---.-L- 3-wr,L"'w . Else fduardiau 't4IaoI'I'QoIl-uuuuuunlnucw C III! C I- -Chill Olhcd. Shell Tumor Bulldlll K II. Cathusu Snort. Via be A. Inna. Paul-nu no ueurv Iuuq hut Wahu. mau- Io-hr Coudru uuuv Nu-vqnpc cannon Auonntnu lo-bu at no i'umt.un Pres dej AIM lure-u d Circulouma nun &na as humans. lacuna no Alban- CC-hluIeooucu.. uanuysboroa Department. Ottawa l.'u-nu uarhuewwp summer-nan lIS.O0 not up In-born In PEI use other PvovuonIa& U l IIIJI per one-. the weakest ink.” "The Ilrongeot memory is weaker than PAGE I FRIDAY. Jl LY 19. 1937 A Rash Champion President l-jiscnltow erimay never have heard of Sir Thomas Browne. or read one page of that great man's ntajestic prose. Had he done so. attd come across tlte-following If passage. he might have learned something to his t'itil.'llli'rl'.',t'. ”l-Ivery man." says Brownc. "is not a proper champion for truth. nor fit to take up the gauntlet in the cause if verity: nuiny fro m igimruiice of these tnaxims attd an illi'(lliSltiOl'El'.0 zeal for truth. have too raslily ('itat1;i-ii the troops of error. and re- main as trophies unto the ('lli'i1li"S of truth." Is this what happened to Ilir. Elsi-nltouer itt his vcrltal encounters with his old wartime friend, Mnrsltzii Zhukov. when they were lmilt army commanders in Berlin? At a press conference in Washinr.;ton the Presi- dent recalled tlte many long discus- sions he had with Zhukov hlmut Dentocracy and ('omntunisin. and how "hard pill" he was to meet his friend's argument ”that their system appealed to the idealistic. and we completely to the materialistic." Mr. Eisenhmver's inability to te- fute Zhukov was due. no doubt. to his inexperience in dialcctics-an art in which all Communist leaders are well trained. But it will be la- mentably easy to put a more damag- ing construction on his confession that he had had ”a very rough time trying to defend our position." Mr. Eisenhower speaks now as the leader of the Western democratic world. One cannot help wishing that he had kept this humiliating confession to himself. Or. better still, that the opportunity of arguing the issue in the first place had fallen to the defeated candidate in the president- ial election. Mr. Adlai Stevenson. Then. indeed. "the gauntlet in the cause of verity" might have been taken up to some purpose, and Mar- shal Zhukov would have found an opponent worthy of his steel! Hope For South Africa Reference was made in these columns a few days ago to the de- cision of Anglican Church author- ities in South Africa to advise their people to disregard the Govern- ment's regulation which forbids Ne- groes to attend church services in white areas. Since then further re- ports have been received which in- dicate that other Churches in the Union are prepared to take similar action. Twenty-five members of the Roman Catholic hierarchy issued a statement in which they called the regulation "evil and un-Christian". The Presidcntpf the Methodist (ion- ference had this to say: "The Churches of South Africa have tried to avoid a head-on clash with the state. but the series of apartheid (segregationl laws have made the present clash inevitable." The Bapt- ist. I'nion adopted a resolution dc- ploring "social and economic injust- Ice and the breaking of solemn pledges given to non-whites.” The Congregational I'nion went on rec- ord as "sharing the sincere convic- tion that the Government's policy has no sanction in the New Testa- ment and is diametrically opposed to the teachings of Christ." Presby- terian officials said they had found upratheid ”morally indefensible", while the Christian (lnunril. a fed- notion of 23 Protestant bodies. de- I mud that "denial of freedom of ation and enforcement of com- mnhory apartheid in any sphere of life Ire denials of the law of II Whether or not these expres- vv of reientment will persuade A Government of South Africa to i millet and wiser look at its plan mnauns to be seen. , they reveal that a - 5,. AH1IIathperbapItl'iebest vjygw: vAfrIahuofovuld- , Indtheeorrcnaf W T Iltlehlrdonil r yhehuretsafsoutla . n.- in” 3 African affairs. is bound to come sooner or later, should the Govern- ment persist ln its misguided and inhumane program. Lamprey Control The lake trout. the chief source of commercial fishing on the Great Lakes, is. according to reports. fast approaching extinction The fish are still taken in fairly large numbers in some areas; but each year the catch is getting small- er. Unless the deterioration is checked soon. according to Dr. Wil- liam Sproules, an official of the Federal Department of Fisheries, "commercial trout fishing in the Great Lakes will be finished by 1960". The main cause of this depletion in an important fishery is the "Lamprey Eel" a vicious. blood- sucking fish which somehow got into the Great Lakes some years ago and has been playing havoc witlt the trout ever since. In 1951 the threat was so serious that the l.'nited States and Canada set up an International Commission for Lamprey Control. But, although the commision has spent more than 81 million a year on control meas- ures the lamprcys seem to be as numerous and as voracious as ever. Ittto the fight has come a young zoology graduate from Mt-Gill Uni- VPl's'lf.V.AThP0d0lle MacDonald. who works with the Division of Lamprey ('ontrol, a section of the Quebec Department of Game and Fisher- ies. Mr. MacDonald is working in a laboratory at Lachine. near Mont- real. on a device which he hopes will control and eventually eliminate the underwater destroyers. Curiously enough. while trout are losing the battle for survival. other species of Lake fish are on the increase. This is explained by the fact that the trout itself is a predator. Naturally, as its numbers decline the other fish have a better chance to keep on living. For some reason. the lamprey doesn't bother them much. A Good Deed 1" 1944 I British paratrooper named Andy Milbourne had both hands blown off by German anti- tank fire. He was a member of the First Airborne Division wltich en- tered into combat with the 116th German Panzers. Last week the former paratrooper was one of a group invited to West Germany to take part in celebra- tions of veterans of the'1l6th. Not- ing that he was using "hooks" in the place of the hands he had lost, the German veterans offered to pro- vide him with the latest model arti- ficial hands made in Germany. "He lost his hands through us," said a spokesman for the Panzers, "he will get them back through us. This will be an act of reparation to an in- dividual but it is meant as a symbol of our goodwill to all our former enemies." will probably do more to heal the old wounds of conflict than all the diplomatic exchanges between Gov- ernments and all the undertakings embodied in treaties. "How far that little candle throws his light! So shines a good deed in a naughty world". EDITORIAL NOTES This year's Shakesperian Festi- val in Stratford is off to a good start. The attendance in the first two weeks was 4.300 more than last year's count in the same period. The total for the period was 30,700. it certainly proves that real interest in the dramatic arts has a place in Canadian culture. I I I The Moscow Radio told its listen- ers the other day that "the (Ieptrnl Committee of the Communist Party is not in the habit of taking petty revenge." This. being interpreted. probably means that Messrs. Molo- tov. Malenkov and Kaganovitch have been selected for attention at a more convenient date. Nothing "petty" about that. 5 n e Whether it will have any effect on the price If Pill. potatoes we cannot say; but. according to a report full! the us. Department of Agriculture. there will be a con- siderable reduction in the New Eng- land crop this yeur. Th its sum- mer harvest it I eetinlted at 5th,- out lurlrcdwellht. eoinpnul will 511.03 llpueulnhbt last year. The revenue: uterus for the arm b573.mI&AHU&I. V l t Ad-in 4'iN1F1.it9'rl"-' What a fine gesture it was! iti SOME SECRET ! ! The StorY Of A generation ago the quiet lyri- The "'lloulttles' began in the first de- cade after Confederation. A band of untried cavairymen sent west by Canadals first prime minister to police" lndtans and settlers alike across the prairie between the Red River and the Rockiel. Their first task was to keep low and order while the new country built its first trans - continental railway. llnw they did it and then went on to meet test after it's! is told in Alan Phillips The Legend lLit'llf.'. Brown). They struggle with Sitting Bull. the enigmatic Sioux chiellain who had trnpped his Indian nation into Amcrlrnn plains because the gen- eral. as Sitting Bull put it. "had driven them from their homes." fairness and gave hint shelter in his promise of good behaviour during the six years that elapsed before the Indians finally returned to their American home. GOOD Pl'Bl.lFlTY "But in return for trouble he I gave them their first international fame." says Mr. Phillips. ”lle coupled their name with his in news reports and every net of Sit- ting Bull. the conqueror of Custer. was front-page news In America. it was Sitting Bull . . . so con- sciously lending his nwn fame for posterity. who was midwife to the legend of the Mounties." There is still a frontier. frontier of the far north where : vast wilderness stretching from Labrador in the Yuknn But the Mounties work now in much more than frontier patrol and the story of the llnynl (lana- dian Mounted Police. as the book is subtitled. tells must facets of their present struggle to keep law and order. Here are some of the mcidentll upon which the legend has con- tinued in grnwz The chase of trapper Albcrt Johnson across the frozen north in 193i; the exposure by undercover agent John Leopold of Canada": early Communist party in the depression of the 30:; Leg: Diamond the bomleiuier; Vnldmanis and the Newfoundland fraud case: Gmucnko and the spy trials and the Eskimo who llwugllt himself Jesus. NOTABHI ('0l.l.l'!("fl0N A generation ago the quiet lyri rni Verse of Marjorie Picluliall wove I silver thread through the books the young English woman merged delight in life with a pri- vate and unorthodox religious de- votion. and produced a blend that contrasted oddly with the tradi- period. The Drift of Pininnt. The Lamp of Poor Souls. and The Woodcar- vet": Wife are long out of print. but now Lorne Pierce has edittd a coIIcctlon- the selected poem! of Martorle Pi:-Ithall tMcClcllInd poems Ire reprlntqf. la the meantime. Marjorie Pick- thall's own manner of writing has "Flying birds" are pitting the face of the run. and becau of them strange ghost: ride the lit- legend of the Canadian: Living 3 won their first test in a 1 Canada in I876 after annihilalin . Cusler's Seventh Cavalry on the t The Mounties showed Sitting Bull . return for which the Sioux kept i the ' 140 Mounties no the only law in . writing of Canada. In three small ' tlonal verse and staid prose of the ' and Stewartv-in which ll of hr! , THE BOOK CORNER The R. c. M. P. By The Canadian Press itself become. perhaps. dated and traditional. But the q u e s t i o n arises as in whether the private 1 voice. Avoiding the stilicd and pro- v tenlious, ever does become dated. ' As Dr. Pierce' says. Marjorie Pickthall spoke about the deepest i things in personal experience as l naturally as she did about the g weather: I shall say, Lord "We will laugh again tomorrow. Now we'll be null I little. friend with friend. i Death was the gate Ind the long way was sorrow. . Love is the end." THE TRUE NORTH in The True North.i Macmillan: continues the series of Great stories About Canada luurd pri- marily for young people. his one in the story of Joneph Bernler. born to a sea-faring family along the banks of the lower St. Law- - rence River, who became I see captain and went on to chart the waters and their islands in the vast Canadian Arctic. llis main contribution to Cull- dian history was his work in claiming fof Canada such north- ern islands as Bylot, Somerset. Melville. Baffin. Banks and Vic- tortn. One of hi: expeditions fell just short of the conquest of the North- west Passage in a single season. I victory he denied himself be- cause his first assignment was to chart the island: and their water: for the Canadian government. Robert Moon, reported for the Leader - Post in Regina, was awarded the Kemaley Newspaper Travelling Fellowship in 1954 and spent I year in Britain and Europe with I group of Common- , wealth journalists. I Found Canada Abroad fRyer- sonl is his story of the year abroad in which he travelled broadly through the United King- dom. continentnl Europe. North Africa and the Middle East. Mr. Moon has returned to the header-Post and covered the last session of Parliament in Ottawa for that paper. PRISON LITERATURE Anthony if I'll c in. Brampton. l Ont. high school teacher. in um- ing 30 pounds of fiction. poetry and drawings. The stories poems and pictures on contributions from inside pri- son walls. Mr. Frlsch is editing an anthology of creatve work by the prison population of the Eng- lish-spcaktng world. its object- "To discover the people behind the iron and bamboo curtains.” Aug. I has been fixed up a dead- line for receiving material. Mr. Frisch. who two years ago edited an anthology of Canadian ltizh school writing. says the prison project is endorsed by federal of- ficials in Canada. the United King- dom. Ireland. south Africa. Aun- coniributiou was granted by tralie. New Zealnfd and the United States. He hopes to get contributions from India. Pakis- tan. Ceylon and Ghana in Canada. permission to obtain Nova Scotll. Sukntch w... and British Colurnbln. Mr. Frlsch and Ontario and Quebec declined. Sunspots At Their Peak Ij0O?DNelcIety lodlc black rub. unseen storms of magnet t l Bedford, Mass. i group. the earth would still first-rate wrllerni and artists; to force the bands of .' PUBLIC FORUM This column in well to the dlM'llI- non by carruporuentu of Iluctuton of interest. The Guatdun don not neces- urtly endorse the opinion of corru- pondcnu. THE LAST SURVWOR? Sir,-I have saved a picture from your paper. by Ripley ttllelieve it or not'l of a whale sinking I ship on March 17. 190i. Well. it in quite trite. as l was one of the crew of the whaling bark "Kath- leen" that was stove in by I whale; but the picture is A little wild as she was a bark. not I ship. A bark is square rigged on the fore and main masts and fore and aft of the mizzen must. The rest of the picture is not so bad. The whale struck her on the quarter and she keeled over in about fifteen minutes. I guess I am about the only one that is left of the crew as the rest were all older than me. and I am a2 years old this September l5. so the chances 'are quite Iilm of them being alive. i won't go into the details too far, but there could be quite a book written about It. i signed on in Boston and shipped on her In New Bedfnrd. The flrm's name was John Wing and Company, New Bedford. Mun. The Captain's name was Jenk- ins. the first mate Nicholson. I cannot recall the name of the second mate but he belonged to The third mate": name was Gormer; he was I Portuguese nctzrn from Brava. one of the Cape Verde islands. 1 Jun wrote to say that it in all quite true. I am. Sir, ctc.. CIIARLI-ZS H. LUTZ Hopefield, P.0., P.E.l. ,:L. n and going is both regular and ions- Imown. there are few cities to why or how sunspot: form. They seem to be simply dark holes that lud- denly appear. Despite their modern run instru- ments. astronomers remain much like pilot: flying in the stratos- phere nbove a tornado. They can look down intn the storm but can- not see how deep the dark funnel 3. Once lunspols were thought to be cooler than their nun ” But now they are regarded as much hotter. vent; of energy to intense that much falls outside the visual range. Hence the epotn seem dark. They are not absolutely block. If all the sun were blanked out except for a single large sunspot re- ceive as much light as from too full moon. SPOT 25 TIMES EARTH SIZE Until the eruption: of 1957 the largest sunspot on record occur-I red in early I947. during the int peak period. it spread mono mil- on across the sun's face. nearly a quarter of its diameter. Billions of lquare miles were dimmed. Such blemishes. plaintly visible to the naked eye through light overcast. fog, or dark glass, have fascinated man for countless cea- turies. Chinese astronomers re- corded sunspot! as early as ll DC. A huge sunspot about A.D. I77 was thought, I portent of the death Ern-pet-or Charlemagne seven on. for men's unrest. The first truly scientific study Galilee. annual later! of "stilt! &e."thlroras. MAXIMS c .L':..''''''.. 2...... '3: Ikallrzuh F iii??? E. ed. wipe it up right away. Flying pnrllcullr attention to crack: and COIIIEFI. To CLEAN SHIZLVIE if. unfortunately. some of then insects do attack your food shelves, here's what to do: Remove all food from the shel- vel and place it when the insec- vu and place it when the iluec tlcide you must use can't reach it. Carefully vacuum or brush the shelves clean. Then Will! and dry them and. finally. spray them with a 5 per cent DDT solution. ' For outs. one of the most effec- tive insecticidea in chlordane. Don't. however. place this on your food shelves. Rather. use A 5 per cent powder or 2 per cent spray solution and apply it to the area where the ant: enter the house. HOUSEHOLD ENEMY The common housefly probably spreads more disease than any oth or insect. He'l your enemy no mat- ter when he is. inside or out. Kill every one you find. no matter how you do it. . , Again. use I DDT solution to kecp these pests from your home. Spray or brush a 5 per cent solu- tion on all window and door screens. Gradually. however. flier are k ming immune to our most potent insecticides. Scientists are even now trying to develop IIEW ones. Insects in some foods does not necessarily mean foods are spoil- lllost dry foodl, for instance. can be sterilized by placing them for half an hour in a ltthdogree oven. If you are in doubt. however. throw the infuted food away. QUESTION AND ANSWER A Reader: in it pouible for a cyst to become malignant? Answer: There is a great tend- ency for some cysts to become cancerous. depending on their lo- cation. You should have an examina- l lion made by your physician to go- termlne whether or not the c It should be removed. The Age Old Story It ll better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in man. FROM MORTE TARTIIUR if thou rhouldrt never no my face again. Pray for my soul. More things are wrought by prayer Than this world dreamt of. Wherefore. let thy voice Rise like a fountain for me night and day. For what are men better than sheep or goats That nourish a blind life within the brain, if. knowing God. they lltt not hands of prayer Both for hemselvel and than who call th In friend? For no the whole round earth in every way bound by gold chain: about the foot of God. -Lord Tennyson OUR YESTERDAYS from the Guardian Illa TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (July II. In!) A tourist party of twenty tach- ers from Ontario who are on I twenty day: trip through the Merl- tlme Provinces, was welcomed in the city yesterday. The party. which is entirely of ladiel. was met by Mr. Justice Arnuult. President of the P.l.i. Tourist Association. A: The Provincial Building they were welcomed by lion. Dr. W..l.P. llhclllllu. on be- hnlt of the province. and by Mr. H.H. Shaw. Chief Superintendent of Education. Mr. .l.!'. Araett it Iumnmme has received word from Mr. D.H. Sutherland of Halifax. who in 8up- . ggglsgrgi i5ri;ii- hi. -ii "3 fr 3: is r E 5 5 9. "E if E- wuhlng machine; it p washed out of the pocket of some short: belonging to A daughter. Wbon dried and the bill was as good as new; color was not In the taut bland. if cleanliness became: even more obsessive in Canada than it is now, we foresee that many peo- ple wlll wash their money every night. just as they do their ny- lons. Meanwhile, we congratulate the bank note printer: on the quality of their ink.-Peterborough Examiner I in Canadian sh tlval at Btntfctd. OIL. have em- tod something more than a gun: the only really new actor-audience experience of Int hundred years on this continent. That's a large order but then It 15- New York Herald Tribune OVIILOAD II FATAL i FRONT ROYAL. Virginia iAPl Five of seven person: who let out for a Shenandoah River cruise in 11-foot boot drowned Wednesday when the boat sunk. Authorities said the boat land I rate opacity of three v-.3 ilt 3 Iunutupme Altueuhotutd t 'ParJon don't you think WHITE OWL is an atuptlomily (in -looliinq clqar 7 Ms ITEOVI A' mm ourlonrmc can N. M! Ohl.-ht- luau.---c-u