Eh: (Euardiuu : l l pugg Qygfy won;-an morning II is! Hues Hui namuou-n. P.E.l.. as us Thomson campus UL. 'unoI-I Pnwe Ewan-I luau use he Def M has SL W.. Tennis. Ioalnai office. 215 Uuverolt fives Ill-o ug A. Iuneu. Pabhmar II4 General Innlb Frill Walker. Editor Ixbar Canadian Dad! NVOU Publimen A-orialion lenbev of 1!: Canadian Pre- lemkr Audit Bureau of Cirenlationa IIIICI etlicea ll summer-de. lloaullllhtg I;Am Authorised II Second UIII Mail by m”"'"'"' mnma." silos m In Q Carrier rfarlotietowa. Sumac - I g... Elaewbdlre in PF..l who other PIWIM-I Ill U. S ti2.uo per Inauin. T71-"in mgngnt ln0lIOf!.l;-VCIKOI than the weakest II ." PAGEA4. M().NDiY, Miincumi. 2:31 A Fine Achievement Warmest congratulations are due to the St. Dunstan's L'nivcrsity de- bating team which-for the second time in five years--non the Domin- ion debating champioiisliiP 0V” the Laval University team at Ottawa 0" Saturday night. This is a magnifi- cent acl'iiei'enicnt for a small college, in mmp(.m10n with the largest uni- versities across the country. But St. Dunstan's has always been noted for "S hirrh standards. and its students hznc i ii on outstdiiding honors in cu-rv liiclil of academic attainment. Dnnaltl .ll:icDou;;all. 0r Bl00mll0ld. and Leo Pcddlc of Corner Brook. Newfoundland. with Ian Gillies as app,-natp. formed the S.D.b. team Teaching Standards At the present time there are approximately 8.000 persons serving as teachers in Canada without any professional training and nearly 18.- 000 whose education and training aie below the prescribed minimum of the province in which they teach. This being Education Week, it is well worth pondering the signifi- cance of these figures. The Canadian Teacheis' Federa- tion points out that raising teaching standards will help to reduce, not increase, the teacher shortage. This seeming paradox is explained by the fact that teacher drop-out is much more responsible for the present teacher shortage than an actual lack of recruits. If entry standards were higher. misfits and those who use teaching as a temporary means of employment would be kept out. The teacher in today's world has a big job. It is not just one of hear- ing lessons and marking papers. He must have sufficient training, insight and leadership ability to develop the attitudes that are the basis of true (lanadian democracy. Nothing but the best is good enough for this vital responsibility. The. Canadian School Trustces' Association has recommended ”tlial in this instance. and they scorcd a brilliant personal triumph. But they will doubtless be the first to pay tribute to their Alma Mater. and particularly to Rev. F. L. Cass. moderator of the College Debating Society, for the excellent training they received. Their success reflects favorably not only on S.D.L'. but on this Province generally. and all our citizens will join in congratulating them most heartily. Newfoundland Trade For many years Newfoundland has provided good markets for this Province's agricultural products. Un- til recently the trade was pretty much it one-sided affair, mainly be- cause Newfoundland produced very few articles which this Province could use. Last year. however, as was pointed out by Mr. Saviile in seconding the Address in Reply to the Speech from the Throne, ii good many articles were imported from our sister Province; not in sufficient volume to balance our exports but still enough to demonstrate our good intentions. 1 This import business will have to be stepped up considerably, if our markets in Newfoundland are to be retained and developed. In recent years many small factories produc- ing the kind of goods which this Province must import have started operations in Newfoundland; and there is a growing feeling among Newfoundland business .men and Government officials that P. E. I. should deal with them to a much greater extent than has been the case hitherto. This view finds ex- pression in the Newfoundland press from time to time; and frequently there are hints that Nova Scotia, which also sends farm products across the Straits and would like to send more. is doing better in this respect than is this Province. it must be noted that the New- foundland Government is doing everything possible to encourage farming on a large scale. Already it is being suggested that within a few yeais the Province will be self-sup- porting in poultry and eggs. Some of the biggest poultry farms in the Maritimes are situated near St. John's. and they are being extended all the time. Cattle and hog raising, too, has been developed I hundred- fold in the last seven or eight years. when the Trans-Canada Highway is completed from Port Aux Basques to St. John's-it is hoped to have I passable road for the entire 600 mile stretch by next fall-agriculture will , take great strides forward; for the, and Willem tiuuugi: the best land the minimum standard of certifica- tion for teachers be two years of teacher education beyond the senior matriculation and that no person be given a professional certificate un- less and until he attains this stand- ard." There is no doubt that better salaries and better teaching facilities will help to attract better teachers. But. most of all. we need conviction of the central importance of educa- tion in the future of Canada. In a country so blessed with natural re- sources. it would be folly indeed to neglect the mental and spiritual re- sources needed for their proper de- velopmcnl and use. Education alone can provide them. EDITORIAL NOTES Says the Principal of the High School in Wichita Falls, Texas: "We do not tolerate Presley records at our dances". Now, there's a man who one day will be Governor of Texas. A military base in Wisconsin has replaced the last mule it had in service by a helicopter. No mule de- serves that kind of treatment. He would have found it humiliating enough if he had been replaced by I horse, let alone a helicopter. 0 I 0 Governor Ribicoff of Connecticut must be an unusual type of politic- ian. Referring to the S25 million surplus with which his administra- tion hopes to begin the new fiscal year, he said: "We do not take credit for it". It is doubtful whether these words were ever said before in that kind of context. 0 O C Even if the old age pension is raised to 350, it will still buy only as much as the 340 pension bought when introduced in 1952. As an ex- change points out, Ottawa will be doing nothing more, in that case. than repairing the damage done by its own inflationary policies during the past five years, A new method has been devised for administering polio vaccine, It is an inoculation pressure "gun" which shoots the vaccine into the arm. It is claimed that the new system will reduce the number of technicians needed for the opera- tion. The gun will contain several doses and a mechanism will control the amount for each inoculation. It has the approval of Dr. Salk, the- vaccine's discoverer. So far it has been used only on a group of volun- teers. o O I 0 John Jay Whitney has taken up his post as United States Ambass- ador to the Court of St. James. He may turn out to be the right man in the right place. but he is starting in under difficulties. For one thing, there is still much lllwlll in Britain towarrb the United States adminis- ti-Itionwaltbmnh perhapsnotu ihuehutlterewasawhtleback. l l r - .6- ' " To have 1 good teacher is the most wonderful filing that can happen to a.-;nlIa.' it sags have 7 EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS !lli-Il.BOL'RNE:- Ten years ago SCIRO mustralian Scientific and industrial Research Organization) be-can in experinir.-nt in making artificial rain. This is an undertak- ing that is fraught with moment- oils p0SSll)lllllCS for a country as walerlcss as Australia. when the experiments began. micro-wave radar. which has been developed during the Second World War. had enabled scientists to examine the structure of rain clouds, to understand befter the processes that produce rain. and to select I type of cloud from rwhich rain can most readily be precipitated. The next step was to discover I chemical which. when injected into the right kind of cloud. would produce the physical processes that precede rainfall. Thousands of nights have been made through the clouds; dry ice tsolid carbon dioxide! water spray and other chemicals have been drop .'d through them. in recent years silver iodide has proved most effective. in February 1847. from I Lib erator bomber flying over the Blue Mgunlalns in New South Wales. dry ice was poured on to I rain cloud. A few minutes later the scientists were rewarded by seeing rain fall over an area of 30 square miles. Since then they have repeatedly produced isolated showers from patches of rain clouds. MORE AMBITIOUS But the objective is much mom ambitious. it is to harness rain- Is water has long been harnessed -to the service of man and to all over Australia. As well as be- ing dropped from aircraft, silver iodide has been .1-leased from make it fall freely It will. The . quest has taken men of the SCIRO Sowing In The Clouds R. L. ('urt.hoyI in the Winnipeg Free Press chemical burners on lonely moun- tain tops. Caught up by passing clouds. it has increased normal rainfall. But thus far the economic difficulty is that the individual treatment of a large number of clouds makes the cost of rainmalp iiig prohibitive. it is in the air that the most promising results have been achieved. in May 1955. on the plains of western Queensland. I Dakota plane made 20 nights in 14 days releasing silver iodida along I 200-mile front over which moist air was coming down from the Gulf of Carpentaria. As much as three inches of rain was meas- ured in one downpour. At SClR0's rain-making head- quarters in the University of Syd- ney. instruments have been de- vised to enable the crews of air- craft participating in the experi- ments to measure the moisture content of clouds. REGISTERED ON TAPE Glass slides coated with mail- nesium oxide Ire protruded through the aircraft's windows. to receive the imprints of the moist- ure particles in the cloud. A tape machine inserted in I slit in the wing exposes I roll of paper to the cloud. The changing resistance of Lhe tape registers the amount of moisture encountered. A microphone in the nose of the plane records raindrops as they strike the diaphragm and the rain- drops generate Ilectro magnetic impulses which are photographed as images on I moving film. Chem- ical tanks filled with silver iodide are attached to the plane. with burners at its wing-tips. Within 20 to 25 minutes of the chemical being injected into the cloud. tiny drops of moisture turn into ice crystals which. as they fall toward earth and enter I warmer atmos- The Pacific salmon is so impor- tant to man as food that deep-sea vessels am now seeking out its most secret haunts. For decades. intrusive studies of the pink-fleshed fish have been made in the freshwater strum; where they hatch and to which they return to spawn and dig, year. I stepped-up pro- lram is examining salmon in the sea. where they grow to maturity. Research lliiph from the Uniiga States, Canada and Jar jrg gn. used in the quest. the National Geosr-phlc Snciotv reports. other scientists are working toward Io- lutlons of I land-locked problem - fish versus water-power devel. opments. risnmo TREATY AT swing on the ocean. fish expert: seek the feeding grounds of salmon Ia. live to Asia and North American. Under an international agreement. Japanese fishermen are forbid. Pacific Salmon Ha-unis National Geographic society den to fish on the American side of 175 degrees west longitude -- Ibout the position of Midway is- land. The treaty. however. is to re- opened for demarcation of the line next year. By that time. it is hoped. the research ships will have produced evidence of what areas in the North Pacific are inhabited by the fish from the different countries. Already. some two million squarg miles of ocean have been survey- ed by the ships. New identification techniques have been developed to aid this study. Although the Asian and A- mericaz salmon are almost iden- tical. they can be told apart by careful measuru...-... of fins and gills, examination of individual scales, Ierologii.-II testing of the blood. Ind the presence of certain rasitel. gliocxs AND riurinc i.ion'rs in Pacific Coast. streams, expep. One of the m .t reuin bicms of Canadap: fueure. ll. bolt: .-ervatlmi as the lounaaun future llrospvrity. 'nn calmly mods II I but II page today. in usually it the conclusions of the .- Conservation Or No Globe Ill Hill. 7&1! Future phera. melt and hit the ground as rain. Experiments are now proceed- ing above the Snowy Mountains when I giant hydro electric un- dertaking is being built. The Inn is ideal for concentrated experi- imcnt because it is well supplied with cloud. The Snowy Mountains llydro-Electric Authority has plac- ed rain gauges on mountain ridges. in gorges and along the rivers. Three aircraft are incessantly It- tacking tha clouds with silver io- dide TARGET AREA There is I target area in which the clouds are seeded. and I control area. which is left to Nature. Rainfall produced artific- ially in the target area is continu- ously compared with the normal rainfall in the control area. So far appreciably more rain has fallen on the target than bu the control area. SCIRO receives many appeals from drought-striken areas to come and make rain. Last year during I dry spell. Brisbane City Council asked the organization to make rain for the city's parched parks and gardens. But the ana- wer invariably is that SCIRO has not yet mastered the secret of Ir- tlficlal rain-making, that your more work will he neccsn ,v be- fore it can do I0. If. however. SClR0 ever does succeed in harnessing the rain. it will take most of the risks out of farming and grazing in Australia. and add millions of dollars I year to the value of primary production. iments are in progress with traf. flc lights. electric shocks. and "Venetian blinds" to keep young salmon out of hydroelectric tur- hints of the great dams. One of the most.-iomising tech- niques puts a pulsating field of dir- ect electric current across the stream. The fish find it unpleas- ant. and can be nudged toward I safe path over the dam- ln some dam installations. thlI' path is the same "fish ladder" that the mature fish use on their way upstream to spawn. in others. I "skimmer" is being tested. It pugllej fish, with I jet. of water. in- to I flume that carries them be- low the dam. ' in small streams. experiments ullh underwater lights - dislik- ed by the fish - have given some success. The salmon. seeking the dark,.ai-I guided Iwgy from des- ger. A system of louvers, set in the stream beds like vertical Venetian blinds is being tried. Though the oplnlngl are large enou h for the fish to swim througlmtno eddies set up are Ivoi by the salmon. it is expected that such lnsl.IllI- tions on large rivers would pose too great-I construction problem. The louver: in be used. howev- er. to keep the at out of smaller traps such as irrigation ends. it -52; 33 if Medically Speaking Illa:-nIIN.IIIIeIeI.I.D. rifbuls AND sniirnas uxiinn Iv A suiwav Beware of storm fronts. Not only do such conditions mean bad mu. they also might mean bad Q A unique. joint investigation. made by I private weather fore- casting company and I pharma- . I.-cut.icI.l firm. has revealed that there is I 50 to 75 per cent in crease in cases of common colds following closely on the heels of meteorological changes which the weather forecasters call storm fronts. DEFINITE LINK This seems tobestablish a de- finite lliik between stonns Ind Inlffiea. Several factors appear to be in volvad in the weathers triggering an outbreak of colds. First. there usually is fair weath- er and I temperature somewhat above average. Then there is I sharp drop in temperature. coupled with increas ed rainfall. wide day-to-night tem- perature range and higher humid- ity as well as wind velocity. DRY AREA if you live in I dry area. the rain. snow. humidity and cloudi- ness factors are more important than for someone living in I nor- ms wet area. The joint study. the first of its kind, was conducted in two stag- as. First. the daily sales of cold tab- lets were recorded in cities through out the country. Then weather re- cords for each city were analyzed. COLD TABLET SALES The researchers found that sales of cold tablets mushroomed after Itorm fronts Itruck the various areas. What does all this mean to you? Well. for one thing, it enables weather bureaus to predict fairly well in advance the likelihood of an outbreak of cold: in specifit areas. MORE COLD The National Weather Institute in Los Aiigeiea. which participat- ed in the study. says the Atlanta. Ga.. and Miami. Fia.. areas can expect to have more cases of colds than usual from now until about March 4. When tho newspaper. radio or television reports for your community forecast storm fronts. you can take Ipeciai pi ' s to protect yourself against fatigue. chilling and other things which help lower your resistance. QUESTION AND ANSWER- H.N.: Why aren't mastoid op- erations performed as uh-equenil, as they once were? Answer: Because of the use of the new antibiotic drugs. Symp- toms do iiot progress to the se- vere stage which requires opera- tions. SONG The boat is chafing If our long delay. And we must have too soon The spicy Iea-pinks and the in- borne spray. The tawny sands, the moon. Keep us. 0 Thefts. in our western rll ht! Watch from thy pearly throne Our vegsel. plunging deeper into I all To reach I land unknown. i -John Davidson. MAXIMS A ship II III-but h Iafa - but um II uc wins ships are built for. our YESTERDAYS From the Guardian tiles TWENTY-IIVI YIAII AGO (MIMI 4. 1933) Owing to yesterday's severe storm the Ionian train did not make I trip to Charlottetown Ind- the pane ' In were forced to re- main in II mnlgm. Tlu regular train which left. Charlotte- town for Borden Iy morn- lag did not reach its dealiaail until almost I o'clock last night. Yesterday marked the sixteenth anniversary of the passing through Moncton on route to Halifax on Noles BY THE WAY It would be In improvement. we think if ever: public utterance of John Foster Dulles were accom- panied. or preceded by, the inev- itable explanation or de. 'il.- J. V. McAree in the Globe and Mail A Nation! Health Ind Welfare publication says that "fortunate- ly. illout atomic warfare would likely last I nat .-r of days rather than weeks or months." But I few The latest report II the Men... dist. Board of Missions underscore. III fact that aconunica and um changing pattern of America. life .. are catching up with rural Cross- roads churches. The Methodists expect. to build L500 new churches in the next three years. but 1.300 Imall one-church a "station" par. lshes have been abandoned. Lit- tle wonder. with the rising living costs of rural pastors, and the ac. cessibility of village or city chm-. days might be 14.3 - enough to eliminate civilization. - '0ttawa Journal clies by auto.-Buffalo News Doctors are urging medical ex- aminations as a pie: quisite to the issuing of drivers' licences. It would make more sense to give the prospective pedestrian I physical -he's the one who has to do all the jumping.-0.'illia Packet and Times Radio I television are in the entertaim - t business, and it is with a strong bias toward enter- tainment values that they present news. The newspapers are still. very seriously, in the business of gathering anc distributing news. as news.-Peterborough Examin- er Insure for Safcty's sake Better Get Your Farm Under Cover Now When we read. in I government circular on employment. that "con- siderable curtailment was shown in fish. fruit and vegetable can- ning and pmserving and there were comparatively small losses in tobacco. lea her footwear." etc. it take a liltl ime to realize that the circular means: "employ- ment was L0l'lSldEl'ui1ly lower in these industries." 1! we took it literally we might spend absorb- ing hours wondering how the Do- minion Bureau of Statistics. Lab- Lct insurance coverage pro- tect against finnncial losses due to fire or lightning. See us for farm Insurance needs. I-IYNDMAN & C0. or and Prices division. went I- LTD- bout curtailing fish. or what I cut- tailed fish looked like.-Pet.erhoi'- D” W7 51 9”" 5'e ough Examiner MONTREAL 3 hrs. 45 mins. Via Maritime Central Airways Dep. Charlottetown 11:15 am. Connect with TCA at Moncton Only 541.70 one-way total fare See your Travel Agent or TCA Office in Moncton. 995 Main St. (adjacent Bruns- wick Hotel) also hobby. the Nova Scotlaa in Halifax. HFC helps going your inoney problems! Thibillutneaonwhynmanypaophbormwvith eontldenoafronillfc-.h tbIttbeyknowHl'C MIN thomaoiwmaiiaypsebIInI.whItbIMaiIynIIdacuh loInormuIlyIdvkneniInaIynIetdI.IfIloInwill h,-Ip.youe-Ibum,asIuna-siooowanuptn30 llfctbainoit ion In mm: . Imi cosmtlcl