i l Lorrn Prineu Edwarli l.\lali(|>|4IkI Illv 09" ,.",,”m,,,, “.9”, “.,.,,K.,,m mm-n.ng al H353 Prmc-: Slice: :h4l’|"HS‘llI'-I'll. [‘ls2.l.. by the 'l‘lioir.~lin (‘0iI1l"~'l"." Md lam A Burnoll. i’llhllSh(.‘l an!‘ lloilcral Mdnalel Frank ivalkcr F‘..-lilo! Membci (‘anariinn Hall} .\li-lvsvallul‘ Publishers Association Member oi Fhe (‘anndian Press Member Adun Bureau or (iircululiuns Erswn «mice: at Summcrsldc Montague and Albfllun !U'lIN‘§P"lP.d '\lalion:iIl_v nv Thomson NewSl'I3P€|'5 Aclxcrtlsini Service M King Street West Toronto, Ont 640 Calhcarl st.. Montreal 1030 West Georgia st, Vancuui By ('ai'l‘ior Charlottetown. Summcrside 30c I??? Week- By Mail elsewhere in P.E.I. $9.00 per annum. Other Provinces and United States $12.00 per annUm- “T he strongest, memory is ificalccr than ' t/zeioea/nest ink. , i*Ai;E’T-“T WEDNESDAY, Al>iilI._:2, 3958 Great Responsibility The overwhelming indorsement which the Diefenbaker Governmeflt received at the polls on Monday has l made political history in Canada. The electors cut through all the confus- ion of party issues and Voted, 1'0 would seem, on the one simple D1"0' position—whether or not Mr. Diefen- baker should be given reasonable time and opportunity to carry out his policies. And they g3Ve an _em' phatic affirmative. Perhaps not since Sir John A. Macdonald’s time has one personality so captivated the public mind. That the Conservative leader cast an almost mesmeric spell over some of the crowds he addressed was the testimony of newspaper men Who followed him. He was the stormy platform orator, “a veritable Sava- ronola. in accusation,” as the Ottawa Journal called him, “yet with remark- able gifts of exposition and defence and an ability to take his audiences to the heights of imagination.” One cannot always live on the heights; and it will be Mr. Diefen- baker's task to show the same out- standing qualities of leadership in the routine chores of government as he exhibited in two election cam- paigns and in the hectic nine months’ i’(T;hr 1iaii*:li.:un. 'l«.s.=r :9 lll"9..<I3,lll"4l'l'm “I H“ l l,‘.'l'l°].’1l‘.'4lf the Varioug natiolls and vita l \' 0 » ‘ ' . the organizatlolls. Included am0nE , - ' _ d the 131,81. are thp Lnited Nations an Bellelllx nations. _ prefi- Caliada, too, will have an im -» . . i , d We building at the‘ “d0r1'dtSG::i:id:Iin a display which Will epic d I unusual manne1‘,- including a mO.e. seawav’. flashing maps’ model t0,W.r;” and other similar attractions. Whl e suggestions have been made that our country’s exhibit could have been more truly Canadian, yet the general theme should I91‘0V9 Of Inter’ est to the millions of visitors who are expected to visit the fair. A Public Demand Touching on the case of the 1,000 Canadian-built automobiles which were not allowed to be shipped to China because of the displeasure of the United States’ State Department over such business, the Ottawa Jour- nal asks this question: “Can” or merit want to compel a firm doing business in Canada to adopt a course which diverges from Canadian Gov- ernment policy? Suppose, for ex- ample, Canada made a trade treaty with’ Communist China and motor cars were among the goods included in the treaty; would a subsidiary like the Ford Company be able to say that it was not affected by the treaty, that in the matter of trade with China its position must be de- termined by Washington?” ‘ In a similar vein the Toronto Globe , and Mail comments: “Evidence ac- cumulates that the United‘ States is hardening its view that Canada is to be regarded merely as an accommod- ation market. As the record expands it also becomes increasingly clear that Canada’s status as an economic satellite is ‘being directed from Wash- ington”. ' interval between -them. His huge majority imposes an additional bur- dcn upon him and his supporters in Parliament. -They must keep “the common touch,” under peril of suffer- ing the same fate as their Liberal predecessors incurred when they for- got the source from which their power arose. \ There is indication of the Prime Minister’s awareness of this fact in his sober words on election night. He referred to “the vote as having imposed “a tremendous obligation of humble public service," and pledged his party, as its primary duty. “to give the people and the country good government.” That, of course, implies consideration for the rights and priv- ileges of the Opposition, and of giving it every facility to function energet- ically and efficiently. Now that the campaign is over, and stable government insured for the next few years, the people will expect a cessation of partisan poli- tics. There are many problems to be tackled, and not even the Diefen- baker Government with all its ma- jority can do this alone. It will need the ‘continued goodwill and under- standing of all our citizens if it is to achieve its high objectives. “The true measure of success in political leadership,” says the Prime Minister, as if in answer to our thoughts, “is the success of one’s country.” That is a maxim that might well be engrav- ed upon the office doors of all his Cabinet members. World Fair At Brussels People from all parts of the world, including many Canadians, will flock to Brussels this spring for the World's Fair, an event which prom- ises to be something different from ,the usual type of such an exhibition. All universal and international ex- hibitions have so far been lists in which the nations enter to defend their colors; tournaments of thought and art, of commerce and industry. The forthcoming exhibition at Brus- sels, although faithful in its form to an already 100-year—old tradition, will be something far more than a contest.‘ Fifty countries and the principal international organizations are meeting this time to build to- gether one single city, the prototype of that city, where in future, man will pursue in harmony a destiny which is both collective and indivi- dual. In the words of Jacques Dumont, editor of the official infoi'm:iti<>ll bulletin of the Brussels universal and international exhibition: “What a stirring problem confronts us in this second half of the 20th century, while under the impact of tremend- ous discoveries, our gaze begins to probe the fascinating depths of the iioblil:-ie and the galaxies, the very orbits of the atonis. To remalie lilllll amidst all this!” The Brussels Exhibition will not be a commercial venture of the usual , All over the country similar views are being expressed. The people will demand of the Federal Government not only a thorough investigation into this particular case but a firm and irrevocable decision that ‘Canada henceforth will, as Mr. Diefenbaker put it recently, “pursue her own destiny in matters of trade and other policies in her own way”. A EDITORIAL NOTES Now let’s get that Causeway sur- , vey speeded up! I 4. .. . You cannot eat your cake and have it. But Newfoundland came pretty close to it in returning a large quota of Lilieral members despitethe more‘ than favourable treatment it received . under the Diefenbaker Government. 5 t w in President Tito of Yugoslavia sent Nikita Khrushchev a. message‘ of con- gratulations on “your ‘election’ to the Premiership of the Soviet Union”. Comrade Tito certainly has a sense of humor, whatever else he may lack. '" 1 1- t . In Tauton, Eng., 21 man was charg- ed with stealing petticoats. The magistrate, whose sense of justice was tempered with a touch of humor, ‘decided that the! offence was a tem- case. Q C C It is not generally known that the fictional V character Dr. Jekyll and Mr. die’s ose, Edinburgh. Robert Louis Stevenson patterned the story after carpenter Deacon Brodie, who lived there, burgled in his spare time, and died on the gallows in 1788. Q Q C , A report from Washington says that “the Congress has displayed less than passing interest in the Can- adian election”. It is strange but true that some members of Congress don't even know that Canadians have the . privilege of voting. They, are under the impression that our affairs are controlled by the British Govern- - ment. A * -Av i The National Geographic Society- Palomar Observatory Sky Survey, called the most extensive map ever conceived by the mind of man, charts three-quarters of the heavens. Its 1,758 telescopic photographs would cover a tennis court, and are expect- material for a century. . O i There will be general regret at the defeat of that gallant public figure, Mr. M. J.Coldwcll, who has announc- ed that he will never again seek elec- tion though he will continue to main- tain an interest in CCF affairs. One does not need to S(l(‘l£lll,\‘l ii-. sllliscrilie to his in l‘m'riglil7.+~. Ml‘. Cold\\'ell’s gi'c.zi|_. siliccl'll.y and ability. All C-aliada wishes him well, what- \' i iiw s ever the future may hold for him. should the _United States Govern-' ISOURIS LIGHHQUSE i OTTAWA REPORT_ Ottawa: “We have the right to deiterlminie our ‘own destiny at all times in our own way, and without dictation in any form from any other country.” . That could be the Canadian Creed: that should be the basis of tlhe belief of all Canadians in Canadian sovereignty. Every Ca- nadian politician slhould assert ; 0a.nada’s basic right, as express- ed in these terms. . The words were spoken by the Right Honorable John Diefenbak- er, Prime Minister of Canada, three days before the election. No doubt Liberal Leader Lester Pearsoii, C. C. F. Leader Cold- well, and Social Cr-edit Leader Solon Low would endorse those words spoken biythe Con‘- .servative Leader. For that creed is at the heacnt of the most im- portant single event which has happened in Canada for very many years. 'Ilhat creed must be porary “slip” and discharged the' I-I/yde is commemorated in Bro-' 1 ed to provide astronomers with study . the mainspring from which im- mediate action and long term policy will spring, to‘ implement the Diefenbaker‘ policy of “Can- ada. for Canadli-ans.” CARS FOR CHINA Mr. Deifenbaloer was referring to the case of "the order for 1,000 Canadian - made cars, to be sold to Communiistyohinia. ’Illia~t order was turned down, not by the aut- omobile lfiactory in Canada, em- ploying Ciamadlan workei's;' it was turned down by a group of Amer- States, who control the affairs of that automobile factory in Can- ada. The reason they tiulrned down -the order was because the U.S. government in 'Waisihlngit~on had told them to do so, and had threatened them with the penalty of a fine of $10,000 and 10 years imprisonment if they dtsiolbeyed. It is absolutely intolerable that employment for Canadian work- ers, and the panticipaition of Can- adian companies in the export markets of the world, should be controlled by another country. Canada must have the right -to control her own destiny, without _ in the Soviet The Atlantic Ocean has_becn studied with comparative thor- oughness, but as yet mankind knows little about the laws of the various phenomena occurring over it and in its depths. For the large number of deep-water hy- draulic observations made have not been systematic and, there- fore, the sequence of the geophys- ical phenomena of time has not been traced. All this makes it dif- ficult and, at'tim.es, impossible to establish the interrelation be- tween various symptoms and phenomena, and retards prognos- is of entire series of elements of the ocean condition and its influ- ence on atmospheric circulation. It is therefore not fortuitous that investigation of the Atlantic ocean holds an important place in the program of the Interna- tional Geophysical Year. The scientists of the Soviet Union have assumed the obligation of in- vesligating the Atlantic intensive- ly. In this connection an Inter- Departmental Atlantic Expedition has been set up which includes scientific workers from a numb- er of ministries and administra- tions. The tropical area of the Atlan- tic ocean between the .-'\7.0l‘€S and Cape Verde Islands is to be inves- tigated by an expedition. under the guidance of Docent M. M. Kazansky, which .,has already set sail on board the Sedov. EXI’EI)lTIONARY V'ESSF‘.I. ln\'(‘.\'liQ;ilioii,.< Elro nlui lioiii: oxiil‘rliiiiiilaijV' \'(‘—;'-.l*‘i, lllP _\likli2il l:f‘0Il’lOnn=:n\'_ P;‘<D{‘(‘lFill_\' built the Al'?a('i0Il]}' of Scloliccs. ican businessmen, in the United- , Cclncidoi’s Boisic Right By Patrick Nicholson Special Correspondent for The Guardian driction from any other country as Prime .Minister Diefeubaker stated.‘ The case of the 1,000 cars for China has aroused do much pub- lic attention, and has precipitat- ed such a preponderance of righ- teous Il.u':LI/l()_Ila.'1liSl.i(! indignation in Canada, that it has at long last fociissed our overdiue attention upon the manner in which we have been selling ourselves down the river to the Americans. This surge of anger rigiht across Can- alda will compel some serious i7h.in‘kiin*g on 1:-h-iis who-Ie subject of iforeiign inivesitmesnt in Canada, and, is likely to have widespread and long -- lasting -beneficial effects upon our national economy. That is why I say that the case of the 1,000 cars is the most im- portant single event which has happened in Canada for very many years. , . OUR FOREIGN MASTERS‘ Nobody will deny -that we need the assistance of foreign capital in developing our wonderful and ablirld-an-t natural resources. But similarly, nobody in their right mind could deniy that the manner in which that foreign capital is taking over the control of our country, our trade and our jobs is notihliinig short of a national dis- aster. - There are two ifonms,in which we can admit foreign capital. One is as loan capital, which re-‘ presents the specific liability to repay the exiact amount of the loan on a stilpullated date, and which carries no rights to control the enterprise for which it is loaned, exicept iv case of default of repaylmenfts. e other form in which we can admit foreign capital is a-s equity capit-all, car- rying VOl’Jl!I'lg rights and control; not repayable; not representing a specific lialblllty; and whose value will expand and grow as the‘ wealth of Canada eicpands and grows. The imunenise growth in foreign equity capital in Canada, almost exclusively coming from the Un- Atlantic Ocean Mysteries By Academician V. Shuleikin Head of Inter-Departmental Atlantic Expedition News Bulletin ies. equipped wil.h the latest types of scientific a.nd technical apparatuses. The vessel can drop anchor to a depth of 32,800 feet. This expedition is headed by A. A. Ivanov, Doctor of Physico - Mathematical Sciences. The Equator and the Sevastn- pol are to investigate the North Atlantic. From February to Ap- ril and from August to October 1958 they will make oceanograph- ic surveys of over ten different aspects. Primary attention will be de- voted to the problem of heat con- ditions of the Atlantic ocean and the atmosphere. Practically all the vessels are equipped with an- tom at i c recording ‘apparatus- es which continuously register heat translation and radiation from the ocean surface. This com- plex apparatus is of domestic manufacture and operates with great precision under any condi- tions of navigation. Aerological surveys will provide extremely vahiable data on the movement of air masses from the Atlantic to the European and As- ian continents. ELECTRICAI. CURRENTS The electrical currents arising in the ocean waters will be thor- oughly studicd. And this will pro- vide broad opportunities for the application of the electro magne- tic method of measuring currents. Observation of the Earth’s arti- ficial salclliles will clarify this (‘l|l1flll(‘li‘(l .in the Allnillii’ by an‘ problem still more. For the mons- lirin: ins|l'ilmonl.< react in imliir. I live r,l.ll'rc-ills ari.<in: in the ncpan by 1 This I vessel has zl (li.<=:i:wrlilclll of 960 tons. It carries 16 laborator-l coming from beyond the bound- waters under the inflllcnre of the Earth's magnetic field and also the €lCCll‘0- magnetic radiation PUBLIC FORUM 0 This column is open to the discus- sion by col-respondenta of question of interest. The’ Guardian dues not neces- lnrlly endorse the opinion of corres-_ ponden‘ . \ ‘ TROUT PONDS FOR TOURISTS Sir,— A bit of confusion exists as the result of an article ap- pearing recently in the press re- garding the closing of certain trout ponds until July 1st. for the benefit of the tourist. There is no cause for alarm among the fish- ermen as this action will not be taken on any of the existing ponds. If it is done in the next two or three years it will be with newly constructed dams or re- constructed mill-dams especially situated and suitable for that purpose. The idea is not new and has a lot of merit because it would cer- tainly improve tourist-resident re- lations and show the non-resident that when we advertise wonder- ful fishing we can at least show him a good place to cast a line. It is the intention of the De- partment of Industry and Natural Resources to instigate .work along this line this present sum- mer and the Fish and Game'As- soclation will cooperate with them to the fullest. If any fisher- man has any difference of opin- ion on this matter a good place to express that-. opinion would be at the Legion Hall, Tuesday the 8th, when the monthly meeting of the Queens County Branch takes place, or at any County meetings which are regularly held. We are, Si-r, etc., P.E.I. FISH AND GAME ASSN. R. E. JENKINS, President ited States, has occurred in the Past twenty years. It has reach- i_ad_~11he point where huge suibsid. iiarie-s of Almerican parent com. ipanies now dominate whole in- dustries, so tihat Cianadas develop menl» Canda”-9 export trade. and even _Ca-nadian employlmlen-t, in ~bhos_e industries are entirely sunb- servlent to decisions made in the _Umlr'9d 5't‘_aleS, by Americans, and in the light of the best in- terest-s of America and Ameri- can-s. Canadian iuiterestis are quite disregarded. The autrinoolbile in. dustry, concerned in the case of the 1.000 cars, is the most gilar. 1'11lz.eXalInip1e of this unhappy sit- uation, tor it i-s so controlled by U.S. interests that 98 per oenfl; of total sales in Canada originate from U.S. controlled establish- merits. That is cerl.ainily not Ca.nad1'l3n mastery in Canada. arms of our planet. The electro- mafznietic method of current mea- surement may be widely used to steer vessels. Soviet. scientific expeditions win devote considerable attention in the study of sea currents, their nature and. causes. Currents‘ will be determined by different me. thods _in order to obtain a critical appraisal of each method and to establis-h.which is most. reliable. In the open ocean is is difficult to determine the drift of a ship ghurlns hydrological stationing. Al- Ough deep ~ water anchoring makes for greater accuracy of 10bS€I‘Vai1OI‘l. the ship neverthe- §}ss moves around the anchor ca- .e and this influences determina- tion _of the current elements. A Special device has been construc- ted which eliminates error and facilities determination of the ves. se1’s shift. OCEAN STORM WAVES The_I‘e is now a new means of Studylnt-I ocean storm waves. For- merly only separate me a. surements were made and on the basis of their analysis empir- lc curves were drawn and form- ulae evolved according to which the authors attempted to fore. cast the dimensions of waves by a definite wind speed, the time of action, and the character of the S021. Soviol ph_\/sicists Stlltlyiili: t St’-‘H. Snvicl pli_vsicisl.< stlldying the Dlfllllwri to lake n.1f‘F.lNlll’Pn'_\P[1f5 nl‘ SP3 \\':-I\'(-‘:: \rllirl:1 makes it pg-_;. sihle to P.\l'll'PS.< the dependence of these fluctuations with greater accllracy. During the forthcoming cruises stereophot-o surveys, etc. The oc- Terms Used For Heart Disease By Herman N. Ri,liid6sen. 3' ‘- CORONARY thrombosis. my0' cardial infarction, _atherosclei‘o. ‘ sis, arteriosclerosis you V9 ‘ heard all these words used n con- nection with heart dlsease. B-us. do you know what they meat}- 1 i_,-_,,- not to bc technical in writing about health D1‘0_b19m5- but I realize that occasionally medical terms such as these find their way into my columns. MEANING OF TERMS _ So I thought you might be “" terested in knowing What “E953 words mean and at the same time . learn a little more about heart; disease. _ 1 In coronary heart disease. not enough blood flows through the coronary arteries. Thus. some muscle of the heart is deDP1V€d of the oxygen and nourishment It needs. Antherosclerosis is the under- lying cause of the trouble. DISEASE OF ARTERIES Ant-heroclerosis is a slow-devel- oping disease of the arteries which thickens the inner lining the blood vessel wall. A mass_1s formed within this thickened lin- ing by deposits of fats, protein, cholesterol and phospholipids. Eventually, calcium also may be deposited in this mass and we then have arteriosleros-is, or har- dening of the arteries. As more and more deposits are made, the opening in the vessel becomes smaller and smalle and the blood has more difficulty get- ting through. BLOOD CLOT FORMS Sometimes a blood clot, or thrombosis, may form on the mass, closing the vessel even more. When this happens i.n a vessel which supplies blood to the heart, we call it, a coronary thrombosis. When the flow of blood through an artery is blocked entirely we call it coronary occlusion or I heart attack. Now most such attacks are not fatal. You will feel weak and have a chest pain, but generally, the flow of blood increases’ through undamaged coronary arteries and you will recover{ DAMAGED VESSELS REPLACED The muscle of the heart‘-sen ved by the blocked artery re- ceives oxygen from nearby ar- teries until the body establishes a. new system of blood vessels to replace the damaged ones. T-his temporary lack of oxygen, even though it usually is brief, generally causes some damage to the heart muscle. This injury is called myocardial infarction. This probably is an oversim- plification, but it wiflll give you an idea of whatcauses a heart at- tack and what some of the med- ical terms mean. i QUESTION AND ANSWER A.D.: I had a Caesarean for my first child. Does this mean I will have to have my second child this way also. Answer: In most cases, once a Caesarean section has een per- formed, it is better to have the second child delivered the same way. depending on the cause for the first operation. However, in a certain few cas- es, when a patient is carefully watc'hed,'there is very litle dan- ger in a person going through a‘ normal delivery after having a Caesarean. The Age‘Old Story I, saith the Lord, will be unto her a wall of fire round about, and will be the glory in the midst other. He that toucheth you tou- cheth the apple of his eye. %efi&c2m l T0 TI-iE SPACEMEN _ Dissect the rose to find lihe fila- ment.. Say 1ight.‘s a wave and beauty‘; in the eye. That Sum-mer's cloud is but an accident, Of sunand wind, and song a tem- pered cry Taught by a little breath and too soon spent, Rechart the cratcred moon and ocicumy . The stars, and on some massive continent In space as yet unvisioned worlds ' espy. And one (lay seeking on a dark fi‘onl.'1er Where time is turned and space; uubent once more, , Look back and see the undimmed shores of light, And strain to Cal.'Cl’\ upon the in-. ner ear The distant, music mute in you before . And all the awful power of your flight. —-Irwin Sil.a*i‘ik in the New York Times. of the expeditionary vessels it. is planned to take measurements of the height and length of waves in several ways, including the use of wave gauges of diverse design, can surface will be phoiograplied simultaneously by several “slol." cameras. This is the first little filial sea expeditions will study the aero- dynamic field at different alti- tudes above the water surface, This will offer possibilies for re. liable corrections in the determin. ation of the height of storm waves by means of the barometric me- thod which consists in the meag. urcmenl. of the difference of the pressure between the summit and the base of waves. The expeditions will also engage in studying the ocean’s chemis- try. the geological structure of its bottom, gen-magnetic and gravi- molric 0h.’<Pl"V3llfll‘|S. nirrsnunr 0“1‘S1‘ER,5 ‘ will have to do some tough P"0b' Al least 1.2 principal species of; edlble Oysters are found in the‘ temperate seas of the w,,,.m_ ‘ l NOTES BY THE WAY 7'VVV> A brain specialist was called in rhéck 3 man who had been ar- rested 10 times for speed“-3 He 1ng._.New Glasgow News Children are difficult. 1’*oir_ ex- ample. so many of them fall to grasp the difference between truth and the stuff‘ going Under the same name which is acceptable t0 g«rownups.—Winnipes Trlbune Dr. William George. of Cm-, cieth, Caernarvonshire, marked; his 93rd birthday by announcing that he has complete}! 61 5°01‘ which will throw new light on the ~ life and character of his brothel’- the late Lord Lloyd George. Des- crlbing the book, “My B1‘0l3h°1‘ and 1," he said that none of the biographies so far had revealed the real Lloyd George.—Loud0u Times ouR YESTERDAYS (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (April 2. 1933) The Industrial Committee of the Board of Trade, composed of Messrs. T. E. McNutt, J.D. Jen- kins. S. T. Green, H. C. Bourke, C. L. Ma~cKay and N. Ratteubury. waited on the local Government yesterday morning and presented a brief regarding the patronizing of home industries. Every consid- eration was promised. The hall, warehouse and store of Mr. Austin A. Ramsay of Con- way was totally destroyed by fire late last night. Mr. Ramsay and his family had retired for the night and were awakened shortly after 11 o'clock to find the hall on fire. Some of the contents of the store were moved, but no- thing could be saved from the hall or warehouse. TEN YEARS AGO, (April 2. IMS) The annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Potato Growers . Association protest- ed strongly by resolution yester- day evening against the recent '21 per cent freight rate increase giv- en Canadian Railroads and went on record as requesting that the whole case for the Maritimes be reviewed. ‘Radio Station OHGS, owned and opera/cal by R. T. Holman, I.itd., Sumimerscide, for the last twenty- four years closed permanently on Wednesday night. A license has been issued to other parties to op- erate a station in Summersude but no public announicement has yet been made. . - FOR RENT Floor Sanders and Edger: also Floor Sealers and Vamlshes for sale CHANDLER BROS. 1 Plywood Place Dial 6557 QUEEN smear MEAT MARKET FULL LINE or" MEAT AND FISH GOODS AND VE ETABLES Free Delivery ANY SIZE ORDER on Spring sales of wiilneil‘5 f,...h', ions are said In hold the key to curing‘ the recession. Prosperity in other words, is in the bag, Stratford Beacon-Herald ‘ed to $3,924,731, or $39 per canlias. but by the end of 1957 it had ‘ risen to nearly $70,000,000. or $337 per capita. Yet in 1947, A1berta‘s debt was $144,966,823 or $175 pm- capita, while today the province's debt stands at $30,817,607, or $23 per capita. And this could be Wlp. ed from the books any time the Herald The business of government has become so complex that Parlla. ment and the legislatures cannot. supervise the execution of every detail. of every enactment. But what MP's and,MLA's ca do, and should do, is to comb through existing laws to make sure thai no statute confers arbitrary pow. ernmcnt board that cannot bq challenged in the courts. The‘ in. _ dividual must. be given the right of recourse in every instance... Winnipeg Tribune alarm clock that rings half a dozen times at four-to-five min. lite intervals after being shut off. This enables you to catch those precious 40 winks and at the same time reduces the daiigar of time. It eliminates the necessity of arising with the first ring. The only improvement that comes to , mind would be to eliminate the alarm clock.—-Minneapolis T1-1. bune MAXIMS The best executive is the one who has sense enough to pick" good men to do what he wants done,‘ and self-restraine enough i to keep from feddling with them while they do it. c2z1z‘é.so.i: Ci: CHARLOTTETOWN ’ C/l .V<,)L78(’/.‘c7l(lS‘i\' 7 fr! .5.’ >‘»’P/,"(?I"‘.‘ 113 Kent St. ~ PROFESSOR OF required by Normal College Qualifications: A degree in physical education from a at least five years experien _as a teacher or physical educs-M. tion in the public schools in al levels from Primary to High, School. Salary according to qualifi cation and experience. APPLY TO .r Nova Scotla Civil Service 7-. Commission P.O. Box 943.: 7336--DIAL-—-7336 Halifax, Nova Scotia _"““l . SERVICE 70!! CAIIDEPEND ON BOWLAN RADIO 8: TV 114 Pownul St. J A{__—:1 . 1‘llJ_‘l l.‘l!.l.SS_I!‘.S 159 QUEEN ST. Easter finery for all the girls!, An adorable array of coats suits. dresses and etc. for big 311 little, sister newest spring styles fabrics colors an etc. See, select yours today.’ "Repul-ation Based on Service" HOLMES and BRADLEY. DIAL 3414 I .. In 1047. Calgary's debt amll1ll\t.-- - 7 -.». government wanted to.—-Calgary = ers on a civil servant or a gov. Now the.V’vc come out with an I ‘ ' sleeping too late to get to work on “ PHYSICAL EDUCATION,‘ 1 1 Department of Education gfi -5. for ii cognized college or universitw Ii ,/‘lint, i Near Queen ii