l. . it? ”lIy Lon-let: caulolmown. use: no: ID a lg. cum. EInwhIuiuP.I.l.I.l. aha?” III - U. I. IILN pd nuns; - "Th! Iitdlseu mound B nah: I-In . on possum hi.” i FRIDAY. NOV. 18. III Mr. MacLean Honoured Congratulations are due to Mr. J. Angus MacLean, M.P., on being ;invited to join a tour of the United States to be made by a dozen par- liamentarians from ten NATO coun- tries. Mr. MacLean is one of two members chosen from the Canadian Parliament, and no better choice could have been made. Mr. MacLean is particularly interested in ques- tions of national defence, his own experience having covered war and post-war service in the Air Force, which he left as 9. Wing Commander bearing the Distinguished Flying Cross and a Mention in Despatches. He stands high in the estimate of members of Parliament, and has shown m a r k e d conscientiousness and ability in his duties as represen- tative. I A Conservative publication re- cently noted that Mr. MacLean is perhaps the only Member of Parlia- , ment who belongs to another "ex- clusive club", membership of which, like Parliament, is only at the price of some travail. It is unique be- cause it is limited to those who have saved their lives by forced para- chute jump from an aircraft. Known as the Caterpillar Club, Mr. Mac- Lean joined it the hard way in 1942. A pilot in Bomber Command. he was shot. down over enemy-occupied Hol- land and made his way back to Eng- land on an extensive underground "Cookls Tour" which took him to Belgium, France, Spain and Gib- ,l:altar. We trust that he will find less arduous going in his parliamentary tour of the United States. The Seaway The general view among quali- fied economists. if one may judge by the statements they have made from time to time, is that the St. Lawrence Seaway will be of much greater service to the United States than to Canada, although this coun- "try is paying almost four-fifths of the cost. In this country, Ontario will be the greatest beneficiary; the far between, though not necessarily negligible. These facts are not caus- ing Maritimers any great loss of sleep; at no time have they fixed their hopes of industrial develop- ment on the Seaway. What most people of this region would like to see was summed up by the Premier of this Province when he appeared before the Gordon Economic Com- mission. "Th e national govern- ment", said the lion. Mr. Matheson. I "is heavily committed to the St. Lawrence Seaway, which will bring innumerable advantages to the cen- tral provinces. same time adopt, both as regional and national policy. the compar- '.stively tiny project of improving shipping and power facilities here?" If the Government of Canada will take due note of the inferences and claims contained in Mr. Math- ,non's well thought out statement, and act upon them in good faith. -they need not feel any compulsion apologize to Maritimers for the -small benefits that are likely to jcome their way from the St. Law- rence Seaway. " Mr. Pearson's Optimism - It-is,.clear that External Affairs ' later Pearson has returned home , ,hls Russian and Asian tour in " I spirits and fairly confident of I peaeemisettlement of the dis- , it between Egypt and Israel can -, ,, arranged. Obviously, Mr. Pear- , I left many important things un- in his brief talk with reporters an ill! Ottawa airport; he said en- . E, 3, ifldicltd .,,-s.-. , resultedfrom flimierllifuser of f , Maritime benefits will be few and- hclp feeling t!iIt)1r.PcIrIon man: have acquired an even better pic- ture of the Middle East situation if he had consented to visit Israel as well as Egypt. It is possible that Mr. Ben-Gurion, the Premier of Israel, may have had some items of inter- est to discuss which the Egyptian Premier had overlooked or neglect- . ed to mention. There may have been many good reasons for Mr. Pear-l son's bypassing Israel. but so far they have not been published. Per- haps more information on this-point will be available when Israel's For- eign Minister arrives in Canada next week. One statement made by Mr. Pearson--vif he has been quoted cor- rectly-is especially intriguing. "I have not changed my mind on fun- damentals," he said. "I have learned a lot". No doubt, he will have more to say about that one of these days. Meanwhile. Canadians from coast to coast will join in welcoming him home; and the general hope will be that his optimistic outlook with re- spect to world affairs, and especial- ly Middle East affairs which appear to contain the most potential dan- ger at the moment, will be justified by events. A Historian's Views The eminent historian Professor Arnold Toynbee is by no means a confirmed pessimist with respect to the status and future of Western civilization. On the other hand, he is not one to exaggerate his hopes or minimize his fears on any subject about which he writes or speaks. In his view, which he discussed in a re- cent speech before an American audience, the chief trouble with Western man is that. in general, he has discarded the religious founda- tions on which his civilization was built. The trouble began in the late 17th century when Wrarcrners fell into the error of minimizing the im- portance of religion and exalting science and technology. The tragedy now, Dr. Toynbee thinks, is that Western man practices a technolog- ical way of life, as distinct from the religious way of life of his fore- fathers. while still professing I be- lief in freedom, which has no mean- ing apart from religion. From any other vantage point freedom sooner ' or later leads to self worship, and this, in turn, leads to worship of col- lective human power-that is to say. totalitarianism. Dr. Toynbee appears to believe that the ideological tensions be- tween East and West will never be resolved unless the West can con- vinoe the East that Christianity is, in fact, the basis of its way of life. "We must choose and choose soon", said Dr. Toynbee, "between losing our freedom and reestablishing its religious foundations". He hasn't in mind the emotional sort of religious revival which crops up every now and again and enjoys a brief period "of popularity; he is thinking rather of an intellectual awareness of re- ligion's legitimate--and preeminent -place in man's life. He believes that "the West must win its way by argument. by figuring out its beliefs and then practising them in all Could it not at the I areas of society”. Only in this way, he thinks, can Western civilization hope to save itself from destruction. as a result of internal corrosion. EDITORIAL NOTES "An expert in child psychology says if a youngster doesn't want to eat his morning porridge, it's quite all right topiet him have a ham sand- wich. There's one expert, at least, who is not a Scotchman. O O I Radioactive isotopes are now proposed for use in crime detection. Dr. Charles Sannie, professor of or- ganlc chemistry at the National Mu- seum of Natural History, in Paris, has just published a suggestion in the annual report of the Smithson- ian Institution that would aid in the detection of arsenic poisoning. , O O I ' An important ' land -reclamation scheme is to be carried out in Japan on the lines of the famous Zuider Zee project. The whole. area of Ariake Bay, near Nagasaki, will be blocked off by I dike six miles long and the sea water will then be pumped out. leaving canals for the rivers that flow into the bay. In this -way, it is expected to reclaim more . than 185.000 acres of new farmland mainly with-lice and "provide I I : - I ,5”: is-be .il-W4. to couple of land lsllllls. A lmill Speaking war you nun muons: Iallllh "Id W PWI - little silly. but g 5 . git if tall: ii E55 , cult in ventilate. But probably the princi of laughter II is the effect i you: mind and laxatlon, as you sat in preventing fatigue. You'll feel more at one once yo nerve tension an end. And difficult to remain false if u i ,5: . 1 55 iii; gl . 5?: or even a chuckle. is better tian nlothlns. but I lsuth is but of I . It will brighten U10 IIPIOII It round you. too. You know how difficult it in to keep from laughing when lemon- nearby is guffawinx over some thing. so, if you're amuscd. let your fellow workers know it. It will serve as sort of an emotional Pick- up to many of them. Anything which helps ease ten- sion and create harmony in the body's emotional reactions contri- butes greatly to better health. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. H. .l.: My bis too w.-8 hr-r ken when I was I child Ind was never set. Arthritis llll developed in it and there is no motion in it. Would it be advisable to. h-ve the PUBLIC FORUM rim column II on: in III lluu mm by correspondents of question: of Interest. The GIIMIII loos not In Inrlly unions the noun: 04 -,. gponflrlllm MR. PARKER'S ADDRESS sir,eAll thoughtful citizens. con- cerned with the educational pro- gram in our Province. must frel indebted to your paper for the more than generous space alloc- ated to the address which i ii-"V9 at the semi-annual meclinz "5 "'9 Provincial Home and. School. Your editorials dealing with. education have always been incisive. CUB- Itructlve and creative. However, in the present situat- inn. I do wish that the editorial space allocated to certain aspect! of my talk had been devoted to thcsuhstance and not lo the trivia. The fact still remains that too many academically educated critics of the public school effort have not I scientific knowledge of the research information which has accumulated regarding "'0 learning processes during the last fifty years. Could you not in the near future. editorialize on the following Quill- ions which seem pertinent to our Island education problems It the present time? 1- Does the evidence indicate that there is gross inequality of educational opportunity for many of our children in rural and village areas? 2. Is the shortage of qualified teachers a real menace to the future development of our Drov- ince? :1, Is the crux of our problem indicated by the fact that three quarters of our Island schools are one-room schools with the teach- ing conditions pertaining? 4. Is there any other practical golut fsvsilable for immediate con Ition than of composite schools for Grades 7 lo 10 and the development of the larger admin- istrative unit? Again thanking you for the in- valuable leadership your paper is giving in this Province. 1 am Sir, elr.. K. A. PARKER. Superintendent Board of School Trustees of Char- loitctown. (The points underlined by Mr. Parker are all very important. and his complimentary references much appreciated. But we cannot agree with him in dismissing as "trivia" the parts of his address dealing with criticism of our ed- ucational standards. Surely it is as important to know where we are going educationally as it is I find competent guides and equipment for the journey. That may indeed be the real "crux of the problem" which we have buried under so much technical jargon.--Ed.G.) Tagging Butte rflies lslratford Beacon-Herald) A project that must come under the heading of pure research is be- ing carried out by the Royal On- tario Museum. The museum has been tagging butterflies, in the manner that birds are tagged. It is well-known that these in- sects fly South in the Winter. but little is understood of their routes or the distances they travel. some go only I few hundred smiles, others I couple of thousand. They pr-I known to cross oceans on be- casion. ' This is I difficult riddle of NI- iure II I contemporary ecu- mcnts. Even the mantle! of birds is scarcely I siesta mar- vol. of course. it in ma hard! to get accurate iuformatim on th- Iecf flights than it it hoheck one Ivlsn migrations. ' ' Even the most conspicuous but- di Two i)S.PrRoAcl:MHEsil A A Prairie Conservation Proiect By Don Peacock Canadian Press Stuff A vast conservation project that one day might mean the difference between drink and drought over much of the Prairies has reached the operational stage. It took eight years. It cost f6,- 300,000 in federal funds for con- struction of amosi 1.000 miles of roads and trails through some of the highest. most rugged--and, in- cidentally. most beautiful-terrain in the country. And it will demand unflagging vigilance from some 70 forest rangers and maintenance personnel until at least W13. The real work of the Eastern Rockies Forest Conservative Board is to ipulate vegetation in the 8.000-square-mile area so that its rich water resources will continue in supply the three Prairie prov- inces through the sprawling Sask- atchewan river system. IMPORTANT WATERSHED Board chairman Maj.-Gen. How- ard Kennedy Iald in an interview that virtusly the whole Prairie population depends on the Rockies eastern watershed water from which is delivered to towns and cities across Alberta. Saskatche- wan, and Manitoba by the Sask- atchewan river and its many tribu- taries. Other sources of water in the area, Gen. Kennedy said. are chiefly stationary: that is, water collected in low spots from melt- ing snow and rain. In some areas yearly precipita- lion rarely is more than 12 inches. which he said is close to desert conditions. In the Rocky mountains forest reserve. however. precipita- tion may sverise U. llcll u- Illy.-with some sections 1 up to 50. ' At present, snow and glaciers high on the mountain slopes are the practical guarantee for the "sskatchewan'I summer flow. But the glaciers grow smaller every year. one day they may be gone. It was with an eye to that day that Alberta and the federal gov- ernment in 1947 set up the Join- board to administer wlterahcn management in the forest reserve. FEDERAL CONTRIBUTION Main role of the federal govern- ment was to finance building of ranger stations and communica- lions throughout the tree. This part of the project was officially concluded on March II. A few tug ends in gravelllug roads and so on were cleaned up this summer. - Alberta now is responsible for maintenance through the re- mainder of the ibolrdls iii-year life. But the autonomous board with one federal and two provincial representatives, remains the Id ministrailvc body. The board considers fire ifreatcst enemy. in I recent pam- pllillel on its work. the board said of re. "It not only kills the trees but it destroys the humus layer on the forest floor. This layer is com- posed of I mat of leaves. twigs. moss Ind other vcgetstloia . . . ”ThlI lnyer can store several times its own weight of water. but its -3 -3 C - 2 3' L 3 s E E 3 ii-iii 5 E, 3 M. V IIIIIII-enables .5 5 ..-as si i ii I. as? tel-flies are seldom noticed except it. --' - I Y . .- found I Monarch butterfly with I mus- eum lag that had travelled I min- imum of Bell mil slur rolosba nest Mcuford. Opt. but first is me only Itch which hu man- 3;; egg in a :3 & i ii iii ii iii if! ills. , I-nI.d.&snuuaInIa., 5!. K. ..a.I.uuonlnn feeder which rises on the north- eastern reaches of Jasper National Park FINE TRUNK ROAD Backbone of the system is a two-lane gravelled trunk road run- ning 274 miles north from Cole- man. in the Crowsnest pass of southwestern Alberta, to Nordeu. in the valley of the North Saskatch- ewan east of Jasper. The southern section of this road, from Coleman to the Kananaskis forest experi- mental farm on the Calgary-Banff' highway about 50 miles from Cal- gary. was first opened three years ago; the remainder in September. The project has opened up in motor traffic I Rocky mountain region rich in fish and game that once was accessible to only the strong-legged hiker or the pack- horse. ' Gen. Kenn edy described the scenery along the trunk road as superb. At one point near the Kan-I anaskis lakes, some 60 miles south- west of Calgary. the road climbs to an altitude of 7,300 feel, he- iievcd the highest for any engin- eered highway in Canada. The Trans - Canada Highway reaches about 5,000 feet at the Great Divide on the Alberta-British Columbia boundary. The road is open to public travel all summer except for periods of high forest fire hazard. All travel- lers must register with rangers If its entrances and exits. - "if I fire starts we want to know who started it.” he said. "Then we are absolutely merciless. Then were uomerious fires 13.33: ro- serve area this year. he said. and damage was negligible. TOURIST SHELTERS Nineteen shelters have been built at good fishing and viewing spots along the road where travellers may cook I meal or camp out. There are no coffee shops, hotels. service stations or any qther form of urban civilization except ranger posts along the way. Gen. Kennedy said traffic has risen as hill! as 40 can In hour during summer weekends. ' Oil companies use the road to carry out seismic surveys. Prol- peciors bring in their equipment over it. Lumber companies. cur- rently the biggest source of sur- sent delightful book these creatures. whole explains hall said that the thick darkness- bullf In house of habitation for theoasllaplacofarllydwolllli ;l.wIys in mind that its wait no . d. as it is v 101' me to wear shoes of two different sizes? Answer: Whether or not the re- moval of the toe would be advis- able can only be determined W your physician. An examination by an orthopedic specialist is indicat- ed. sooxs RECEIVED rm-3 aonnowans AFIELD by Mary Norton. illustrated by 30W and Joe Krush (McLeod. Toronto. 215 pp. I3). Those who were trjgued by "THE BORROWERS . the creatures who are as like ll! humans as makes no matter. ex- cept that they are six inches tall. will be anxious to follow Pod- Homily and Arrlety. They had been smoked and hunted out of GM! home under the floor. In the PN- little existence I rest many H011"- hold dlsppearsncol. In 107004 '0 develop I certain amount of self reliance rather than Milli 63010" ly "Borrowers". The Age Old Story Then uid Solomon. for over. timber over it. Commercial traffic pays one can I too each mill: , ourists travel the road BO- shlns and Celtic in face revenue in the area. hand out Pnorssslonulcms BARRISTERS. SO Bell. Matheson I Ionic IIO Bichmnd U. ..'.'.?.?.”a”"””".i..'&. M. A. Former. Q.O.. Ialal. Bank of (243104: Ills. If. allb. gh mluclnsnlhx nR ""-s"oL”"i'n""...."”'.: -Pihsrllsshm .i;g um .......... ..-iii. i . C. l'.- IO. .-.:.t.f9Wi7.-.i.. gi, . , R. ARCHITECT ucuons. Etc. , -orrouieuusrsi I-J.A.0InuIsII.l.o. 52' 5."...".ui""h'.-'.' . . E" exalt. , ' tag; ----- ...:”;-la"-' . iicnalijsaaoi ACCOUNTANTS ........... ........ I z GIf- lanes Plvlloltlsnllcl M137. ll?! has-inmcfaa civilian life. uidthctuk , gnnrovcnt I hills: " " - lccurllll lnlnllhmai tor. - rim, of course. is the ban of ..,”.,'.:l.l.'.,'."&".1.1'.,','.,"'"""' if" Illvblioowoltltisthcnuoo uncugggwggugo & forthoutrolmnnvnlkinshlabut. North American g ...,,, footbyfoof.'f'hoofIlcIrwIlkins gomothlaunowtorcad : his best-knowlnlmsnypeoplc q,m.mum3,u.h.p--a Indchildrea-uosthlnxsbulldins. , dam” ..London Free PW” been g::u':-guguwgth-u.I:l:. ma "3. seeing, mo .Frnm the united sum gmwi 5"" 9””-4" "em? dm telling about I Scotland” Yard mu. 3,. mitlatlns large - scale The despatch relates that the cal- tle were ruslled somewhere bet. ween Liverpool and their destinIt- ions at farm: in the Midlands aid East Anglia. Somewhere out yon. der on the open range of little old England. -Sydney Post-Record. Real danger may come in . tendency to set scientists and humanist: against each other, mg though I natural warfare must forever be waged between them, so that what one may Kain. the other must lose. Such a spirit will only divide still further the one from the other. at the very time when I deeper reconciliation and mutual trust is needed. The worst thing that could happen is for the scientist to pride himself in his ignorance of the humanities. while the humanist prides himself in his disinterest in the so-ca"ed practi- cal subjects. .It would be more than ever healthier and realistic. It the present time, for scientists and humanlsts 'alike.iIf crisis in Western civilization. to subord- lnate the negative and defensive in their latitudes toward each other. in favor of the positive and the outgoing. The future does not lie in the triumph of either over the other. but in their understand- ing unity in what is. lifter all, at single cause. --Montreal Gaz- I c. --Now York Times. While such advice may be pro- msture in this region of the coun- try, it is nevertheless worth our keeping ln mind for the months ahead. In the beginning and cod- ing of almost every winter season in New 3. wick there are need- less tragedies caused by t.houdit- leuness or outright esrelusuess. Too often we are not shocked into realization of the peril until the first lilo-or lives-In lost. When- ever the , , ' ting places III rivers. lakes or creeks. child- ren should be warned to stay away until the ice safety is checked by responsible adults. -saint John Telegraph-Journal. Then In few. if say. greater forces than justice. The force of justice starts to be felt at In early age. and continues down through the years. In its most t t form it is, found in the courts of the land. but its force is felt in many other plans of life. Young People. in Dllticullr. on its dis- iuicilll;-if::u9fBQlle'llI.Ily Ind with last- I II 03' Flu thro the formative years of school. D? llll those years the teachers, under whose direction they come. face I grave rcIponsibllity.ia flu: their declslons will have I very wide in- fluenco on the children's attitude toward authority in later life. Up. fortunately some felcherl have little idea of justice. basing snap decisions on surface situations. fsliinl to hear Ind consider all the flats in the cases with which they meet. The result on the livII of tho children who come under such teachs I can only be umgga by we . -owca sound Sun-Times. AUTHORIZE I nalltfn Llccmql fflrlu I 5 The Aristocrat of Undergarments sag. Ptcliiishbr ii V0050 II 0004007 D Molronu 3...".':"""""'."..l':.' arcuanoss s n....l'&..u'”li:.... III III and repair all Oultlnsflaop-Ohowlndnso motors,-washers and dsctrleal W05! hid Ituconoooo Ipplluoos. quolnm - Storey Electric ' fl GIIIIOI &UCx PIONI III? W & my 1 PARAPLEGIC moszlus” sussclurnou Aoeucv .j'orsIyom'&-InflraI0wdlilbI0fiPlIDIIPIl'lPl0U' Asoueystantroahlourveyou. wcurununnimodnndooiuwodooh-ndoadnuforovorv mInsinopy.I:IimIdforhumI.offIcoandinduIUy.IndoII1ON' wiIbIvII'JrItIluihdoIdforsoIa'IunlictmdInolinorf1ial- ilosyoojvs diam. iodemoaotrste Inlr Illillbbnfto IfI"l00- 'llI-Paraplegic Machine Silllccriplloll AJOIW is I Pl'0i0ci ofghs canals: Parsploclc Auoetaftna, Mumm- Divlslu. and sruaotu the aroma. , III! I30 wanna doubled lay umhoh. f one-fIcIifiIIIIoucIoutoyouIIyoI,.H.,I,IIiI.IlO sucusiyhonoaacyouwupluuaasgffg,-I ma-II-Ir' ualumiuu-ouno Istscodtbs ., , 5.I?H0'l uryioo--IIdyouoIsssvIwIoDI'brIItIirlblIl- , III: we III have he -v .