Publnbed Ivory wool-cu morning II In I"l'In('I in-cu. (:nIi lottetown. P.E.l.. by Tho Thommn Company Limited "C010?! Prlllo Illlrl llllld LIII OI Del" Editor. Funk WIIker Gone:-IIQIIIIIII. III A. Innun lunch olfjcu ll Summers-dc. Munllgul Ina Alnermn. Aulbo Lied In Second CIIII MIII by the Pan Oillco Depuunent. 0u.1wI. 51 (Inner: Ctl'Irlull('l0WlI. summn-.uaI Ii.5.oo per Innum. Elsewhuo tn P.E.l. 89.00. other Provnm-II Ind US. IlI.(li' per Innum "Tho Itrongut memory II weaker IIIII the weakest link." MONDAY. MAY 9. I955 Useless Recriminaiions There has been an angry debate in the House of Conimons. with the Hon. George Drew on the one side and Ministers Martin Ind Garson on the other, over responsibil- THE GUARDlANl -Party, calls ”political humbug"! its vast circular tower dornlnating the sur- rounding waters and its lovely oval stair- case soon to gain fame as Scotland's finest. Humbug What dreary events elections would be, to be sure. but for what Mr. Herbert Mor- rison. deputy leader of Britain's Labour He was referring to the Government's most re- cent dhapter in its pre-election tax slash- ing adventure: the removal of sales taxes from various classes of textiles produced in the Lancashire mills. Of course, Mr. Morrison is right in looking upon this gen- lerous gesture as I vote-catching device; indeed. no one on the Conservative side has bothered to dispute the allegation. although somebody did say that it would ity for the alleged failure of the i945 Fcrlcral-Proviiii-isil Conference. Mr. Drew blames the Fcdci'al authorities of that day; he says they came to the conference unprepared. and uninformed as to the real nccds confronting the Canadian economy. His opponents. on the other hand. blame Mr. Drew. who at the time was Premier of Ontario; they say he wanted more for affni-ri to pay. That. at any rate. is the gist of the argumcnt: and. if we may say so. it is a case of much ado about nothing, at least as far as present problems are con- rerncd. especially in the field of unemploy- -ms-nt. For sonic i'cason- probably for a iiiim- ber of reasons--the i949 "Green Book" proposals. including a federal public in- vestment program. federal care of able- bodied unemployed. national health insur- nice. and a few other things. were not ac- cepted by the Provinces. Perhaps it would have been better if they had been. not- iwithstanding the Prime Min.ister's state- ment the other day that. had the various programs gone through. the Government would now find itself in I state of "finan- cial embarrassment". In any case. this is 1955. and there are problems, plenty of them. which cannot be solved by dickcr- lnszs over mistakes. miscalculations. or bad -find-gements-perhaps Ill three-of ten years ago. It may be exhilarating to the politic- lens to engage in wordy and useless re- criminations: but it is no consolation to the unemployed-nor. for that matter, to Provincial authorities in their efforts to do something constructive towards easing the situation before another winter gives tithe Federal Government its perennial ex- vcuoe for treating the problem of unemploy- -ment as a ”scnsonal" misfortune. 4 Eisenhower's Castle Ctilzean, President FJisenhowei”I Scot- lmah castle home. is now attracting the first influx of I955 visitors. expected to exceed Sfififlti people during the April-Sep- til-mher season. The castle is a long way. architecturally and geographically. from the President's new farm dwelling near Gettysburg. Pa. his golfing cottagc at. Augusta. f;a.. or the White House in Wasti- lngton. But more than these it links Mr. Eisenhowr-r with deeds that first won him I large place in history. For in 1945 the British Government turned over to him the castle) top-floor apartment. in recognition of his loadcrship of the Allied armics in Eiiropr rliiriiu: World War II. Allhoiigli the President has lifetime access to this ”home". he has stayed therc when he took .Vlrs. F.isenliower and tier molhcr to Culzcan's crenelated towers for I week's holiday. presidential duties will allow him soon again to see its huge ruined. ivy-draped gateway. the stoiiy iiiassiveness of! its walls. its floucrcd paths and terraces. or its noble cliffsirlc uniting. Long before llic National Trust of Scotland took the castle over and made a public shownlacc of it in 1945. Culzean was steeped in the lore of the past. When Robert Bruce (1274-1329). Scotland's king. was summoned by flares from the island of Arran 16 miles across the Firth of Clyde to assault the mainland and fight for his throric. he landed near the castle mp, Near by stand landmarks in the life of Scotland's beloved Robert Burns. who "wandered niony H w98I'.V T00" Rl0"2 ”m.V . native banks of Ayr." Less than ten miles l norlhcasl of the castle the poet was born in I759. The cottage in Alloway and his home in the town of Ayr welcome. visitors. Ciiizcaii Castle has its own Claims 0" liistory. although it is not a struCtlIt'P Of ancient lineage. Its construction stems from a lawsuit following the death of the eighth earl of Cassillis in 1762. A cousin. Sir Thomas Kennedy. fourth baronet of Culzean. was forced to court to establish his right to the earl's title. Thereupon he engaged Robert Adams, the most renown- ed of Scottish architects, to enrich the age- old lands of the Kennedy! Wml " famlly mansion marked by exterior grandeur and tntorlor xx-Ice. Adams. llmmltew "””'d' only twice. first in N46 and again in 1951 ' It is not likely lllllll e of I burial in Weotmlnnter Inch protect the industry from foreign com- ipetition. Whether the voters will takc .Vlr. Mor- ;rison's complaint seriously is another mat- 'ter: but it does not seem likely. in view of the fact that the Labourites are calling into service a little humour: of their own; and. of course. what is sauce for the goose -is sauce for the gander. Titus far in the- ME p,.m.im., man fhp (-,oV,,-"mam muidlcamtpaign Mr. Attlee and his advisers--' of uhom Mr. Morrison is chiefv-have been able to think up only one Conservative iii- iquity serious enough to warrant putting lthe rascals out-in the Labourite view. that is. . This. in their own words. is the Coii- ,servative failure "to get top level talks on lthe hydrogen bomb". But. surely, the lLabour'le.'-iders do not expect the British .people to believe for one moment that either Sir Anthony Eden or Cornier Prime :Minister Churchill is to blame for Rus- sia's obstinacy in the whole matter of ldisarmament. which includes everything lassociated with the hydrogen bomb. And to suggest. even with tongue in cheek. that the Conservative Government does not realize the gravity of the international situation. looks like a piece of hunrbug ilthat lacks even the appearance of credibil- .tity. which cannot be said of the Conserva- tive tax reducing formula. however closely related to political expediency it may be. The Labourites gave a very good ac- count of themselves in foreign affairs dur- ing the last Attlee administration. and there is little doubt of their ability to do so Igain if given the opportunity: but lthere can be few persons in Britain. or anywhere else. who believe that they have vricher diplomatic gifts to contribute to the nations service than the Conservatives 'have demonstrated during their term of office. No. it simply won't do. tical reasoning it lacks substance. fbug it. is much too amateurish. EDITORIAL NOTES A hundred years ago a few pair of buffaloes were imported into Northern lAiisrtralia from the East Indies. Now, they lare so plentiful that government-paid hunters are killing them off at the rate of .8000 a year. In addition. thousands are slaughtered by hunters who enter the con- ptest for the fun and adventure i As hum- n I o Not to be outdone by civic and political l leaders in extending hospitality to notables lbehind the mirtain. the British Council of Churches has invited Churches in the Sov- iict l'nion to scnd representatives to Brit- ain during the first two weeks of July. A Council spokcsman said he was fairly ccitiain that the invitation would be ac- cepted. The Archbishop of Canterbury says they can all stay at Lambcth Palace if they feel like it. i The Federal Advisory Comniittcc on Weather Control, an arm of the United States Congress. receives in the run of a year all sorts of suggestions from experts and iion-experts alike on how to keep the weather good. There is one proposal they had better not consider. if they don't want to injure American-Canadian relations: the erection of atomic powered fans along the international border t-o turn back bad weather coming from the North. One of the world's most ambitious irri- gation projects was inaugurated recently at Kotri. in West Pakistan. The dam. some three thousand feet long. spans the ,River Indus about 100 miles north-east of Karachi. Pakistan's capital. It will com- mand I total area of almost three million acres in Sind Province. and when the irrigation scheme is in full operation. it is expected that the regionis present output of crops will be multiplied five times. The waters will also feed a giant lake stretch- ing over forty-five square miles which will provide water for Karachi. as well as for new hydro-electric stations. The newly- irrigated land, the Govermnent has an- nounced. will be distributed among refu- gees Ind small-holdors. International ex- ports working under the United Nations , nlcol Assistance programme have pbrtldpated in various aspectI of the jben tt3I0l'M8lItofhll.PW' ' " IpItIIvIIeeIIIPl9W1- nut ln'lgIt.lon pnpjeot. As politu By Gerald p (fanadlnn Press. The clean-lincd sclumncrs that made Lunenburg I famed fishing port are vanishing from the seas. and the men who sailed them are boning to relentless. unromantic l progress. ; Scliuoucrs are being rcplared by stubby. uork-a-day (lraggers. regu- illar fishing machines. Schooners captured the imagination but drag- gers catch more fish. and they've doomed the sleeker ships as surely as railways doomed stagccuaclics. Draggers are built high from the watcr and most have dicscl en- gines that drive lhem faster than any sail and provide power for re- frigerated storage space. Schooncrs were long and low and trim as tomniycotl. built to race to the banks and home again with their perishable catch. Thcy car- ried 20 to 30 men. about twice as many as tlraggcrs. LONELY REMINDI-IRS Earlier in the century the twin spars of nearly l5fl scliooncrs made Lunenburt1's busy watci'front look like I leafless forest. Now only 17 or iii are left. lonely. sca-scarred reminders of the past. There are fewer than I dozen draggers. Nn schnoners have been built since the Second World War in lLunenburg's sliipyarrls. and some of those remaining have been con- verted to draggers. The sharp-eyed skipper who com- manded the greatest of them all has resigned himself to the new era. Capt. Angus Walters was mas- ter of the Bluenosc when. flesh from her launching here in 1922. she began her career by winning licrfirstlnternationalocean schooner race. The I40-foot vessel was the longest ever built here. The Bluennse-Walters team kept winning through the l!l2fls and '30s. and Bluenosc became one of Can- ada's proudest legends. Capt. Walters sold her in I940. and she didn't long survive. She grounded on I reef one stormy The Si-nalc rccninciies on Tucs- day. Thr Govcrnnicnl may soon have to face up to the qiicslion of what to do aboiil il. Senator W. D. Euler has introduced a bill that would make it obligatory to fill Senate vacancies within I reason- able time -- six months a(ter they occur. if the Senate approves the bill. it will go to thc House of Commons for debate mid tho Sen- . atc issue will then be squarely inl the Government's lap. The Government has three courses open to it. It can Imend the British North America Acts and abolish lhc Scnale. it can con- tinue the present process of abolish- ing the Senate picccmeal. by the slow attrition of leaving vacancies unfilled. Or it can embark on I vigorous program of Scnatc re- form. Abolition of the Senate has been advocated by some members of PurliImen . Yet. eien though the SenIte is so often treated Is one of our oldest public jokes. no one whn understands and values the principles of our federal consti- tution would advocate I nnlcameral Parliament. Continued criticism hIs created I mood in which the good work performed by the Senate is often overlooked. but it cannot be not Islde indefinitely, its functions II I parlinmentary watchdog. tak- ing I sober second look It the work of the House of Commons, are becoming more. not less. im- portInl as government become: more complex. The United Kingdom provides I particularly clear ll- lnuration of this tendency. There. the House of Lords is most ll- loglcally constituted; yet in recent years it has Ibly performed in- crensingly valunble work in revis- ing legislation: the good done by this revision lIII been admitted by socialist Is well as CnnservI- tlve politicians. But if it would be I mistake to Ibollsh the Sennte. I contlnuntion of the present policy of Illowlng it to die slowly. through failure on the part of the Government to fill vIcnnciu, ls juIt IrbId - Ind cownrdly Ilsa. it must mun tho! the Government would like to kill off the Senate but. reIlIzlng that public opinion would be Ignlnst it. llckn the cournge to do the job quickly. The only Icceptoblo course open to the Government II. therefore. tn reform the sonic. This I! not. Id- mtttodly. I course tbot Ippuls to elected polltlclans. They ITIIII. I l Schooner Fleet VdfllSllIllg The Senate's Future Winnipeg Free Press ifar along this line. The mere ad- .dlll0l'l of 21 Senators to be pres- Viiould-be Bellringersl Fret-man Lunenburg. N.S. night off Haiti. Ind waves pouiulcd her to pieces. Her wheel is preserved in I hotel here. and she's pictured skimming along in ”a living gale" on the back of Canadian dimes. Capl. Walters sold her to a firm that put her in trade in the West Indies. and ”it was the greatest mistake ever created." He blames the government be- cause he couldn't get the backing he needed to turn the Bluenose into a fislicrmenIs museum after he re- tired from the sea. Hc figures it would have been worth 'millions of dollars" to Nova Scotia's tourist industry. "When I knew I wouldn't see the Bliienose again it was like walk- ing out of a ccnictcitv." Capt. Walt- crs says. "But after 40-odd years at sea I wanted in stay ashore. it was I choice between the Bluenose and my dairy." CAN'T STOP PROGRESS ('apl. Waltcrs is 74 now and in a new era himself. He's been re- tired from the sea for l5 years. and is owner-manager of the town's only dairy. ”Whcthcr you're I farmer. fish- erman or fiddler." he says. ”you've got to keep up with the times. We all know machines have taken the place of hand labor. and the drag- ger is the latest method of fishing." But he's still I schooner man. "I think it's been proved in other countries that the tlragger has de- stroyed the fishing grounds. it scents the schooner can keep fish- ing in the same spot for years." Schooner fishermen rowed away from their ships in dories to hand- line for cod on the fishing banks. Draggers scrape the bottom with a lingo scoop that trails I not to gather everything in its path. Capt. Walters says that in places like the North sea draggers have so dis- turbed tlte bottom the fishing has becn ruined for years. i with some justice. that if second cliambers are given an inch they take a mile; if their influence is allowed to be significant It all, it inevitably ” enough to slow down intolcrably the work of government. But though this may often be true the Canadian Sen- ate surely is an exception; its pro blem hitherto has been of the re- versc kind. and its power and pre- stige could grow greatly without becoming too much for genuine democracy. Much can Ind should be done towards making the up- per chamber a better parliamen- tary body wlthnut making it too powerful for the House of Com- mons. Senator Euler's bill does not an lent Bl. to bring the'Scnal.e up to full strength. would not in itself in- crease its effectiveness. What is far more important than numbers is to start choosing Senators of greater vigor. But. the bill has real value; it may force the Gov- ernment to stop procrastinating. No Joque lNapauee Post Exprcs-.-1 Congressman Guy Hardy, ofl Colorado has I faded lil(l Cllpw ping in his pussessiuti about the, ”We began the pulilicatinn of the Rocay Mountain Cyclone with some phew difficulties in the way. The type phnunder phrom whom we bought our outpliit phor this printing uphice phailed to supply us with ephs or cays. and it will no phour or phive weexs bephore we can get any. This mistaquc uas not phound mit till a day or two ago. We have ordered the missing letters and will have to get along without them till they come. We don't lique the loox or this variety ov spelling any better than our readers. but mistax happen lll tic best regulated phamilies. and iph the ph's and c's and x's and as hold out we shall cccp tsonni. .ic e hardi the Cyclone whirling Iphter I phasion till the sorts arrive. It is no joque to us-it's I serious aphair." NOTES BY Anyone who gets I ticket for jay- to attend a night pcdcstrian school. And so it was that I man stepped into I police station the other iln collected I policeman: jay-w and got his ticket. His girl friend had been given one just before the evenings. What Spring can do to I man! Kingston Whig- Standard. A farmer's wife in Manitoba was in quite I sweat the other (lay when she accidentally locked her- hours she sat on -I pail turned upside down and saw them eat. drink and go to bed. Dripping with perspiration. she counted her '” ' t ” of chicks when her husband arived un the scene to rescue her. - Kitchcncr-Water- loo Record. Together with other United NI- tlons members. Canada was asked last year to send its views on cal- endar reform to the Economic and Social Council. The reply of the Canadian Government. supports no particular plan. But it does express interest and concludes that a study of the mntlenmight prove useful. This seems fair enough. for the time belng. and contrasts favor- ably with Washington's reported objection to any further. investiga- tion nf calendar reform. A specific recommendation: from the U. N. could be dealt with on its not --Ottawa Citizen. The hurdy-gurdy ....s an aristo- cratic ancestry. in medieval times it was an Instrument whose strings m-.c set vibrating by I wheels friction somewhat as those of a violin are set singing by a bow. A d .cendanl was I lIal'PSl('h0"l whose strings were rubbed by small wheels Instead of plucked. But the hurdy-gurdy was to out- live, in changed form. its original dillettmtlsm Ind become the or- chestra of sidewalk lerpischoreans. the tireless hIi-bingcr of better 5 foam 00115;) OLD DESERTED HOUSE An incomparable serenity dwells here still Ax though by natural right it but dwelt before; Beauty. majestic dignity that old In cnnnot bumble Are steeped in a fragrance of ti-I-, dition and lore. 1 Breathing mute memories e- fulll myriad unseen. AI 1 step through the crenkin great oaken door. lHow Ilvlng I thing In old house i is' I Shadows seem Ictive. Echoes reverbcratez The very wall: shadows put Speak of men. vnnlshed men. of coungeous hurt: Yet. something of nut ltunnnlly receding into of the mysterious linger: on. Under its spell I III! I put. -Mobel Blnck erl. Amhont. N. times in the L . .v 0f great cities. and even later I re- minder for cverybodY "'3' PI'B-tel!-" vision. civlllutions IlIo had their Imenlties. - Christian I It OIIC Monitor. difficulties of I pioneer ncws- tl0n- (hf "lC9l' "ill" C3" bf ”' paper out in his country winch l”3V9d C0Yl5ldf3T8bl)'- "mi QUESTION AND ANSWER Medically Speaking Bu-mII N. Buldelol. M. D. DOCTORS DON'T KNOW WHAT CAUSES ULCER8 Just about everyone. it seems. either III! In ulcer or knows someone who has. And virtuIlly everybody wInts to know more Ibout this Illment. There's no doubt that peptic ulcer poses an important medical problem. In the United States, it yanks about tInth Is the cause of death from chronic diseases. Between four Ind ten -million Americans have I peptic ulcer right now, and each month at least 375.000 of them consult their phy- sicians about this particular trouble. Your family doctor is the only one who can advise you if you have this condition: but '1 can give you some information about ulcers which all ulcer patients should know. Mont Victims Are Men While ulcers may develop at almost any age. they most often strike people between the ages of 20 and 50. Men are victims more frequently than women. An ulcer is like I clean-cut or pinched-out hole. it might de- yelop in the lining of your stom- ach or in the duodenum. which is tlic first part of your small intes- tine. We don't know just why they occur. but it is believed that some interference with the digestive process is to blame. Your stomach Iecretcs sub- stances which Iid in digesting food. Among these is I substance called pepsin and an acid called hydrochloric. Excessive secretion of this acid is believed to be necessary before peptic ulcers can form in your stomach. Experiments have shown that ulcers will heal if this ex- cessive secretion i eliminated. By neutralizing t is acid secre- A. 6.: Which drugs are called antibiotics? Do they include cor- tisone and penicillin? Answer: Antibiotics drugs which either check the growth of bacteria or destroy them. Penicillin is In Intiblotic; cortisone is not. refer to The Age Old Story worship. him declare I unto you. leth not In temples mlde with hands: neither II -nu hipped with men's hands. II though he need- ed any thing. THE WAY expansion . . . greatest period of Ixpanlion Ind. bIrring wIr or other urtoul Inter. it seems likely to Whom therefore yo ignol-Intly at I r-pid rm for tome yours to come. To take population alone. God that made the world Ind Ill W? W9” 11 mlllhnl l” 19”: 15 things merehh min: am he .. millions now and will Ilmost cer- Lord of heaven Ind earth, hub tnlnly reach l9 millions by 1965. fessinnal Iervlces that everybody needs. doctors. dentists, ministers. teachers Ind lowyerl. it takes I great mIny more needs of 19 million than of 15 mil- lion. And we have to Itart educIt- ini: Pigs! The llnndlnn Crisis Of There are now Iboul. 55.000 full time students registered in the Canadian universities. Almost all of lhem were born in the middle thirties in the depths of the great depression. Throughout the thirties, the Canadian blrthrate stood still. About 1941. it began to rise. After 1945 until the present it has risen very sharply. . The full tide of post 1941 babies is now flooding the public schools and will soon pass into the high schools. The first ripples of this tide will reach the universities in about 3 years and its full flow will surge around the ivory towers between 1965 Ind 1970. We know in I rough way what their numbers will be. All the youngsters who might come to university up to 1970 In: new born. We know how many there are. There is nothing speculative about them. We have figures which show over I period of years. what proportion of our youngsters com- plete the high school work requir- ed for Idmission to university. We Ilso know what proportion of this group has been coming on to col- logo. If these proportions remain as now - and they Ire likely to rise rather than fall - we an estimate roughly the numbers bot will be knocking on the doors of the uni- versities between now and 1970. There will be I 50 to 60 per cent increase by 1965 and I 75 to 85 per cent increase by 1970. Some say university registration will be doubled by 1970. A 60 per cent increase over pres- ent registration would mean 85.- 000 students . . . If CInIdiIn unl- versitlas line to face I 50 to 60 per cent increase in registntion in the next ten year: they have to meet In entirely new order of costs. And we can't wIit till the deluge Irrives. We have to begin to plan now for Idditional facili- ties to be brought into production. so to speak. in the next tou'yIIrs. Many universities will mod to hIve Iome new Iccommodation ready by 1980. Building: Ind laboratories cIn't be produced overnight. 6 The factor which makes the lit- uation critical is thIl; the uni- versitles bIve Io ready resource: of their own in hInd with which to undertake such I program of Canada is in the midst of her .dll- Even if we think only of the pro- tn meet the them now. not in 1966. qunlly important. we Iood From I recent Iddren II '5' Vice-Prelldent of Queen's Univerlltn additional . was able to function until the walking in Portland. Orgeon. has dock was repaired. By May 14 the causeway is expected to be ready for trains. so it almost won lils y. race with a couple of lmponder- alkcd ables. These mishaps perhaps de- livered the coup de grace to my remaining sentimentality about the and he wanted to be with her in old car ferries. They created fond greatly increased number: of on- gineer: Ind other technical por- sonnel to operate the greItly ex- panded nomy we Ire erecting Judging from the wIy our unl- versity graduates Ire snapped up now. the starting sIlIrieI they gel. and the rapidity with which men of even modest Ibllity IdvInce. we are not. now meeting the needs for . t S . self in the brooder house with the W "" baby chicks. it had a low ceiling Implicit in this mushroom and I high temperature. For two growth are henvy demands on associations they sure could mess up traffic between Cape Breton and the mainland when ice. stress of wea- lher .or me L ical breakdowns put them out of buIinIII. -Wind- transportation systems Ind needs for extended gas, electric, wIter and telephone services. for shop- ping centres, schools, churches. hospitals and other fIcilitles Ind services. The school problem looms especially large. The bIby cIrrlIgI on the front porch in the hallmark of Canadian civilization. -Port Elgin Tirnrc. Tlicir is nustllllx Ilnr all Ameri- can presidential press conference on, the face of the globe. There are some public documents that could be written in IdvInce by anyone who knows how Iuch docu- ments Ire put together. The men conference is not one of thou. it is full of surprises. It is Ilmnst never completely dull. It must now sometimes be I source of dismay to the Prenidenfa political opponents, he usually does it In and memories. But. te ing . are busily buildin bi ' Ind professional train- ltechnicians Ind engineers I bigger CIn- But we Ii hIve to nice The Ida. Outer Hebrides Ind intend to Itock them with sheep and cIttle. The islands are Pabbny which iI unin- habited. Mt ' , with I popu- lntlan of four, Ind BernorI with I population of to. They Ire reputed to contIin some of the bent gru- lng lnnd in Scotllnd Ind the nIvy men, who Ire It present carrying on sheep Ind cIttle breeding business on nearby BIrrI. stock them with 900 own. bring- ing the Ihoep flock up to 1.200 Ind import sIverIl hundred head of cIttle. They will cIrry on their mIrketlng by means of three but: they have bought, one I for- mer tnnk lnndlng craft. The enter- prlu was Innounced It the first Innunl genei-Il meeting in mun. hum: of the Hlghllnd Fund, lIunched I year ago to promote Pfolperlty among the eroftlng community in the remote high. dl bx the ..dvIncemon' of Ions. well and he in lo disarming on the occasions when he cannot turn in .-i score IpproIchln" par --Now Yell Time: Fi'ancc upfbin, with the train that oporntu luelf. some motoi' car owners in this country have been giving the some test to their cars. -Port Artlnr News Chronicle. The man who OOH HI I but when drlvlng his cor la the most . ' ' of Ibnormnl it-action to feeling of inferiority. The psychologist would ny thIt he has mnde I "poor Idluutment". This simply means in! this pIr- ticular lndlvlduIl hu not been The not that polunun In In- pointed for full-time duty has. nev- er relieved the individual citizen of fill . "titty for T ' t . ..ialnl.'.iul IIW Ind onler. Un- der the old CrlmlnIl Code. I pn- vnte individual could arrest any person whom he found commit I criminal offence It night. 15) day. he could In-Int those only committing I number of Ibtcllled - Icnces. But under Code, In mIy It any time Irrest the revised 1 able to convince hiuuglf tbIt MI inferiority feelings In not due to any rIIl lIck on hlI pIrt. but Ii-I only In emotionll .eIctlon to I set of Li! ' in which his mental, pliyIlcIl. or environmen- tal rupomoa hIve not been In IdequIto u he think: they should have been. The man In the on "compenutet" by using the mI- chino II In extynnion of III! mn- tl-Ited penonllty. Ho become: belligerent Ind Igroulve. Of course. compensation mIy tIke will ' R0fESSl0llAl CCARWD ” Expansion lnnipeg by Prnfeunr Corry, thought about making it a better Canada. where we can all live ful- ler and more satisfying lives. Technical and professional skill and knowledge afone will not at-. accomplish this. Enrichment of lite calls for wisdom. It is for want of wisdom that the people perish. even while they wallow in abun. dance . . '. p In the complicated and danger- ous world in which we live - and will have to go on lving - ii is impossible to be wise without hav- ing a great store of knowledge about our history. the history of other peoples, the course of de- velopment of international affairs. the intricacies of our economic amt political life. the reflections of the great minds of the past on nu- riddle of existence. More and more. the acquiring of this know ledge has to be pursued systemati- cally in the universities. ' The main Job of the universilii-s.. their greatest glory if they sur- ceed and their sufficient crin- demnatian if they fail. is to can serve this body of knowledge that bears on man's estate. appraise ll critically. and pass it on to those who will use its light and lcarl ing for the wise direction of our life in the present and the futuri- But it cannot be passed on Ef- fectively unless the right kinds of students are there to receive it. This emphasizes I gain the urgent need of an extensive system of scholarships to draw more stu- dents of promise for this high task. 0 t Planning must begin now. Whcre new buildings Ire required. some of the funds needed for their con- struction must be assured within t three years. Substantially increa: ed revenues for the securing of nquipmeut and staff must be assured within five years That is I Ipecinl problem for each university COI1SldCI'lu5 its own special circumstances. But if we look It the sources of revenues of Canadian universities It the pre- sent time. we find extremely heavy reliance on provincial governments Ind substantlnl federal Government. Unless there u on the in I great increase in gifts by individuals and corporations. there is not likely to be much choice in sources of governments with the direct re- sponsibillty for education will no doubt have share . . . . support. Provincial to find the greatest wltliilie PIERCED GUARANTEED OUAUTY AND FRESHNESS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. '”"- i:.'ii:::.':..tt.lT"':' ...0.:t':- ta ire"-W-.52.-;A.?.. OPTOMHRISTS M. A. Fnrmer, Q.C., LL.B. BInk of Commerce Bldg. Allison M. Glllis. LL.B. ll Richmond St. MI! 4141 A. Wslthen Goudet, LL.l!. Phllllpl Bldg. 111 ontun It. PI.lmer I IIIIIIIII G. F. llutcheson F. G. IlU'l'CHEsn' 53 Gt-Ifton st. Ag! J. A. Cnrruthers. H.0- Kent St. Dial M II . 0.1). KeyIIlfoIlllJ Gum" DIII still J. S. Toylor, 3.0. Caner Kent I Queen St!- ua ll Ink II NIVI loath Illd(.. flee 0138: Home 475i,4 H. -I. ho . R.0. ":"n:i.:..E.”:'” ” M. "1". "5 MIMI Mr-04 CHIROPRACTOR J. A. MIoGulgIn Dr. W. B. CI!-Ion Cunlia aux. - pm om . am. 81. I01 Prim It 91'' W 6. I1. Mnchlllhn. B.A., LLB. ARCHITECT o. Keith ncima. . .ldl'l'8Ilt Iny onglvfhgrn he I h h In Richmond It. out ml 3. Arch. M.n..A.l.c.. i'"'d3 ' ”"" ”' ' 9" -””" .5 "ed lll'm;'um: kn . Sununenlde. P.E.l. DIII 228' fence. in I police state. the police "uh t u 0' '"uo:" 00- MIcPheo 8 Tnlnor ciiu-moan. by" uppolltnwll - ""2. "'..:...::::.: rs. ..m- -----u we on m- I'IC . VI fllln I ' '- - and ymfipiyciuiim pfftlgeau pfnthe lwhts-5fIndIrd. - CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS I rvIptI o e e ow . CTtlvZOl.I;.B .2 -ONIWI Citizen. I 0"". Nu. MeDoNALDchu"d”u'-CUBIHE 3 00. BM rm Completed In not opened to rIlI. On Scottish lulu vehicular Ind pIdeItrlIn traffic. II. B. DOANE I CXDMPANY u., can c.....;qd.ymgv:dcnn'tly;mwl:I tNlIgIrI Full: hvlew) Ml Great George 3.. cmnguouwg M I T . :.'.'”..”'.i'i...i”" "within a matter of It will interact may broom. ""' "7 '” - '- "t '” ””"'.'......t”' .....'”' 2: ;'i.”..'..:':.'. m'."it.': ......'”"”" a.,.i'”"""..."".... mm 1- mnnwrr iifiinm ntouuanqaaiu dock. ihIve mm mm mull Islam "C. .. .. "W" 3;" . 5,, only . "mi. "5 puunget ferry It Ioutbornmont and of the