'*sefl.‘<v e5 ~. PAGE FOUR THE a GUARDIAN there is one grave difficulty in attempting a solution through Federal channels. Under the Morning Dally (Iotlndod ll llli) Authorized an tlecand Clan slut]. Poet Office Department, Ottawa. The bland Guardian Publishing 00. Luiiur umi Managing Direct . J. l. Barnett; Associate Editor, Frank Weller _ ' (‘The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest In ." cunnwrrcrowiv PHURSDAY. OCTQBEB 14» 19“ Welcome Naval Visitors Since early colonial daysPrince Edward ls- iund ha; had many naval visitations, but none r.f more interest and importance than the ar- rival today of H. M. C. S. Magnificent, the 17,400 aircraft carrier which is the giant 0f Canada's Navy, and a symbol to all the world of our status as a sea power. Accompfliiylfifi the Magnificent will be the Canadian destroyer Haida, which is also a welcome visitor. The Magnificent, under Commodore Miles, O.B._E., R.C.N., carries a compliment of some 80 offic- crs and 550 men and is one of the most modern carriers afloat. Suitable entertainment for the naval visit- ors while in port is being arranged, 0H4 ll’ '5 hoped that their stay will be a pleasant one. ‘This Province is proud of its contribution to Canada's senior arm of the service during the war years, and of those of her sons who are stirring at the present time. Charlottetown, as rho island capital, is a "home port" to all men m the King's uniform, but to none more cordially s: than to the boys in Navy blue. ___________--_--- Acaiilan Scholarship Drive Worthy of every encouragement and sup- ucrt is the campaign which has been launched tar the St. Thomas Aquinas Society to raise funds izr the establishment of a permanent scholar- ship for deserving Acadlan boys and girls iii Prime Edward island. The objective is the com- pcratlvely modest sum of $50,000 and the ap- ceol is being made to the Acadian people alone, ihcuoh there is of course no reason why others do rag to do so should not contribute. The campaign has the worm endorsation of His Ex- - ncy Bishop Boyle and the Catholic clergy, o; well as His Honour the Lieutenant Governor, the Premier, the Leader of the Opposition and r-thcr men lfl public life. A canvass will be made on Sunday afternoon next of all Catholic par- ishes with Acodian residents excepting Char- lottetown and Sauris, where the press of other activities renders it necessary to postpone the appeal until Sunday, Nov. l4. lt is hoped and expected that the public response will be gener- ous, thus providing an incentive to the sons and daughters of our Acadian citizens to equip them- selves for positions of influence in professional and other walks of life, comparable to that en- loved by other ethnical groups within the Pro- vince. Serious Teacher Problem The seriousness of the teacher shortage problem through the country was heavily under- lined in the report of a special committee sub~ untied at the recent convention in Winnipeg of “he Canadian Education Association. This com- mrrrae was set up a year ago and its report, in Ml mimeographed pages, reaches this sobering conclusion: "|t is unreasonable to assume that more than a minority of Canadian children are receiving or can receive suitable education under Filillflg conditions. Teaching as a profession is rclotivcly unattractive as a life's work. lt is not competing on equal terms with the other pro- fessions . . . Positive action on the port of the Canadian public is imperative if the schools are l: function effectively." The teacher shortage as reported by Depart- rrcrits of Education in January, i948, was 7,276. T; this number the committee added those cer- flied after completing short training programs a ~»‘ iliose accepted for training upon completion . l Grade l0 schooling, the latter addition bring- >ng the "real shortage" at present up to 10,800. in the next ten years, Canada must overtake a potential shortage of 25,000 teachers. This figure is all tho more formidable when it is reo- lilid that the total number of teachers in all public and secondary schools stands at only 82.000. The approach taken by the committee is not that entry to the teaching vocation be made more easy, but that it be made more attractive. The profession needs higher salaries, better oc- commodatian, greater incentives. ln terms of i939 dollars, the average of teachers’ salaries ll Canada in i945 was $20 a week. Since i939 salaries in various types of schools have increased from 6 to 66 percent although the general wage level in Canada has increased 83 percent in the some period. Nearly l5 percent of Canada's teachers receive less than $l,000 a year. The sal- aries at the "top" in education are too low. De- partment of Education officials and university professors are, in the main, drawing salaries of only $3,000 to $5,000. in British Columbia, Alberta and Saskat- chewan teachers are given continuous contracts, with all dismissals subject to review by a Board of Reference; but their security in Eastern Can- ada is not so formally acknowledged. ln Prince Edward Island contracts are signed for one year only, and these may be broken at any time on three months notice. The survey revealed that the general edu- national background of trainees does not com- b pore well with those in the United States. l7 o per cent of Canada's teachers have had some university education; 27 l2 education, 30 per cent grade ll, and l5 per p cent only grade l0 or less. ln 62 U. S. cities reporting, 66 per cent of the teachers have had four years of college training. In certain entire states, some 50 per cent to 70 per cent of all teocliersof all grades hold university degrees. The scope of; the problem indicates that it l‘ h a c P a s S yea r. indirect "censorship" on the use of newsprint, but they have not been able to complain that opposition papers were worse treated than ernmei-it. ln Argentina President Peron's gov- ernment is more direct. Opposition papers have been singled out for newsprint restrictions. fi I i R homes envious. After six mother and I'll "and mixed butchering Whippet mine at Tennant Creek for i100. Milnes hadn't i£l00 but he bar and bought. vately owned butchering business in the North- ern Territory, date I644, son of Admiral Sir W. Penn, he be- came a Quaker, and lisliing Sandy Foundations Shaken. He obtained ation and founded ed the "Great Law" which made drunkenness, prisoned for debt and was ing the colony. in Britain as a result of a year to increase farm produce by one-fifth in four years. the winter before last, are up by nine per can! PIT CQHP llUVC llfld QYGdG 0" [qgf ygqh hqyg couraging facts were given in ally bad weather but the average yield per cow has risen eight per cent since output this year is expected British North America Act, educational mat- ters belong exclusively to provincial jurisdiction. As the Rawell-Sirois Commission noted in its report on Dominion-Provincial Relations: "A free hand in something so important to the social and cultural life of the people seems to us to be vital to any provincial autonomy worthy of the name, arid it is obvious that any attempts to alter the existing arrangements would meet with powerful opposition and would provoke pro- found resentment." The Commission could only express the hope that provision could be made for the fiscal needs of all the Provinces, includ- log within those needs provision for the educa- tion of the young. "Once this position is estab- lished, it seems to us that education, like every other form of welfare service in a democratic community, should have to fight for its life, and that a generous provision for the education of the children of the nation should depend, not on any arbitrary constitutional provision, but on the persistent conviction of the mass of the people that they must be ready to deny them- selves some of the good things of life in order to deal fairly by their children." lt is for all concerned with teacher shortages and other problems hinging on the financing of education to work wholeheartedly in I; di- rection. j. _i_________ . m EDITORIAL NOTES ' The overall potato situation, to floor proposal, siderable dispute. i like the pota- seems to be a matter of con- I i i lt is encouraging to note the absence of any new active cases of tuberculosis, as reported by Dr. Keeping at the City Council monthly meet- ing. I O I I Best news for a long time from the Bur- eau of Statistics is its announcement of lower meat prices, based on substantial increases in meat stocks across Canada. Q I I I H.M.C.S. Magnificent accompanied by H. M.C.S. Haida are clue to arrive this morning, remaining until the afternoon of the l8th. The great carrier and her escorting Tribal class de- stroyer escort will certainly receive an enthu- siastic welcome to Charlottetown. O ‘I Ar it The City has properly acted to curb the dis- orderly and dangerous use of fireworks by draw- ing attention to the by-law forbidding such be- havior. As a concession to human nature, how- ever, particularly youthful human nature, it might be thought meet to authorize their use for a short period at this season. I i fi * For a people who have vital interests in the Narthland, Canadians show deplorably little en- thusiasm for its development according to Col. e P. D. Baird of the Arctic institute of North I America. Of 43 inquiries about grants-in-aid ° for polar research offered by the society, only four came from Canada. i f I i The science of government budgeting is at a very low ebb at Ottawa. Sa roughly were esti- mates made that the Dominion Government is now expected to far surpass the budgeted $489,- 000,000 surplus al the end of only six months. The comptroller of the Treasury who released the figures did not indicate what the surplus is expected to be by the end of the financial H N English papers have long complained of the resulting from restrictions those supporting the Gov- it Here is the pioneer luck that makes stay-at- years in the Royal Aus- ralian Navy, Ken Milnes in 194i, said to his "l'm going up north to find some gold get plenty." He went to Alice Springs with prospecting. ln the a man was offering a half share in the he otel, borrowed the money in the B‘ ln May this year the mine was old for £200,000. He also owns the biggest pri- u a cattle station and a hotel. i’ i‘ R i William Penn, English colonizer, born this “r to W05 C11 imprisoned for pub- grant of land in America as quit claim for rown debt, and became governor as well as pro- rietor of a new province, called Pennsylvania, fter his father, and made it a haven for per- ecuted Quakers; he proclaimed religious toler- Philadelphia, and promulgat- SlS wearing, brawling, etc., punishable offences; °d . . . . l.“Grdhlpul" was deprived of his governorship being suspected ‘alegwergncee “talkers” should of Jacobitrsm, but was later restored; was im- wake 11p and be ready for the next. released on mortgog- eie O I I I The livestock industry ls rapidly increasing campaign begun last to in the lost twelve months there has eon a sixteen per cent increase in calves. Sheep, f which the nation lost hundreds of thousands M increased thirty-two per cent. These en- the House of Lords er cent, poultry twenty-one by tliefiovernmeiit recently. ln addition not only 51h; M” “refd a n”, d”, has milk production gone up despite exception- gn yguf m”, "Imp", m, pom, the war. The beef to exceed the pro- must be attacked eii a Canada-wide basis. liit war output by nineteen per cent. 1' HE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETO__W_1:I i-‘s i "Writ-Irina; termini’ " _, 5:. H. M _,. . \ ' “s...” H.M.c.s.'MAoiiii"ici.=ii m ,m_ “m4 I c! so i“ “ll-mitten ‘fjifiiméinvs -;,_,__,;,,, _ T‘ ‘»».. ‘.- Qq‘, 4 “HAioet/W .- "_ ~ s91.“- r'-*’."'?“" 1w fir" haven't fitters mrsnneq ode in children have, in ousneso possible leaelone lion on jurymen flees on sanltorlum for more year (lungs), I om trying to start a stamp collection. 1f your read- ers have any stamps to give (any kinds) they wioulrl be much ap- preclated. My grandfather. Taylor, came to New Zeal-and in (approximately) three brothers in Prince Edward Island. Arthur, George and Hag- gen (C!) Taylor, with whose des- cendants, if on the Island, I would like to communicate. Oxford: PlLD. ible position in Ottawa. Slr,--Premler “better Wemperance law"! I won- der where in Mr. Jones’ Plflllmm either; too many of our ire-called temperance politically even though they tried Politics comes ahead moral issue that. might defeat. the Government with some Liberals and of course some nicely financially. Has our Province really come situation. quoting different people. none of whom ers’ BNWQWOOCOWO PUBLIC FORUM discussion by correspondents of questions of lnterelt. The fly endorse the opinion of correspondents. APPEAL FOR. STAMPS sin-Under treatment than I em. SL2‘, eta, cooke Sanitarium, Trois-Rlvleres. Quebec. ____.__.._.____ SEEKS P. E. I. RELATIVES Slr.—Gould any of your read- rs give me information that would sslst. me 1n finding the addresses f relatives who, I presume. are living in Prince Edward Island? Charles Ernest. 1881. He left I am. Sirr. eta. (Mrsjr URiStTLA BOUG-EN. Mangamulis Bridge. eklanga. Nth. Auckland. cw Zealand. May. 10. 1948. crimes SCHOLARS Bu‘. — Recently reference was made in The Guardian to Rhodes Scholars from Prince Edward 1s- land. was a resident of New Brunswick when he was uppfllnlfld E Rlmdi-‘S Scholar for that Province in 1933- Whlle Dr. Ernest P. Weeks might be 1n order to soy the! he was born at Mount Stewart, in this Province. 13mg;- iRev. E. s. weeks) was the Methodist Minister 1n that village So the Island can very Well Claim him. It is worthy of notice that in 1912 when hls won the folloivlng degrees from BA. BLitL, M.A.. and He now holds a. reslwm- I am, Sir. etc.. ONE INTERESTED. deque. PEI. anon STORES n POLITICS Jones and his any of his speeches will you find where the liquor shops were be kept open until nine o'clock Saturday nights. and not even closed at. nine o'clock bu’. kept open until almost. ten o'clock was the case last Saturday night. Of course they couldn't Bel» the crowd out to close the doors. the next. change may be to have them open on Sundays, too. If has been very danzervus l" drive on our roads on Satisrday nights with the booze shops clos- bul. with them open all I can cllon. But. no. that’; no good people would vole sell it in the churches. of any are dolnif this disgraceful position? I em. Sir. eta. DISGUBTBIJ LIBERAL _..________-.... THE POTATO SITUATION expressed the ferm- point of view. - first. there were severe! state- ments making the prophecy that This column is open to the Guardian doe: not neoeeaar- l in a 011B G. E. MARGIL PATTERSOIVS BACKGROUND "Walter Paterson. ESQ-l granted by the Crown on July 23 1767. about a year and a half later. on lottetown. brother John who acted as liis private secretary. Both brothers (proprietors jointly of Lot 19) hail seen army service, and it seems highly probable that. the Walter Patterson who as a volunteer was commissioned Ensign (1757) and Lieutenant (1760) in the 80th Regi- ment and served with this regiment in America was he who was after- wards to become a colonial gov- ernor. ' Vilaller Patterson was an Irish- man. and his father was known as “William Patterson of Foxholl," Co. Donegai, although his ancestors lived and were buried in the not far distant town of Raihnielton, on the barrier of the Fanad peninsula. Foxhil’ svas a leased estate of about 170 acres in the parish of Conivali, some thirty miles from Buncraria. William Patterson hm] five daughters, and four sons of whom Walter was the eldest and John, born about 1742, the third. The William Patterson ivho was appointed schoolmaster in Prince Edward Island in 1777, and WllOSC death is referred to iri despatclies of Nov. 19. 1781 and June 23, 1789, was doubtless the youngest of the sons. Of Walter Patterson's education we know nothing except what may be inferred from his despoiches, covering a period of over twenty o. large per cent of the crop would have blight rot, ivhlcli had the re- sult that all the buyers are scared to buy any amount of potatoes uri- til they see how they stand up in storage. The statement regarding blight. rot was very much exag- gerated; digging ls pretty well ad- vanced and there is very little rot. showing up; and with the careful inspection we have. buyers need not be afraid of receiving any bed potatoes. I would like to commend the Summerslde Board of ‘Prado on their efforts to secure a floor price, which dld not get any sup- port from other Island or Marl- tlme boards who do not seem to realize that potatoes are a very important article of trade in the Moriiimes and bring in many needed American dollars and also help to balance our trade with the Central Provinces. If the farmer has fin money to spnild, all bran- ches of trade will feel the effects. One writer blames the dealers’ underselllng methods for the low price. If such is the case. the only one who can stop it is the Gov- ernment by setting is floor price. In 1945, when potatoes were scarce and they thought. they might. go too high, there was a ceiling put on potatoes of 90 cents a bushel in November, with an trial-ease of 5 cents per month for storage. The Prices Support. Board thought. that u fair price at that time. Nearly everything else-lino advanced in cost. since then, also the cost of growing potatoes; so f think the price should be at. lens‘. that high today, which would bring our potatoes in line with the American floor price when they roach their markets and thus re- move the complaints from that. quarter. If the Prices support Board re- fuses e floor price. thev should change the name l-o a "Floor De- pressing Board.“ as this is how they act when they are seared the prices will gp too high, and when they foil to support floor prices when they are needed. Thev have pieced a. floor on the apple crop in Nov; scoffs 1 think the potato crop is lust as worthy of eu . I em. Sir. eta; KAI-Wm’ DOUGLAS. Reed of Hillsborougti. mar. The name of Prince Edward Island's first Governor appears as Coptn." in the list of proprietors to whom the townships of the colony We"? Patterson's appointment as "Captain General and Governor-in- chief ln His Majesty's Island of St. John", ls dated Feb. 2, '1769. and Aug, 30. 1770. he arrived in Char- accompanled by hls agape , ' hich may be seen at the l' lleigosrdvlbtfice in LogfliirniA libs-vol!- \ Old charlotpefown§ ume work on the iOftCfl lain“ $ (And P‘ E. L) m constitutional aspects o Eng s give a clue to his tastes. bears Patterson's book-Pl!"- great deal ls known. The old house ‘ in which tie lived on the “Fart Lot" (Rocky Point) was the house of the French governors. It. was is large wooden two-storey building with a very high foundation. Nothing but the cellar, nearly filled up with stones, earth and rubbish, now remains. In this house Pal- tersorfs successor, Governor Fann- ing, lived for some time, and here Abbe de Calonne was for years a tenant. In this house too, between the years 1771 and 1775, Patter- son's daughters Margaret and Anne were born. Their mother was Margaret (if) Hyde, daughter of Thomas Hyde, who came from Clare. Ireland, to Prince Edward Island in 1770. He brought his fam- ily vrith iiim. and settled at West River. The "Fort Lat“. which in- cluded the site of the old French capital, Port la Jole, was over 500 acres in extent, and was developed by Patterson into e highly pro- ductive farm. -From "Carlyiek First Love". by Raymond Clare Archibald, 1910. _________§_ NEWFOUNDLAND _..__. with the Ancient Colony about to become Canada: lentil: Province, ll ls well to gel; acquainted with Newfoundland place-names. Same of tliese have so fascinated Col. F’. X. Jennings. of War Assets Corpor- ation, lifontreisl. that for his own pezscmal enjoyment. he has en- shrined them in the following verses: All the way from Kitty Vlddy right around to Isle aux Marts. There are scores of names lo till one with delight: Like Come-By-Chonce. Great Ral- tllng Brook. Haystack and Joe Bart's Arm. The Village at Push-Through and Lushus Bight. There's a touch of dear old Erin in Rushoon and Merasheen. In Lolly Cave. Green Isle and Ire- land's Eye. ould there be auzht but pleasure in a spot called Heart's Con- fvnl. Or Heart's Desire. or dome-Come-By? Old France has given Belle Bay and Ootrteriu and Cape la Port aux Cholx: And there's Role d'Espolr (that's Bay of Hope) but. known as Boy Despair. Rose Blanch, Clna Cerf, Bonne Bay and Ba iscliols. There's Hrirb ur Grace and Cer- ' l-lrmear and Gander -- all well known. But I doubt ff many here have ever heard Of the Annle-Opsquobch Monm- tains or the Partrldgebetry llllls. Or Chimney ‘Tickle. Horse Chops. Bav de Verde. frhero are hezios and heaps of oth- er= - for example. Harpoon Hills. And Parson's Pond. Main Topsail. Hunarv Grove. 5t. Joni-s Within and Fox "i"rap. Kenrtudeck and Sit-Down Pond. Spanish Room anti Kitty's Brook and Dentin: Cove. Aye. there‘: music and tcrnanre in all those grand Newfoundland e'en Sel- any names: ay Cheleur. Htme and . names, , And 1’ love to hear the Islanders- rlvm speak: Arid I lane to vim once again mo! Knf/eeeoddsr Yoke. Or we’ a line in Lilli» Codroy Creek. vintrownarisiamrcr Ancient Greeks believed that l: crew warmer and warmer as you history which was in his library in Prince Edward Island may perhaps This work is still preserved by e Serif-lime" in Charlottetown, and each volume Concerning hie private life while in Prince Edward Island not e now get that the ter in ca presidential candidates. generally clvllizatlo CGUIG W8 each other. table; the second almost criminal. We must OI‘ W! 3T0 but is name. find out enough. Canada that lion by a flcult, less-of e ilsh and something greater on the horizon than the vote. -— Hamilton In Von] centuries vented modern type and come war ta build a “Churchill Arch" in Aldus had empmyed a the now House of Commons. This h Negroes were a rarity arch which has been included ln or‘: devil.” _ Negro boy left behind by a merch- ant vessel in Venice and people began to say Aldus was employing black art. and had a black l stop the rumo boy with the declaration that, "Bo it known that I, Aldus Manuilus, printer, have exposure of the printer's devil. All sense of the dramatic the arch ha! “h” ‘hllik h” l’ "°‘ ‘ml’ “"5 bl°°d been built with battered and black- ened stones salvaged after German may step Associated than doe: o bastion own waters, a large potential mar- ket for our goods and the benefit of natural they remain in provincial jurisdic- tion. are nevertheless an addition to the ag completion tosk~tiie Canada. without Newfoundland; fences, our transport couldn't maintained without Newfoundlonrfs co-operatlo Newfoundland hoe given up more than we have to create this union. -Maclean'e Magazine. University the past few months that the ms- tion faces sis. radio" are President share of creating alarms and rum- ore when he makes a flat assertion that the h with Russia, lacking documentation other than report of critical relations between the Sov- iet Union and the United States re- quires no alarms or rumors. bleak and alarming enough. ~ ton Post. committee lotion of the of realistic men te. used in cl ty mei-lt. from victim, 22 a whistle l chologlst have on th But, as adults, we feel Justified in ondemnin: them no the adjuncts of a type little that (Patriot. PIG!!! Copy) 4- ivent south. end tlini if you went far enough you would rile of hon‘. child's life. i Windsor Star. The longer the Buuim Ian blockade more ridiculous it seems. like something to be ex Isis-childish e iliur N ewe-Chronicle. A recent ceeo Jurymen. the question inevitably arises to whether cannot be ma a bit easier. The paper-a of President chiefs and I Dewey taken now. The ca the critical p manried at ei mon. goat, d tomehavvk phase. have more to laugh at look around and see the troubles white man. - New York Sun. Our future la too being small because we don't under- stand each other; and often apparently hope- We gain more President Conant of Harvard but recently. addressing the freshmen class. he urged that they consider only the facts and snap judgment or hearsay. Specific- ally he was critical of alarms and rumors with which At lie convention in Vancouver. the Chief Constables’ Association of Canada passed to incidentally, which were Iall. year. storing into the barrel yvhnt appears to be e genuine outa- moilc, la in holder if lt we leave the matter determining wlini effect possession of such realistic fake weapons may l! this ie the postwar world pore.- dice so many predicted, please pass the forbidden fruit. —- Kitchener- Waterloo Record. Ottawa opinol that people aren't spending u much as they did. The explanation is obvious One of Britain's problema has been solved, but we can't quite de- cide whether to be happy about It or worried. After years of failur- the National Association of Ou has enlisted enough ulms to men's weer. of Berlin continues, th at play. Rusolds action fact, of the implications Consequences. — Port. In that instance the altar of Justice. ~— London Free Press lnto the feathers-and- It seems to me red man always looks bet- mpalgn pictures than the They are laughing and they surely when they n has broulht to the big to go on or, worse, be- to understand The first is regret- worft try believe in the same things not. a nation in anything And a name, as we too often, lo not nearly Canada only became the could try to be a na- ziant effort-at. once dif- band of men of both Eng- French descent who saw ballot boxes of the next Spectator. oe nearly four-und-a-hulf ago Aldus Manutlus in- punctuation, llallc this day mlade public up and pinch him." — Press. Newfoundland. We gain for the defence of our resources which, though of John A. Macdonaidfis physical completion of We were half-maimed our dc- be n. Let us not forget that has been declaring for is long truce with Rus- not “press and filled. It. seems that Conant has done his atlon faces a long truce an opinion. The factual the development of It is Boe- lto legislative is proposal to seek regu- menufucture and sole toy pllltlll~—llillfl.l- holdup: In the mainland The suggestion has many points of view. A of no position to ask the 1| e plastic device with n one end. To the psy- of e child who owns them. of play which brings iii constructive Into a -- that they u much ise they had. — Seult Ste. Marie Star. male siaze a faslilan par- Oh, fudge. - l t‘; more pectod of often seemed child- xcept for the seri- and Ar. J4fi at Supreme Court in London focussed atten- U18 hardship inflicted on the were locked up for slx days although the time they actu ally spent in court only totalled 15 hours. ' Ms ybe nothing could have been done about this, and the jury- men may have been merely sacri- But as some arrangements do to make their lot are printing pictures Truman with Indian expect to lee Tom into a tribe any day mpelzn he; reached alnt where this l: de- l candidates. The sai- ove and not-biscuit stage was passed lest week and we Can you a little bag about if. 9r 1' Exports o ed new pas i! United Stat E gallons, an l s proof gallon more than l Service. alarmed. can proportions. session of a their night - against an Criminals in so it goes. how far the wrongdoere guards and concealed we tlon lessened by e realization that the youngster seldom buy: self the toy gun—-ftiat it is ilSually a present from his elders. torla Times. ' the first nix months ._.__ This bueineu of are l: a vlcloue circle torced to carry firearms There, not only do for him. -— Vic. remember beck vii-hm some of the kids came to calms] with is lump of camphor sews; i, and hung around their necks? This was supposed to ward off colds, but let's not They still how to cure one. -— Boston get. lnobbllh don't know Post, f Scotch whisky d 01' 1948 creel,- t-wnr records, totalling 4,233,000 proof gallons Compared with 1.35.000 proof Iallons in corresponding period lest year. The the es took 2,206,000 proof nereisee of 744,000 proof gallons an the first six months of 1947. while Canada received 322,000 s, 124.000 proof gallons n the first half of lest yearn-United Kingdom Information revolve which, on“ grow to etazzeri A criminal gels poo- iun. Then police are because sticks are useless armed law-breaker. crease their arms and The situation in the United States is on example at circle can be carried. the police and go armed, but body. _ private citizens carry apane as protection, __ . Edmonton Journal. lutely no l1 hardships of —-this is the recently left the them ently. tended to fol that has gone them. the torrid cli skl's view, wi harassing pro The heat sometimes exceeds 110 de- grees in summer, and the district ll yellow fever and other tropical diseases. known as Cord do contains poisonous a locale of semi-barbaric illes, it in re decided to re transfer to S number of Mennonites was decid- ed on the basis of religious convic- tions. Their elude. will be sorely tried. ~— Saska- toon Star-Phoenix. the new cham praval of all . there as a permanent reminder to mp of the devil. To - y, r’ Aldus exhumed ‘he new and old members of the. ze lent services man who take describing himself at e "child o! the House of bombs had WI‘ of Commons, and it stands on e by cmuedamtlo“ spot sold to have been one 0f Churchill's favorite places to study reports of the lng the conflict. will not be r for two years ready there, and it is a happy commentary on Mr. Churchill's wise 5'33"“ wealth of ca” and unduunfed leadership, and the ada. We gain even more by the recognition by of this leadership, that monument. should have been erect- ed within the House of Commons with it: rich tradition of personal freedom and llbertyi. ~— London Free Press. youth's confide this country. one of its many and complex bran- ches. ls an exacting. not to say re- latively expensive course. does not study for the sake of the quality of his name. He seeks I By the response of indus- try, by the plans of the universit- Cfiffiél‘. les themselves, a career for l would not be lng to Dersn J. dent of the E of Canada, "the field lo broaden- ing. In on ever-lncreoelnz deli"- one finds engineer-l at the t0? "l administrative staffs of lane 01'8"‘ There ls also an lncrefl!’ ed appreciation ln industry 0! ll" value of service: engineers have i0 The universities seem l° be trying to meet this cliellenut- to keep pace with demand. Mini" like the University lzotloris. offer." have expanded schools to acco ii le natural that Canisdl. a "n" ion of lncalculeble but ltlll lei-all)’ undeveloped resources. should PW‘ vlde the young engineer with l, field for his newly acquired talent!- Englneerlng is bulldlnl and d?‘ veloplng; and such an opportunity for these aci- But it ll not only l" w“ lvltleo. profession that needed badly. there ‘is such men that our able to nnswe emphasis being pieced on rewilic" eoiieervatlon la openlnl I?!“ °7' portunltlee for those skilled b. woodland oclence. — Toronto 01° Nor is that condemna- and Malb Wild, inaccessible find new home: in South Mr. Dublenski in legal advleor in emigrants. He accompanied to Paraguay and returned reo- He added that he vlsfrig Mennonite groups It: was o well-deserved tribute to the men who gave Britain ouch d ‘he phrase, “pmw magnificent leadership during the The fact that the engfnoeri“; schools of Canadian universities ere filled to overflowing with ydiiri: men ls a firm manifestation of "WNW. chem auslnz end extreme subtropical conditions description attributed to B. B. Dublenskl of Winnipeg of the conditions in Paraguay encauni. ered by the Mennonite settlers who Western Canada t4 America, wee ed- that in- iow the plonee bend already to delay their l departure until at least provisional accommodation le available . for The Mennonites bought a ,l track of 100.000 acres a! lend Vlllarrlca, Paraguay. Adjustment to BBQ! mate. in Mr. Dublen- ll be one of the moot bleme of the settlers. The district ll Ceisguaze, and it snakes and Indianl. Three tem- ported, already haw turn to Canada. The auth America by a faith, one must con- ‘ s __._ ber with the full ap- pariies will stand to the nation of a s a proper pride in Commons." With I ecked the old House war’: progress dur- The new chamber eudy for occupation but the sgan is al- ail classes of people such a precincts of U" nee in the future of Engineering, in any‘ A mall in ihll new merely a degree to enhance it seems that such he diligent ltudeni“! unfruitful. Accord- N. Flnluyson, Presl- ngineerlng Institute of Tofflliloi their enllneerml mmodete eoallcw“ no country offerl men are neerifid- 03g‘? In forestry. °Y ' a call for oil-ill” universities are i"; r it. The increase