V-.a.L .-...t --g-,- ,,.u,. '15 ti; be; h weaker than the weakest Ink.” DAG: A afwhnav, AllGL'S1' 3. 1951 Immigration There are two ways of looking It a restrictive immigration policy such as the one the Canadian (lov- ernment put into effect the other day. One is to call it shortsiglited. 'I'he other is to call it practical. There is something to be said for each view. - There is no doubt that tlaiiauia is still very much a growing nation. To say nothing of the stimulus to farm production and manufacturing which thousands of newcomers pro- vide, a young nation which does not encourage a steady and high rate of immigration from older countries is likely to develop into an ingrown, Introversive community lacking a broad and expansive culture. The current policy does not affect pro- spective immigrants from the Com- monwealth, France and the United States; and that is to be commended. Nevertheless, it would not be a good thing for Canada's prestige abroad were word to get around that racial discrimination is the main aspect of her immigration policy. On the other hand, of course, there are other practical considera- tions which must be faced. One of these is the inevitable unemploy- ment of the winter season. It would be neither right nor wise to allow large numbers of persons to come into the country without reasonable assurance of their finding jobs. In such circumstances they would be just as well off where they are, per- haps better. The problem. then, is to kccp to A policy which is realistic in the light of the country's ability to ab- sorb immigrants, but which at the same time does not reflect an of- ficial attitude of defeatism respect- ing year around employment. No doubt, the Government gave earnest consideration to these things before issuing the recent directive. As far as Hungarian refugees are concern- ed, those who have been waiting for months to come to Canada, it would be a great pity if commitmcnts en- tered into by the previous Govern- ment were not honoured in letter and in spirit. Digging Up The Past Archaeologists have been making some significant discoveries in wcst- ern Canada this summer. Their finds may throw new light on the arca's pre-historic period, the customs and ndornments of early day Indians. Oldest evidence of human habitation In British Columbia was uncovered by Dr. (T. E. Borden. a University of British Columbia archacologist. on the east bank of the Fix-iscr River northwest of Yale. Precise age of the Yale site cannot be deter- mincd until charcoal there has been tested for radioactivity. but calcu- lations indicate that thc sands in which postliolcs from a house built therc by Indians was laid down when the Frascr River was Sf) fcct higher than it is today. Two ycars ago 8il'llll?ll' evidence of Indian lodges was found at Locarno Beach near Vancouver. and It was dated by radioactivity of charcoal fire ash at about 500 B.C. The Yale discovci-y Ia believed to predate Locarno's. What is described as the most remarkable archaeological discovery of all time in British Columbia was unearthed a few weeks ago by unl- versity students on the Fraser River ( delta. It was the 2.000-year-old skele- l ton of A large male native Indian T warm; I hand-beaten copper breast- Igiuu. -nu figure was found buried L? M I not and nasal In A nijddcn , Liana Grove. close to the United my. Dr. Bonkn also I. 8. McNeIAli, Aehlor lrcliuologlst At the National Museum At Ottawa. identified an arrowhead found at Vilna as A Clovis point, one of the oldest ever to be unearthed In Can- ada. Existence of this Anowhead is accepted as additional evidence that man first came to North America from Asia by way of the Bering Straits and Alaska. At the time the Vilna arrowhead was made the ice age probably was receding, and scientists speculate that an open corridor existed through what is now Alberta. Evening Jail Sessions What to do about teenagers who run foul of the law for the first time and for lesser offences is a question which has bothered law enforcement officers for many years-in fact. ever since they started to think about rehabilita- tion as well as punishment of of- fenders. To put them in jail with oidcr and more hardened lawbreak- ers doesn't seem quite the right thing to do, while to let them go .with a word of warning is likely to encourage further disrespect for the law. it's a difficult question. Pei-liaps a plan now being tried out in Vancouver will provide an answer. The plan, which has been in use in England for some time, provides for offenders of a certain type. who ordinarily would be given short jail terms, to "serve time" by attending "evening jail sessions" regularly. These would last from early evening to the youths' proper bedtime. This would curtail their freedom at the most dangerous time of the day for potential lawbreakers. At the same time. they would be assigned tasks intended to reform their social outlooks. These tasks would be under the supervision of trained personnel. Attendance would be compulsory: and it would be clearly understood that failure to turn up on time would mean trans- fer to a regular prison. The process would continue until in the opinion of the court satisfactory rehabilita- tion had taken place. There are. of course. certain types to whom this sort of thing would be useless. But for the young person of any promise, despite a mild venture into lawlessness. it might be A thousand times better than ”durance vile". In any event, the Vancouver experiment will be watched with interest. EDITORIAL NOTES The I-Jpworth Old Rectory in Liiicolnsliire. the birthplace of John Wesley, has been dedicated as A shrine of world Methodism. It was purchased from the Church of Eng- land by British Methodists. Ameri- can lllcthodists have undertaken to restore and maintain it. I I G Mr. Khrushchev may be sincere in his picdiction that the Soviet Union will soon overtake the United States in production of milk and other dairy products. But his cows will have to do a lot better than they are doing now. According to a rcccnt statistical report. the milk yield per American cow in 19.36 was about 6.000 pounds. The highest yield in Russia's stale farms-the most efficient ones-was abou't 4,700 pounds. It was much lower on col- lcctive farms which are something like co-opcrativcs and not directly undcr state management. A A A Two years ago we celebrated our civic centennial and Monday's holi- day. marking our l02nd natal day as an incorporated city. is a re- minder that we have moved into A new century of progress and develop- ment. Visitors remark upon the pleasing appearance of Charlotte- town. its well paved streets and fine shopping and residential areas. We can look forward with confidence to the future; but It is well also at this time to nccall our past achieve- ments and those responsible for them in the years gone by. A A e Royal Commission hearings are noted for their excursions Into corn- plicated rlgmamle. JIM by re- ports from St. John's. the one that iiiilillllil -I Jv?&Ilu'ifnIenAY was strzsiot "ET usslnunt swmuoooa uoau nuance: - ,ili I llilllli . l llliilll I I nutter aimem-'n-s mot. Bur ir uuv as CANNED. LIKE Dnvucur sums nuts) it canzsmaoaotdsaoaa ” i 1051' lameness, IF You6O 4,23,: 8! CA3, 60 ensvt I -cue-I HAPPY HOLIDAY ALL! UNITED KINGDOM OPINION Regretiable Strike Incidents By ”0nlooker" Thomson Newspapers. London. England Bureau It has been A week of some ug- liness. In two main strikes - one At London's icgetable markets. the other among bus operators outside London there have been Acenes more in keeping with thosc pre-war gangster films of the Gap- ney-Bogart-Rnbinson era. Outside the main bus depots ll been scenes that have often top- pled into violence as the lorries drew up with their fresh loads from the country districts. The bos- ses. packers. and clerks unloaded them as the striking porters wait- ed outside. Outside the main bus depots it has been worse. One coach oper- ator told me bluntly: "We have Anme staff ready to keep on work- ing. but we have taken them off the road. And wc have done it to avoid bloodshed." That is pretty strong talk for I957 Britain. It comes as a shock to most people I that it "can still happen here." There were A few who recalled that A transports strike was the first sirlke that happened tliAt leAd to the overall General Srike In I926, and they gloomily predicted that this one would go the slmc way. But both sides in the trans- port strike anyway have now u-en sense. The busmen Asked for an In- crease of 52.70 A week. The em plnycrs offered 40 cents. Now tlicx have settled for A sensible half- way figure - 8l.5l. And 100.000 striking busmen are back At work FALL OUT The whtttllng-down In Britain'- Irmcd forces announ ui this week has been accomplished. on the whole. gracefully and well. Com- pensalions for the officers who have Io go is generous. and the cutting down in rcgimcnts Achiev- ed fairly smoothly; with one ex- ception. The Highland Light Infantry And the Royal Scots Fusiliers are to merge - and A row is brewing in Scotland. For one thing. ltmenns that Glasgow. Scotland": biggest town that has the depot of the HLI in it. now has no regiment. For another - the RSF came in- to being to fight the Scots for An English king and they are Low- landers. not Highlanders. Although the other mergers will, one can predict. be accomplished. of the HLI and the Scots Fusiliers the last has not been heard. . . CHOP OFF TL-'PPl-ZNCE The Government over here has let up I council on ”priceA. pro- ductivity. And incomes" in their fight against Inflation. The same time that Chancellor of the Ex- chequer Thorneycroft announced this. it was announced that the Aterling's purchasing power of shillings in l9Sl had gone down by 20 per cent In May last And has dropped another 2 cents. Al- Ao announced: An Increase In price of cooking gas. and that iron and Ateel products would be going up by an Average of 82.68 A ton. I TWO PARTIES There Are two pArtleA around London now that Are easy to s t. One labels itself. with huge ob on): lapel-badges to let the whole world know that they are members of he American Bar Asisocinlon over for A convention. I have never seen It) many members of the legal fra- ternity look so bewildered so of- ten as they wander around London. here was a whole group of them outside A five-and-ten the other day as I passed. Each was Inspec- t ting A handful of money. They were trying to get A decision as to how much A florin, or half-crown. or Alxpence was - And what they All The other group don't nu-d la- lookcd like. belt. They Are scouts from All oi- Ar the world in London. getting ready to move slightly north of the capital. to A place called Sut- ton Coldfield near I where the world Jamboree In being held to celebrate 50 years of the Scout movement and the centen- Ary of the birth of Baden-Powell. the movement's founder. The scouts have not something , they stride through the streets of Birmingham. . London. they At least look AA If they know where they Are going. FIVE-YEAR PLAN There is to be Sl,620.000 spent here on steel and iron develop- ment beiwecn now And 196i. An- nounces the newly-set up Ministry of Power here. At the moment the Industry turns out Just over It mil- 1 lion ingot tons A year.DemAnd ; next year will be for over 21 mil- ; lion tons. and A productive cap- . Acity of 29 million tons IA Aimed ; At for 1962. i will the British reach that tar- get? industrialists seem to think that they can If A higher degree of automation IA Introduced. With- in in: "five year plnn" they Antl- cipate. however. that nuclear pow- l or will not be established strongly enough to help out. They will have ill full effect from the mid-1960A onward. "IIESTING" Lady Laurence Olivier - actress Vivien Leigh - IA "resting" this week. That term meAnA thAt one IA out of A Job when It Applied to theatrical folk. Not so for MIAA L Leigh. She is doing very well In the blood-and-thunder Shakespeare piece ”Titus Andronlcus". But lMln Leigh IA resting After her , bnnistormlng efforta to Anve tlio - I St. James' Theatre, which IA tlireA- 1 p tened with demolition And with the , prospect of its AitA being used for i officel. l I'm All for keeping the thnlra healthy. but I will weep no turn If the St. James' goes. It IA un- comfortable And out-of-date. But Miss Lcigli has been - and IA - flghting hard to uve It, And try- ing to whip up enthusiasm for the old place. She has extracted A pro- mise of 51350 from Sir Winston , Churchill If any "lighting fund" IA Act up. She tins lend proceulons. ' She has carried A placard In the 1 Atreet. She got up In the House of Lords and shook the peers by pro- l testing in that holy-of-hollel. , ' And she hAs dragged her bul- : band into the frAy. Sir Laurence loined her and A few hundred , people In A procession Iut week. I Lady Olivier looked AA If Ahe wnl enjoying it. Sir Laurence looked As If he wasn't. the constitution from major dain- Age in the process. PERSISTENT QUESTIONS Legend of Churchill Tanks Judith Robinson In The Toronto Globe And Mail The Lord ('hcrwcll of Oxford. P.C.. (iH.. l-'liS., died the other day It-avinii no heir. but A legend. This was the inseparable wAr- time associate of Winston Churchill. This was the .l('lt'nllIl(' mind which. having weighed the Alternatives and counted the cost. encouraged some of the lonclicst and most dar- ing of Cliurcbillian gnmbles. This was the trained imagination which. driving through lmposslbilies to the possible. was Chiirchlllin support in many calculated risks. This wAs the Aloof And Absent- minded character In A fIAt-topped bowler to be discovered Acme- where In the background of the group on the tarmac In At least hAlf the news pictures of Sir Win- Atoii Arriving here. there And ev- ln ensuring the load In the Air which saved us All during the Bat- tle of Britnin was played as A pro- fessor of philosophy. i Still As A professor of philoso- I pby he was commandeered by Win- ; Aton Churchill early In the second -. great war And set to work on other I scientific problems. Thereafter he Ilotlnd himself. A one-man testing V laboratory for ldnaii. promoted to i the House of Lords. where he would i i be useful at n eed. convincing doubting peers of the wisdom of the Prime Minister": pins. 5 He took as his title the peace- l fnl name of Oxford's lesser stream , And settled down for the duration , of hostilities to his main task. that I of personal Acientlfle consultant to ' Winnie The backbenc.-hers went on 'AAli- Inl ' About tank: undil- enuraged by periodlac i , from Mr. Cliiirchlll, until At last Winnie gave them right And lddld An unwilling scientist to the num- ber of the King's mlnlsten. From first to last the real Issue of the recurrent quarrel wan not mentioned. No one Accused Mr. Churchill on Acting on Advice from Another Place Instead of on that of the cabinet. No one suggested that the Prime Minister had been overlooking both (-Abinet regiona- lblltty and cAbtnAt solidarity in making major decision Alone AAvA for the expert scientific company of Lord Cher-well. Mr. Churchill an MA Aide nevor for A moment Admitted that then was constitutional rtdu In the AAA- glng. He merely Iurrendsnd And Added Lord Cherwell to the war cabinet AA Paymuter General. AA Payihuter General. of All un- New Drugs In War On Disease dAAtlAAdtAbAAAm ll tkreaditlunntwnymenmefilu uuuuwuni-onu-dkll Advances. Streptovariclu. A Aow Antimi- cnhlal Agent. IlVGl main of M- in; of value it the treatment of tuberculosis. TIAA drux IA derived hum A fuuus. suwtomyeu IP05- tAhlllA. found in the soil near DAI- IAA. Tens. USED AGAINST Tl . Doctors who have IlIl.d::ld tin drug report it is Active nnt A wide variety of bacteria and IA --puueularty Au-lkiu" when nu-i against the tuberculous germ. Experiments with mice indicate It is especially Affective for tnAt- Ing tuberculosis when used In con- iunction'wIth the druglsoixlaxld. Although only half AA Active AA Isoniuid when used Alone. it ll. nevertheless. About ten times I! Active AA nreptomycin And I- bout 14!) times AA Active as pan- Aminonlicylid Acid. Washington pathologists report that the mustard derivalive Thin- TEPA fcql is one of the best All Around drugs yet found for-treab in; certain cancers and leukem- iAA. CANCER GROWTH IMPED!-ID Growth of tumor: wAs notice- Ably impeded After Application of Tbio-TEPA in more than 50 can- cer cases that were studied. Appreclable inhibition of cancer growth was noted in carcinoma of the ovaries. lungs. stomach. liv- er. mouth and pancreas. AA well AA melanomas And ly As. in- cluding Hodgkins disease. Ear- lier studies produced excellent re- AultA In cases of lympbocytic And monocytic leukemia. While we cannot regard this new drug AA A cure for cancer. it doe: offer promise AA An Adjunct to can- cer therapy. PAIN-KILLING DRUG A new pain-killing drug. one of the fastest-acting known. was re- vealed recently At An American Pt I ' Society meeting. The new compound is A Aynthetic product And in tests on Animals relieved pain In 10 minutes As compared with the 45 minutes required by morphine. Like morphine. this new drug belongs to A fAmiIy known as Anal- geslcs - Agents which case pAln without causing the patient to ion nsclousnesl. The new Analgesic also ll report- ed to have A long-lnsting Affect. QUESTION AND ANSWER. P.W.: I hAve been bothered for yean with persplring hands. Can you Advise me what to do? Answer: Excessive Aweatlng of the palms may be An indication of some general disorder. such as An Infection or perhaps even difficul- ty with the thyroid gland. In many cases. it is A localized condition. the cause for which cannot. be de- termlned. There Is no trutment that Items to be of Any particular value. Of course. A careful search Ahould be NOTES BY THE WAY”:- Pnpibbnmnlllb petintednktnnltbtnldnutd It. udsht Anny Impsunllu ti;luc.-PurtArtkArNAwACknn- iclA uperbnardin tl:UitAd Andpa StAtAAbAArlAeAtot.lIAAtIllIrIIl tuunoltzliioundnllercavllt Thenppallingunectaftbialllhl (Act untuoniany lndlvldunll tlirowthetrul pnunnAIngut- tenudalteyn tnteadofu-uh cans.-Det.mltFrAAPreu Toronto lakes prlda In the fact that it IA first in some thing: -- nnt subway In CAnAdA: first mun- Alclpal underground parking gn- rage. Little however. has been said of its priority In Another field where It IA first not only in Canada but Also first on the whoIA conti- ment. Toronto kills more persons per lllJ.0Il).0Ill miles than compar- able cities. Driving in Toronto is dudly. - Tomato Telegram Ialatriahlilvumpou u.Ad,AAlkAIAAlt:IelAAhy- in man In BAA! Kazakhstan.- In-IIAAA And Anus: than day: an AA critical of conlarinity that It taku A man of real eourAiiA And independence of mind to dart to go Along with tbs crowd.-Ed inontnn Journal It In boconu A national cllclu to Aay t.hAt. lryou can live in Can- ada you can live Anywhere. Like inoAt cliches. il'A hue. We endure And even thrive on Aub-urn bllsti in Winter. Awelterm. heat In Sum mu-. We Are part-Eskimo. part-Zn lu. And more Adaptable than eiili Ar.-London Free Press UIII Board. Board. NOTICE TO EMPLOYERS All employen of Labour within the Province. both Rtlldenl and non-Resident. employing three or morn workmen must register their operations promptly with the Woi-kmen's Coin- pensation Board. The Responsibility of protecting his workmen lie: with the employer And heavy penAltIeA will be levied "Dun any employer who carries on operations And falls to report. to None: to WORKMEN It ll important to you to know wbethar or not you Are cov- ered under the Woi-kmen'A Compensation Act. Ask your Em- ployer when hiring on with him If be In registered with the If lbera If! three or more workmen At tbA lame time em- ployed In An InduAtry within the scope of tho Act, It is compul. Aory for the employer to Regular with the Board. For Any Information or Advice - write to: THE W0llKMEN'8 COMPENSATION BOARD. 13 Eulton Strut. Charlottetown. wall by mean of Insurance. minutes. Why take chAncAA? Supplemental Covers. Our experience of over In the midst of Success you may suffor Disaster Although you cannot Atop the wlnduorm. or the lightning At the earthquake. or AlwAyA tlic flu. you can erect An economic A lifetime of gathering And IIVIIII may dlAAppAA The only lure Aafegua 6 LI Adequate Insurance. Including Consult our Agents. or writA or call on HYNDMAN 8: CO. LTD. lAAArAneA llneo It'll Aurancn Underwriters, IA It your d In Afow uni-ten of A century. AA In- poAAl. IALLET OF THE IANDPIPEBO AA waves break At the edge of the Ahote . The Aandpiper corp: retmcn A frontal Aurge. for the surf IA I'I'l0l'I Than the corps do ballet displac- eA. Playfully venturing forth. then luck. They Aklm the rim of the neon In deft sllsuden Along A trAck Dulgned for undulant motion. Appearing to skate. they Arace- fully veer In lrcl that reflect An Inner Rhythmic sense. which never pre- venla A pause for A pick-up dinner. -EIIAA Lieberman in the lbw York Tlmu. OUR YESTERDAYS from Ilia Guardian l'IleA TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (Aunt I, I082) No Aulhorative Atatement hAI yet Appeared AA to the Attitude of the BrIIlAh delegates At the Im- perial Emnomlc Conlerenco to- wards A removal of Ilia embargo on Canadian Potatoes - A matter of considerable Importance to Mar- ltlme Agricultural producers. And particularly to P.E.l. farmers. Minute! of Agriculture. ban been ulld in Ottawa for consultation which may knvA to do with INA matter. After Aome Amendments to AIAAA And ApeclfIcAtInnA had been mndo v ' bnckbenchcts having made their ervwhere In the war Mn and SOUR . 0 0 mm" Atier. y Tllllfrlll :eCTl'mOU?l!!'el Aource of ,n,,,l:':".m'l.'b:""C:':'c':.'ll warned nntudlv IAA F . Inn This was the professor of philo- trouble between Bi-ItAin'A wnrtlme Q... 1. 3,. H". .( cmlnxn u "E c”-- 0' "9'l"9'l 0' "if NI" Aophy who Aeptn no time pliiluo- purilament And IA leader was wmmhnn 0' I IIIIPIIMOII IIIIIIIIIIIIII Of plilslu And the Paymuler GeAer- u Intermittent quarrel. A Ann of ' 33.3 III A In of I. will Alwbonanuotiiuigntanuolo parliamentary AAulAA.AAiIItA Indeed:-Adnrclndopractlcalty wnhpAy'rtilAwAAuielinioceAteAAAAwAAAevernAAAtionAd.IA- Illllhbtllrlctwnrl cameallkeonesertouadiffereace twemerbeanlnlnaoceuionnerw TKTIACAOO Izlaston C:I':'Iill"r with Brl- reintewed AAAtn"n.d:,- Malt!!!” fl"?! 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Qnfljfllidt. tk ggggj Dw&In&(3lI'eIdnllAb-i Anuryaauiuuareenynuniaa NIfrIlAclcII.IIAlAA- apqgqpiygcg-..,.'AA.g land Inclalundhuinf hmhwnigdlh, K IIshjhvQ 8h'd.ydwn. 3&1 than hI&d.IAclA- iIntAAnd.aA;khAAA(: E13 whit - x 1 made for the cams, Ao that it an 0"l00II CUIPIONGMWI - IIIDCIIHO - MOIMIIIO - MMPIOI be eliminated. t "W A99 Old 5 0”! frcwnlligg In the o.x.? Thor: In that Aeatteroth. And -. yet Inerenuth . . tliA liberal Aoul . mu be :1: to 7;: or: Ktip Abretk IV A AA Elmull. - EH DCICh with homo-road CANADA REVIEW Keep in touch with home nan - sports, finance, politics and current Avonta. Canada Wnolzly Raviow - tho only Canadian paper edited and published in Gnot Britain is on solo at loading hotels and nun-stands. Fost cable news piwu you A weekly noon on Canadian affairs and hoo- FUNNI- ON IALE IVEY IIDAY AIIIWIMIEII everywhere in the UK. Onlyddpnuqy OYAIJIMID IVK Anuninuinuuninninuuninxnsnann onwnuuunanyun E-."'g3"o::-"'li-2""”"'”""""""" Ell