscellaneous accidents. cleaned up I triangular area embracing Phu Ly and the nearby towns of Nlnh Blnh and Thai Binh, apparently ending any immediate whose defences shield a rice gran-‘ cry and ciicrect routes to Hanoi itself. Elsewhere in the Red river delta the French reported Tuesday killing 7| Vietminh and capturing l0 in scattered mop-ips. ; The rebels who have infiltrated the delta in numbers estimated at between 70.000 and 100.000 stepped’ tip their attacks near Hanoi. Il- saulting and capturing one small‘ post. French Union defenders who withdrew reported sufferirl; "some ‘lossc:." . Vietminh also Iitncked hilt fniletli to take two Vlet. Namese-mvmnedi posts six miles southeast of Hanoi. Twenty-seven more survivors of fallen Dien Bien Phu came backl to Hanoi Tuesday night. They tered to the nearly 2.000 French Union wounded at the fortress dur- ing the two-month siege. eign Minister Molotov within so the Rus.slIn's return from a two-day unexplained visit to Moscow. The meeting of the opposing high commands today comes A day ahead of expectations. French and Vfetminh military delegates met twice Tuaday to prepare for the high command talks. An announcement Tuesday night said the military delegates agreed that prisoners of war on both sides‘ lng president. of the Dominion Board of Insurance Underwriters. says today efficient insurance agents are worth the commission paid them. "The piirnhaaer of insurance needs expert advise just as much as n litigant needs A lawynr." said Mr. Bethune in a speech prepared for delivery to the annual meeting of the board Tuesday. The two-day meeting is in con- iiinction with the Canadian Under- writers Association. During the meeting Roland do f‘.i~andpre. of Montreal was elected president. of the board to succeed Mr. Bethune. R. P. Simpson of Toronto was elected first. vict-president and Charles Curtis of Montreal, second vice-president. Eight Provinces Included In Totally Disabled Pensions Conway Mother Rescues Children When Fire Breaks Out; Ne )'estei'da;' hnr titre!- Ivirninz ll‘- slsn saved --A Conway mother afternoon rescued small rhilrlren before the fire alarm that the house. Mrs. llarry Ramsay of Village. started a wood the kitchen stove about Leaving her 7-months-old and a son Barri‘. aged about '3 _\‘car.<, in the liitrlieri she “cut up stairs to get. another daughter. Marianne. 2 l/2 years of age. About five minutes later as shc Cnnwa; fire in 4 pm hub;-'. riasrenrlefl this stairs with th'~ little girl in her arm: she dis- covered the kitchen was on fire Dropping this child llirnugli the window of the ground floor ighbors Save Home i into the kitchen to r‘a|‘l'_\‘ the bahv to safety and re- turn-ri for the little boy, who was an frightened he had craw- ind under a couch in the sun- porch. First on the scene to Assist‘ .\frs. Ramsay was I nearby neigh- hour, Miss I-Irma Morrison. who helped in carrying the children -i-ross flu» street. to the home of Mn. John Broomo. in response to the alarm sound- ad throughout the village by mean: of telephone. I stendil.Vln- ru-axing bucket brigade wni t']li:('i\'i_\‘ formed. with men also woiuing from the nieghboring dis- icontinued on page 2 ool. 2; she rushed Devastated Korean Village is Being Adopted By Canadian Infantry Brigade IN xog}3;A rCP> —- A war-de- vasfated village in the Canadian sector of Korea is to be adopted by men of the 25th Canadian ln- fantry Brigade and re-established by voluntary cash contributions from Canadian soldiers serving in the Korean theatre. It is the first such rehabilitation scheme a m n n g United Nations forces in Korea. The tiny farming lPillf?I'|‘ll'fli. of Chinmokchung. obliterated in the fighting three years ago. will he re-established to shelter R50 men. women and children. Many of them now are scattered in refugee camps. Th 9 fund - raising campaign started Monday. its objective is $1 from each man in the .'l.000-mem- ber brigade. The money will be used in erect a school. construc- tion of n wsrehniiso for fond and crops and purchase of oxen and clothing for the inhabitants. One of the first contributors was R. W. Mayhcw. Canadian ambasfi sador in Japan. He donated $200 after seeing the tent village during COLONEL STONE OTTAWA. «GP» —— Funeral serv- ices will be held Thursday for Col. Cyril G. 1". Stone, principal Pro- testant chaplain tn the Canadian Army. .who died suddenly Sunday at lroguois. Ont. Full military honors will be accorded col. stone with burial in the military plot at Ottawa 21 Beechwood cemetery. Right And tell Wings Ready To Pull Down laniel's French Gov't in Vote By IIAIIOLD KING PARIS tfleutersi Raymond Schmittlcin. Gaullist state secre- inry for lndo-China. resigned his post Tiiesday after only 24 hours in office its forces of the extreme right and left mustered their strength in a move to topple the government of Premier Joseph Lani:-l. Schmiitlt-in‘: resignation came in response to resignation demand from the Gaullist group in the National Assembly only I few hours aftcr a fuil~scale debate opencd rm the lnrlo-(‘hina war. He had been named to the post to succeed another Gaullist. Marc Jarquef, who quit over an article that was puhlisliecl by a Paris weekly in February giving his views on lnclo-China. Lani:-l won two votes of con- fidence last month. But on ihl‘ lseconri be squeezed in by only two votes. The two - vote margin of con‘ fidcnce resulted from Gaullist lug- giing of their votes in the assembly Honest Weather Of Season At N. Y. NEW YORK, (APT-—-NOW York- were the medical men who minis- ers sweltered in an ii!-degree tem- perature Tuesda_v afternoon, high- est reading of the year. The air- port st Newark. N. .1.. recorded a7_ Eden Enterliains Red China Premier should be able in send and receive letters. They also agreed in prin- ciple on the exchange of sick and seriously wounded prisoners, but sniff final settlement of this issue must be made in the high corn- mand talks. Brig.-Gen. Henri Delteii. so arrived here from Indo-China to head the French high command delegation The Vletmlnh will be represented by its vice-minister of defence, ‘ta Quang luu. to give him the smallest marlin possible. CHANCES SLIM But observers said this time his chances of remaining In power depend on the achievement. of a cease-fire in Inclo-Cliinn by the middle of the month and whether he is able to prevent eager sup— porters of the European Army plan from attempting to rush ratification of that project through the assembly now that the Social- ists have asked their 105 deputies to back if. The rlomands for so quick l‘r'3Sf‘- fire arise from friars that. Foreign Minister Georges Blfiflllii. it play- ing for American inirrw-ritinn in the lnrlo-(‘hing war It the (la-nma conference. F‘rt>nt'h piihiir npiiiinn at pil‘St"hl wiviilcl much profcr a "scitlcmt-nt t("onliniiI~rl on nag» 2. ('nl vii Levels Blast At WTNNIPEG (CF) —Prof. I’. H. flnrierhill of liiiivrrsity nt Toronto said today "bureaucratic" school boards and not imported ideas are responsible. for damaging educa- tion in Canada. He was one of the. speakers at I symposium of education, pres- entrd by the Royal Society of Canada. it used an I springboard the book "So Little For the Mind." by Dr. Hilda Nentby of University of Saskatchewan. Prof Underhlll said John Dewey. the U. S. prophet of progressive education, Wu a "kind of personal devil" to Dr. Neatby but some of his theories hadn't reached Canada at all. He asirl the nftitiirirs of teachers and university professors pointed to what was wrong with education Most. professors were hapv! at. their Jobs, most teachers weren't. The difference was that profu- sors hId much greater any in de- ciding what should be taught. what the standards should be and what research was needed. 5 in recent visit to the Canadian lea- tor. RADIO STATION HELPS ' Cnl’lSll‘|l(‘ilf\n of school and ware- house will be done by I Korean contractor under supervision of the Royal Canadian Engineers. Hous- ing accomodatlon will be built through civil assistance command funds. Canada. as I member OI UN. contributes to this fund. Radio Maple Leaf. the brigade’! radio station. is playing I big part in the fund-raising campaign. The station staff has arranged special programs of request numbers to bring in money and daily cam- paign results and percentages ob- tained of various unit quotas will be announced. Lt.-Col. W. M. Sinclair of Hall- fax. commander of the 25th Cana- dian Ficlrl Dental Unit and earn- paign director, said he hopes Cans- riians at home will help out witfl parcels of clothing. Contributions may be addressed to the senior Protestant. or senior Roman Catholic. chaplain, 25th Canadian Infantry Brigade. CAPO 5000, c-o Postmaster. Vancouvtfg B. C. - - i-imo wot-aos cues mt: iuiaoee. TORONTO fCP)—Minlmum all maximum temperatures: | Min Max il'i:i‘\'.=un . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 - < ‘\‘:incut.\'or . 45 33 \-'iriuii.\ . 46 57 ‘i‘:filVlI'Vl‘lt'1l"f . SR 53 vraliza-v .17 43 IR--rzin.-i 39 49 .\\'mmiw.-1 ,, 31 M lT',w.oii'r1 so 7g lint.-ut-3 5.1 M ,iti....t..~.ti . . . . .. as as ,‘(.)iiclv~r 4g 50 ‘Saint .lnlll‘l . . 44 6.1 Moncton (1 01 llalifax til 7] ('ltai'lvittrtr-irii 42 MI Svrliicy 42 Ml \‘:iimr-iitli 47 M St Johns . . . . . . . . . . . .. 30 ea I HALTFAX tCPi — The wggghg office .-:i_v.< rainy and showery \\'l"alilf‘l‘ is forecast for all the Maritime; Wednesday as a dis- liii'hniirr> over the Great Lakes cnniinucs eastward. Regional forecasts: Eastern N. 13. counties. St. Jnhn riw-r \'allr‘_\‘.=: intermittent rain and widely scattered thunder- storms Wednesday: little change in tcnwpemturc. winds east is. Lmr-high at Moncton and Fred- ericton 45 and 62. Saint John 40 and 62. Edn-iundston 45 and 00. Prince Edward Ielendr Inter- mittent rain beginning about men: little change In temperature: wind: out is. l,nur-high at Cherieuo inwn 45 and M. Bar of (‘hnlaui-: intermittent rain Wednesday: little change In temperature; winds east l3. low. high at Ca pbellion 40 and I). High tide today et Charlottetown At 10.51 If. m. sun rises today at no I. in. and sets at 1.5! n It . -~