L. ..__ ._-.._.._.__-. ....,' < ‘U. S. Schools Seekillg BOTTLE 8A8! Wells. ‘Ib-yltr-old 1018- ush shephefd, “Bi I dly'°ld baby lamb from. a bottle. Strength- ‘md by s hearty meal, the lamb tested its wobbly less under Wells watchful 0i"- , Sentenced For Fakcd Robberies Jamel (By The Canadian Pseeai JOHANNBSBURG. South Africa. March iii-Criminals have taken advantage of the number of pdy- roll robberies on the Rand recent- ly to stage faked cases. Aotinras the victim, they have hidden the money obtained from the banks for their employers, and then have wraplaincd to the police that they have been robbed. ‘lwo natives who carried out faked robberies have already been sentenced to terms of imprison- ment ior the theft of their em- ployers‘ money. A third native ls waiting trial on the allegation that ha stole s large sum of mon- ey which. he told police, had been taken from him at the point of a revolver by three native robbers. Senior detectives said that when- ever robberies were reported to tbein a careful check of the vic- tim's statement was made to en- sure that the report was genuine. The police have certain lines of investigation which they adopt to test a victim's story. it takes g swordfish one year to grow from an egg the size o! a " mente will fall oif now. but offic- lt means eohoola will need oven 'and repllollik old schools and pinhearl to a BOO-pound giant. Ivaoeluruoisosia wseaneauou. March io-um ~ -isnitonair-ea' and babies an as; question marks ‘to school emerge twins to and 010.000.000.000. rrne 015.000.000.000 is tho wfce tee the Unites states office cs education means earners will have to pay meg-g s! the education bill. ‘ Mind-millionaires have often been hill-ravine "Ihgels" for col- leges in the past. Many college beach In worried that endow- hll ilrthe U. S. office of educat- ion believe the smaller fry will coma through. Babies are question been; i”. cause all records for births have been broken since the war ended. I! U! flsniliee become popular, airs money, than now is estimat- John W- Studebaker, U. S. com. Ulion of educatin-elsl 010.- 000.000.000 is needed for repairing buildng new ones before 1000. The full tide of the big baby crop will strike the schools then. Census exports predict the baby boom will continua well into the '50s. Two other, experts of the office of education. Ernest V. Hollis and J. Harold Ooldthorpe, have just completed a detailed study of what the war did to colleges and universities. ‘Jive Billion before use They estimate these institutions need 06.000.000.000 before i050 for expansion and replacement of buildings and purchase of land. liven this would give each ‘ ‘ r less elbow room than pre-wsr stu- dents had. college plantrwisich were built for a peck pro-war enrolment oi 1,500,000 now have "$340,000 etu- dents. About 3.075000 are expect- ed by I000. Hollis and Goldthorlio said the colleges and universities have 841.- 5b0.000 feet of building space and need an additional 265,000.00. At i060 construction prices the ad- ditional cost would be about $1.- 0t0.000.000 or e10 a square foot. "In space this is approximately the equivalent of l3! Empire State buildings," says Hollis. These new classrooms, laboratories and dorm- itories would ‘give colleges and universities 253 square miles oi space. This is larger than any American city except New York, Loo Angeles or New Orleans. Besides problems of raising-anon- ey labor and material shortages are tough hurdles for anyone start- ing a muIti-hilllon ddllar job, EX- peris at the bureau of labor stat- istics say the school work might be done by about 265,000 workmen working steadily for s. yes-r. The apparent shortage of mil- lionaires isn't causing office of ed- ucation officials to lose much sleep. They figure the “small fry" earners and to: payers will come through. People who make contributions .000.000 ca... ma; Edward island Like u» o... s Reed rybody Seen “above are Mr. Paul Sharpe (right) of Paul's Flying Service, Mr. Sinclair putoliffe (centre) and Mr. Benjamin McEachei-n (left) of the Cutoliffe Ambulance Service, . . _ u _ _ . . from s. newly equipped hospital plane. prior to being taken by am- bulance in the Prince Edward ls- iand Hospital. ' The plane, which is a Stlnson Voyager, owned by Mr. Sharpe. was recently equipped with skill, stretcher and other equipment by the Provincial Government. POST OFFICE WARNING REGINA — (GP) — Polianen delivered 4.693 letters to Regine citizens who didn't have proper facilities to receive them. The letters, written after a survey by the letter lirrlers, told house- wives their letter boxes were un- satisfactory. LONG AND NAB-ROW Egypt consists of a narrow strip of irrigated“ land along the 900- mile course of the Nile River, surrounded by desert. duct them from their incomes be- fore figuring income taxes. Less than two per cent of all income is being contributed as gifts now- But the law allows a person to subtract up to l5 per cent. Col- leges and universities could in- crease their incomes tremendously by showing income tax payers how to reduce their taxes by contribu- to educational institutions can dc- tlons to education. s34 the; censure... writers WEDNESDAY. Mince! 11. 194s E3 h a ZHICJ Photo by Saunders. Ireland's Sons Honor Patron Saint Today Canadian Preee Staff Writer It’: St. Patrick's Day today and the symbol of the shamrock will again enliven irish hearts and recall to Irish utlnde the legend- ary figure of one of the most col- orful saints of history. The date of St- Pai-riclfs birth. and even the date of his death, are disputed by scholars. But, it's agreed he lived in the fifth cen- tury and died at Abbey Saul in County Down-in the year 460, some say, while others maintain it was 493. The place of his birth is pretty much a. mystery. Histor- ians have conjectured him vari- ously cs o. native of Ireland. Eng- land. Wales and France. There are those who assert that the Apostle of Ireland was really a Scotsman, born at Kllpatrick, near Dumber- ton. In any case there's little dispute that he had a. long and adventur- ous life. Kidnapped at the age of 10 from his father's farm by a band of pirates, he was sold into slavery to a petty chieftaln. Six years later he escaped, journeyed to France. and became a monk, first at Tours and later at Lerins. one of the most celebrated mon- asteries in Europe. In the year elll he went to looked u-gast the clock. “It's doctor" acid. The doctor smiled, l "We're not through yet. Thieiano .. Ha was right. Soon often: midnight and just in ung matron gave first tri lets the little Red Croce Outpost I-loppitalhs seen. timefor the New Yeanthl hirtbtotwomorebabioa The created a sensation . . . but e problem also. - - - f k, watt‘; six children already at home, the new- flrndefiffifid IfQfWTQVQfiKOQ‘, Qflwkjfi oomerewere more than the parents’ small house- flu nun“ u‘ on ‘u m, flaw hold could absorb. So Red Croce Hospital “ ” atepptg: in, kc t the babies for go cad‘ a hidlf “alight Rllghtsmm “o! , wa ‘ w m - a , _ ' ' “m; m” ' . ens-mud ' mo mo» adorable. §°..'..‘&"£ thfraafillr mobile e513. u: nt bios. then sent them home. ‘ummom; eqohn, 3° ‘at the dorms;- fast!" W" ""'°'"°“ °°“"P“"“’ fil‘.'2.r"2.l§°32.i‘tll°‘1‘"?§ffii2$i;’$fil‘i: That ss only one local service this small (nine And John my‘: “Au m. “hi” mm m m“, beds, two cote) eficient community in which it is to ‘ t-of-the-world’ cqmmunty. Well»; i ,‘ ,, , S.::..':.,°"* hearers Tb'1926 RodCroea ',eeta' .. . .. ' tbeusoud brick hospital com lete leivitb a small mmunwfimedwma wh°t6 p§$ surgery and nursery-and has oonistently - P‘ m °"“' - - ~ tvedflaxiflborhooddnathut _ IXQOfUBtOIdVIIUOYDQ-Ilfiltltltlilltifll. The nurse with the now-born baby hospital renders the situated. This is a are _ in the well-equipped surges-y. Osss eteroomtaiseeoaseofserlously. i tboepitalapaceisat suche cumulative: are d lo e their bebiee Home: and some time after was sent by Pope Celestine to preach in Ireland. Awarding to his Irish biographers, Patrick founded 305 churches and baptised with his own hand 12.000 persons. There can be little doubt he was s persuasive missionary. It was while preaching at Tara that St. Patrick made the shamrock im- mortal. when a. Druid priest challenged the mystery of the ‘lrlrilty. Patrick. stooping to the emerald sod, picked up a shamrock and held it high to prove that three could combine in one and one in three. - After 20 years of missionary travels, he fixed his sec at Arm- agh about the year 454. His relics were preserved at Downpatrick. near the Abbey Saul, down to the period of the Reformation; and the district about Downpairick is venerated by Irishman to this day. Such was the Life of Patriclps Magonus sucatus Oalpurnlus-St. Patrick to you. INDIAN COTTON U? In i932. India produced only 40 per cent of her needs in cotton piece goods. but by i940 produced erated by the Navy simply at PAGE THIRTEEN 0.5. Navy's Air Ann (lonverting To- Jet Planes __._ ABOARD USA/Emma AT 55A, March 1o - (AP) - The United States Navy's air arm i; in m, process of conversion to 10-mlie- Bfiilnute Jet planes. This was announces} Navy following trials aboard tlqls 27,000-ton aircraft carrier jug Week. when for the first time jet 1180"!‘ planes ‘operated 1mm s carrier flight deck under moutine conditions gt sea, The Navy said it expects the use of jets will have been expand- ed throughout the fleet within g Your. Already it has two jet fight- 91‘ Squadrons in commission. One squadron is using the Norm American "Fury," designated the FJ-l; the other McDonald FH-Ys, Th0 H-A-F» in December, 1945, successfully made one experimental lsvnshln: with s jet. Recently ""1 eXDerlments were conducted ""49! Sllecial test conditions. But until last Wednesday there had been no jet operations at sea under- normal carrier conditions. The lo-mile-a-minute FJ-l's thundered on and off the Boxers $118M 490k with, ease. They were lflilnched successfully both under their own power and by catapult. But despite the Low-pound thrust developed by the FJ-l’: Itrfiiflllt ram duct engine. it was apparent the slow acceleration of the 1971 PY°Pe11Bd plane woulq boi- launching! under its own power as routine procedure. This i; a handi- cap inherent in all present jot propulsion. Th! Jets took off easily from the Bill-foot Boxer with a full deck run. but under combat conditions it would not be feasible to keep the entire flight deck clear ti; launch only one plane at a time. ‘The Boxer’: two deck catapults, however, shot the six-ion fighters inio the air at about 145 miles an hour — well over flying speed. The FJ-l is a stub-wing plane by the "more than 550 miles an hour." It has a rate of climb of a mile a minute, an official flying time-of four hours. and a range of morq than 1.500 miles. landings on the Boxer were ems». Evan P. Aurond and Lt-Crndr. Robert Elder. Both pilots pro. riounced jet carrier larfdings easier than with conventional propeller- drlven aircraft. . Among jet operational problem will be new methods of plane handling. Unlike conventional planes, the roaring rearward jet blast probably will prevent launch- ing of more than owo or three more than 92 1-2 per cent o! her needs. r by Kate Aiiken in her arms However, just midnight, ital has been next summer. night flights.’ Isolated har fiat‘. The work o! more; never ends . . . Give generously to are cslvanuzv awn moss rsgyiucist csiersicu uesooussrses the cornerstone of a new 20-bed boa- orwsrd to moving into the new quarters be increased will better service to be also allow more oi Outposts, 45 and 26 miles In the meantime the busy life of the hospital goes on. The superintendent and a stall‘ of two nureoe and one nurse's aid are on the go from morning ~ This hospital is just enotbor Red Cross Services include: Blood Transfusion. Outpost Hospitals. Aid to Sick and Disabled Veterans, Treatment for Crippled Children. Dis- nsier Relief, Nutrition Services, Home Nursing Courses, Swimming and Water Safety, etc. planes “at a time. laid. Red Cross officials look w.» space ‘vcn to the district. t will to noiillssbosing Red Qroea ' tent respectively. isgechsinofRed Making the first jet operational ' Young l! GLIN Will-III! , DONDON. March io-(Arh-Brl. tom's youthful new embossed to Washington can hardly be find from an Ansericesv-when ha has his hat on. Sir Oliver Pranks. the ambeesa. cor-elect. likes widc-brimmed soft fell-l. the kind that make Anten- can.s conspicuous in British lur- ioundinal- The bat, however. is fer from being hie only mun‘. ulshing mark. He has a brilliant mind and it was almost solely due to his men- tal qualities that the Government insisted on his taking the new lob, even though Sir Oliver would rather have continued his quiet, scholarly life as provost of Queen's College, Oxford His mind was the directing force behind Europe! response to the Marshall Plan. Many here regard him as second only to Secretary of State Marshall himself in bring- ing something concrete out of the ides. Marshall expressed at Har- vard last June. Sir Oliver while retaining his college post, became chairman oi the executive committee of the i0 European nations which drew up the European Recovery Program. His choice for that difficult chore was based on his performance as a wartime civil servant. His judg. ment, tact and capable admjmgg. ration brought him eventual ad- vancement to permanent secretary of the combined ministries of sup- ply and aircraft production. He made the two ministries into a single, tidy administration, clean- ed up his desk and returned to Oxford less than two years ego. At the same time he turned down several private business offers. Sir‘ Oliver is convinced his pro- per career lies in academic life, but his delvlngs into moral phil- osophy have reinforced a sense of duty that draws him into public service. Many Qualifications Ha has many qualifications for his new job. l-Ils major task likely will be to link the United States to the countries receiving its econ- omic heip,a. job he prepared him- self for by whipping Europe's Ro- covery plan into shape. Neither the United States nor Americans are strange to him- Flor a yea-r. in 193b, he was visiting professor at the University of Chicago, on leave from a philoso- phy fellowship at Oxford. i-le knew Americans well in the war. Conscious effort made his relations with them quite cordial. despite his retiring nature. He even broke his tectotal habits to promote happy relations with con- (By Godon Lindon! Smith) Here's a Real Hobby In these uncertain times lucky indeed is the man or women with g garden, Threats of sky-high vegetable prices next fell winter won't scare these people. They can grow and star; their own, in addition to a steady supply, fresh and right out 01 ti“ garden from June on. But that ls only one advantale- As a hobby, recreation. exercise. or whatever you call it, El-rden- lng‘ ranks‘ at the top of the list. 1t is inexpensive — a few dollars will buy all the seeds. tools and fertilizer necessary. It is elastic — one can spend es much or AI little time and energy as one likes or the doctor advises. It 18kt! one outdoors into the sunshine. lets us follow the natural spring urge of digging in the soil. And. finally, gardening gives satisfaction that comes only from creating something with our own hands. With e. few tiny seeds and plants one can produce a flower Borden u-iat is es individual as a painl- ing. a Common Mistakes Commonest mistakes of new gardeners is to plant too close together. whether it ls lettuce seed or maple trees. This is not only a waste of seed or nursery or poor growth. With shrubbery about the house and splndly grow- th that is liable to fall a prey to heavy storms. With annual flowers and vegetables, proper development is impossible. the vegetables are liabla to be stringy and tough. require at least half specs between them this means 20 to 40 feet. carrots it means inches. with corn or packet will be given the prope spacing. With bigger ‘seed peas, corn. atc., spacing can he spread more evenly rowing the mixture. In any cas develop will be advisable. Proper depth in planting also important. The rule hare poppies, alyllum or L 62 Prisca St, Phone 2010 ~ in the soil, with big gladloll. bulbs. potatoes and _ stock, but it also encourages weak and trees, the result is a bit of s, jllflfllg with fnr- too much shade Zan-a-i n v o y Its No Stranger To 11.8.; PRACTICAL YOLK A hen. belonging to medley Stern, of Greene, N. Y., laid a, perfect double egg. The whole egg. top, was formed inside the larger one, below. Both were completo in every detail, the larger weigh- iru six ounces. vivlal Americans who came t0 confer with him. Last fall he spent a couple o! months in Washington, ready to answer any and all questions about the recovery plan he submitted Sir Oliver celebrated his 6rd birthday recently. Ho is s. little over six feet tall, with a lean look that implies strength. He is friend- ly, with the friendliness of the. normally reserved man. On occas- ion he displays a witty tongue. Sir Qllver is the son of a con- gregational minister, the Rev- R5. Franks. He was born at Bristol and went to Bristol grammar school. He studied classics a1 Queen's College, Oxford. and is I fellow in philosophy at Queen's. He is married and has two daugh- tors. He held the job for l0 years. except for the year at Chicago, then became professor of moral philosophy at the University of Glasgow. He was khighfad in i046 in recognition of his administrat- ive work. Canadian Garden See-vice 1948 dehlies it moans fmno__ d inches, with a, beans. sbouthn inch of cover. Iiret Jobs While the frost fl in the lhdltnd of course, gardening will be largely confined to planning. but there are some outdoor Jobs that can be started almost any time. pairs or the starting of new ones. Grass seed makes its beet growth in cool weather, in fact it crust be sown just as soon as the eoli can be worked. sweet peas also must go in early for best results. They need to develop their deal growth before the soil gets warm. 1,1 a hot-bed ls attempted one should get a government. bulletin on how to build it. l Navy Training OTTAWA - It was announced at Naval service Headquarters to- day that among‘ the preparations now under way for the extensive summer training program for the naval reserves the frigate, HJVLCA. "Swansea," and the Alger-inc type minesweeper, H.M.C.S. "Portage." both of \vhlch have excellent war records will be commissioned. Lieutenant Commander A. ll. Rankin. 0.B.E.. R..C.N., of Ven- icouver. has been named m com- R. W. Timbrell. D. S. 0-. R-UN- also oi Vancouver. becomes thf commanding officer of "Swansea." One of the first will be lawn ro- , mend "Portage" while Lieutenant- _____________.. LARGEST ALBERTA GAZETTE EDMONTON -— (C?) - A list of those appointed commissioners for oaths in Alberta - lnore than the flowers bunched so closely to- glow name, ._ as they sre high at maturity. with big trees 58m 1e, w“ fouf tin-fee thg sl "m1 the normal issue. only about 2 staked tomatoes is inches. On the seed easy, but it is much more difficult coyote n-lrlt o rope again. with the fine seeds of carrot, lettuce or slyssum. Such things by mix- no matter how carefully wa scriv some later thinning as the plan's about three timos the diameter cf tween the hlkilnds the seed. With tiny seeds llltl video are being discussed. means merely pressing the seeds lus 300 poles out. gether that they will not bloom 1min; regulutonl under the properly. Electrical Protection Act. made Generally speaking all plants m, slim-g‘ quotes issued recant- aa much 1y the largest since the province was form-ted more than (I years: R 0 _.__.-.__...__. _ rauoum WITH cores}: l.‘ along the e. the 1c; before subdulng it. ‘ ‘I0 All) Si!!! IAIKII i suntan’. ralkluid reloads - ccr) — Plans for a fraeeieg plant here and rlfrigoratod shipping bee and Nantes is is -turnipa this farmers. are esp i! L in the plan which “Ne! things like mutton or sheep from the illend and to be marketed in other eounisleq HERBERT, Seek. - (OP) -— l" Jahnke, veteran rancher of thia _ like beans. west-central Saskatchewan district,» ~ will he will think twice before tackling a Riding South Baskotchdlars River he lassocd the animal ' but wound up grappling with it in the ing with a little dry send and snow. He was severely btttole on