I . Pnbllsbedevanwnea-day at1&PI1nealtreai.CbIr httetowl. P.l.I.. I! The anvil! Limited "Gavan lrhse IIIIII IIIIII Lb the Dev" Editor. hank Walker - General Ilaauer. Ian A. Bur-null I Crunch officu ll siuumarside. Ilnnugua and Alberinu. Autbo as Second Class III:-Id!!! the Poet oluea Department. I WI. Iy Carriar: Charlottetown. summenide l1.l.lo per Innum: llsowhern in P,I.I. 0.00. Otbar Province: and U1. 012.0! par unnuzn "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink." ' MONDAY. APRIL 4. ms " School Unit Problem ' I I The results of Saturday: plebiscite in- dicate a very strong majority opposition, solution to the problem. The situation is serious enough today, but the future pre-I sents a real challenge to all concerned in the educational interests of the areas af- fected. For example, an unofficial survey indi- crowded. Spring Park. with an enrollment time. pected in the enrollment next year. next year. Central Royalty, with 205 children en-ilprime Minister Churchill Eisenhower in the matter of high level .talks between Soviet Russia and the West are perhaps more apparent than substan- Certainly, there is little to be gain- ied by exaggerating them or reading into lthcm implications which they do not, in Both statesmen are agreed in principle on the desirability of explor- g views "at the summit." also on the priority to be given general ratification of the Paris Agreements. The lonly real dispute, if one may judge by reports coming out of London and Wash- ington, concerns procedure and method of Mnlgetting the summit conversations under rolled, has six teachers. As many as forty- four pupils are accommodated in one room. Twenty-five more pupils are expect-3 ed next year. West Royalty is also becoming crowded, with two teachers for seventy pupils, and an estimated increase of twenty in the next two years. At present, about 1.000 pupils are enrol- ' ' led in the Unit: by September, 1957 there proximately twelve new classrooms. total debt on the Unit. is in the vicinity of 34170000. which is being reduced at the rate of 5 percent per year. The Minister of Education, l-Ion. Clark, has intimated that he will ask for i the appointment of a Commission to assist- him in deciding on the steps to take in forming new divisions or districts, and re- ' allocating the liabilities of the Unit. It will not be easy to reach an agreement satis- factory to all, and there must of necessity. in whatever plans 19 be some give and take are adopted. It is worth remembering that the persons chiefly concerned are the child- ren themselves, the younger generation whose educational requirements must be met. No plebiscite can determine this issue, but a new setup based as far as is humanly ' possible on equity. cooperation, and apprer, ciation of the responsibilities resting on the- whole community. Russia's Preparations Review. Moscow Match Us industrially?-" Written by Prof. Philip E. Mosley, di- bia University. that Russia is gaining each year. pressive. ducing only 4 U2 million tons of steel in 1928. to 45 U2 million. from five to eight per cent a year-a rate higher than that of the United States. Soviet Union is not equal to a percentage- wise increase in that of the United States, for production In the United States is much greater to begin with. But this fact duction is to be used. In peacetime more than one-half of American steel production goes into durable consumer goods, hous- ing, roads, and other uses that add up to the highest standard of living in the world. But in the Soviet Union's econ- omy, it is estimated that 80 per cent of III steel produced goes into building more heavy, military industry, and more arm- Iments. Thus. the Soviet Union, though wrrently producing only one-half as much steel as the United States, is prob- ably putting In approximately equal quan- tity of steel into military industry and per- haps somewhat larger amounts into mili- mry end products. ' '. It was previously suggested that Mal- almv had drown a greater disposition l I ' "peaceful co-existence" with the he whhad to devote I o. d soviet Industry to The differences of opinion ifact, contain. will be a minimum of 1,200. requiring ap-' The: the sa me line. Smlle makers. ' common Serious and criticallpeane. negotiations, though they are frankly committed to an intense concentration up- on heavy Soviet industry. It the cost of consumer goods. It should also be noted that great gains would lie before the Sov- iet Union if it could continue its concen- tration upon heavy industry, while, with peaceful negotiations, inducing the non- Communist world to relax somewhat its own military preparations. negotiations with the West would serve I double purpose, or, rather, would serve the one overruling purpose in two separ- ate ways. Furthermore, time will also allow the difference between Soviet competence with the hydrogen bomb to be narrowed. This very probability in- to any further retention of School Unit No.l dicates the impressive proficiency of soviet , 1. and D059 I Se1'l0-U5 Pmhlem l0T the Gm" i scientific and technological skills. It seems i ernment in working out a more satisfactory; probable that whatever the west does in these or other fields, the Soviet Union will do sooner or later. was ahead in developing the hydrogen bomb. And the quality of Russian air- craft, tanks and artillery is tremely high by Washington defence ex- 1 eates that the schools are already badly he -9 So there may be no contradiction in of 300 children, has eight classrooms with the fact that the new Russian regime is h0l'lTl'rll 303-0l'hm0ll3ll0h for 240- Four ideter-mined to put consumer goods second 0l8SS55 3”? held 0hlY lhl'994uaTl9l'5 of the and massive military industry first, while There ls Sald I0 he 3 heed for htat the same time showing a disposition , least four additional classrooms. An in-I10 enter into peaceful negotiations with . crease of between 20 and 30 pupils is ex-flthe west. The two facts, so far from Icontrad-icting each other, may only add In Parkdale there are 268 enrollments, -up to the one and the some thing, with accommodation for only 230. An in-I crease of between 20 and 30 is anticipated , Temporary Differences Sir Winston appears to believe that it would be better for the heads of the four States to come together first and then, once the broad objectives had been defined, to leave ultimate solutions-if any be possiblevto the hannels. Mr, Eisenhower, while not dis- counting the value of that kind of ap- lproach, is of the opinion that it would :be wiser to start a bit farther down, per- ihaps at the ambassadorial level, and work up. The latest word is that Sir Anthony Eden. who is expected to take over the Prime Minister's near future, is thinking, tentatively, along In the United States. Sen- . ator Walter George. the Democratic Chair- lman of the powerful Foreign Relations KC0mmittee, and who exercises an influ- A striking estimate of Russia's prob-pence in American policy Secondary only hhle Vlgw "I "5 aw" lull"? appears l” the to that of the President himself, has sided current issue of the Harvard Businesslgagain tematiVe1y,an.gth sir Winston's ll l-I 3” alllclh ehlllled "Clmyied. as being more practical at the pres- ll l5,ent time. All this does not mean that initiative rector of the Russian Institute of Colum- m either London or Washington is being Pmh Mosley Calculates overshadowed by dissension among policy It does mean that in both coun- of the basic industrial statistics are im-lmes nesponsnne leaders are contributing RUSVi8- ff" lnSlanC9- W35 DT0' l their experience and diplomatic skill to the task of exploring every possibil- lh 1954 lhls had been Pushed up ity for presewing and strengthening world In due time full agreement will Western students calculate that the Rus-I he no-nnhhd; and it W111 not be any less cap. sian national income may be increasingiahte of achieving good results because, temporarily, it was held up by honest dif- ferences of opinions regarding ways It is true. of course, that an increasegmenhs. percentage-wise, in the economy of the' normal responsibilities EDITORIAL NOTES Oliver Goldsmith died this date, 1774. "If life was complex enough in New- is counter-balanced very largely h.V lhe foundland before our generation, it is way in which the totalitarian government doubly m today... says the St Johnfs of Russia is able to determine how its pro- ; Newsg Premier Douglas of Saskatchewan may be drafted as national leader of the CCF before the 1957. general election campaign, says the Winnipeg Free Press. it h known that Mr. Coldweil, the present (SF leader, is not in the best of health and 0, mm. it is possible that he may leave pibllc life at the end of the pfesent Parliament. The OCF group in thecommofis ieIlIrm- ednttIldpIoepectofloslngMr.Coklweli, who H an outstanding parliamentarian. TheybelieveMr.DougiIsiathemenmost bkQIn&ae&. In this way and western For I time Russia rated ex- between and President They agree diplomatic in the "Once upon a time we could fig- ure out the year's prospects without ref- erence to the economics of any other coun- tries except those that bought our prin- cipai export products. Now we have to look also at the Canadian picture and even wonder about such things as gross national product, a term about teiiigible as Sanskrkit to the average per- settlement built by oil means "High Place." as in- Criminal Code Provisions By Bernard Dufresne Canadian -Press Staff Writer (Following is the final of three articles on the new Criminal Code which came into effect on April 1.) From organized labor's view- point the three most important sections of Canada's new Criminal Code deal with sabotage, crim- inal breach of contract and mis- chief. ' The tag "anti-labor" was slapped on the sections but later amend- ments appear to have eased iabor's fears. The country's three main labor federations. representing about 1,- 100,000 trade unionists. felt the sec- tions, as originally drafted. could be used to curb their right to strike. The Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, the Canadian Congress of Labor and the Canadian and Catholic Confederation of Labor in Quebec said so in representations to the government, which later added what. are called ”saving clauses" in the sections. TRADE UNIONS EXEMPTED The clauses ,.' trade unions. under specific circumstances, from the ambit of the sections. While Justice Minister Carson and other government supporters in Parliament have said the labor groups were satisifed with the sav- ing clauses, some labor men still regard the three sections with sus- prcion. The sabotage section provides a penalty of 10 years in penitentiary for a ”prohiblted act" prejudicial to the safety. security or defence of Canada or the safety or secur- ity of allied armed forces stationed in Canada. The code defines a prohibited act as an act or omission that im-' pairs the efficiency or the work- lng.of any vessel. vehicle. aircraft. machinery or other thing. The definition also covers damage, loss or destruction of private and pub- licly-nwned property. MISCIIIEF SECTION The mischief section. which com- bined in simple language some 20 sections of the old code. provides severe penalties for anyone who wilfully damages. destroys or ren- ders property dangerous or inef- fective, or interfers with the law- ful use of property. The penalties are life imprison- ment when life is threatened. 14 years when public property is in- volved and five years when pri- vate property is affected. Organized labor argued that since a strike possibly could re- sult in damage to property union members could be charged with, and possibly convicted of. sabo- tage or mischief. Roughly speaking. the saving clauses exempt workers from prosecution for sabotage or mis- chief if damage to property follows in strike action. SAVING CLAUSES The saving clause to both sec- tions also permits a worker at I plant where there is no strike to walk off the job and join the picket line at a strike-bound plant. The breach of contract section provides sentences of five years in penitentiary for breach of contract which may result in endangering life or property, causing serious bodily injury or depriving citizens of certain public services such as gas. electricity, water or train transportation. The saving clause added to this section specifies that workers in public utilities are t from pr secution only if the walkout oc- curs after all possible legal steps towards conciliation of a labor dis- pute have been exhausted without success. The three sections are not new to Canadais criminal law. They ex- lsted in roughly the same form in the old code. But the rewording undoubtedly will make their application easier. One legislator said during parlia- mentary study of the new code last session that the old breach of con- tract section was so poorly worded it was impossible to obtain a con- victlon. Mysterious Burial Mounds National Geographic society Locked in the sun-baked sands of Bahrain Island is the unsolv- ed mystery of its myriad burial mounds. Perhaps 50.000 dome-shaped tombs, ranging up to 82 feet high, cover much of the north- ern quarter of the Persian Gulf pear'shipping and oil center. No- body knows exactly how many there are, or how they came to be Some archeologists believe the flat steamy island once served as a cemetery for nomads of the Arabian mainland. the National Geographic Society says. Cover- ing I sea-horse-shaped area 28 by 10 miles. Bahrain is the chief island and namesake of an archipelago 1) miles off the Hess coast of Saudi Arabia and north- west of the Qatar Peninsula. NAMES SUGGEST BUBIAL The names of three major towns suggest funeral rites. Mau- ama, capital of Bahrain. means "Place of Sleep." A IV:-mile causeway links Manama with the neighboring town and island of Muhan-Iq or "Place of Burn- ing." Awsll, the air-conditioned man. scientists of several countries have failed to esubltslr the ident- ity of the ancient people who are acted Batu-ain's famous tumult. Flndinu include the bones of men Ind animals. iery. articles of bronze and ivory. bead necklaces. alabaster jars. stone bowls. was traces of lost- brokeu pot- ' niches or collected in neat piles. not consistent. stories. ANCIENT TRADING CENTER Apparently, burial customs were Architecturaliy, the tombs rise from ground level. A sloping mound of earth. gravel and stone chips covers an artificial stone vault, often constructed with two Most tumuii belong to the WI " SPRING STARS New dawn the west the mighty Bull goes plunging. Aidebarnn the great jewel of his 9319. The Hunter ciambers over the wall of mountains searching the westward pastures of the sky. Up the east the springtime stars come climbing: Arcturus who will watch our summer night. and trembling. Spica. and as midnight passes. once again the glittering Swan in flight. In snow-damp woods. on rock thawing hillsides. Arbutus opens delicate pink stars. I-Ieputica lifts small pale-purple planets in upland meadows by fallen pas- ture bars. And which are iovelier I cannot tell: the low sweet stars of earth or: the high of heaven. When I see Altair or I sudden wind-flower blowing. I am seized by spring. by those two white stars riven. -Francis Frost in the Christian ” i Monitor. Medically Speaking N. laalasn. 11.3. , HAY FEVII INJILYIONI IIFOBE IIAION It's -time in start thinking about fever. - course. in most sections of the country. it": pretty early for Iuy sue to be troubled by pollen from ragweed or other offending plants. But. if, you went to avoid all that sneezing, sniffing and weeping you went through last year. you'd better beziu taking protective injection soon. Building Up Immunity You'll wabt to build up an im- munity to the ular poliens which affect you. d the quicker you start, the better off you'll probably be. You might. begin taking these inlectious about 12 weeks before the pollen season begins. although some doctors advise waiting until about six weeks before the symp- toms are expected to start. Hay fever. of course, is I mis- nomer. It has nothing to do with buy or fever. You will be allergic to many things besides pollen, principally inhalants - things you breathe into your body-such as fun! and house dust. Daucier from animal skin, vapors, cosmetics, even per- fumes, mlght set you sneezing o and wheezing, too. As a rule, you are sensitive to more than one thing. Chlefly Affects Men While hay fever might affect any one of any age, it is more frequent in men than in women. Persons of the white race are vio- tims more often than those of the Negro race. You are most susceptible If you are between 10 and 40 years old. If you were really bothered by hay fever last year, and you don't know to what you are allergic, I advise you to have a doctor give you a skin test. This won't hurt you, and it will determine your II- lergies and indicate what treat.- ment is needed to relieve your distress. If you begin your desensitization injections early enough. you have a pretty good chance of avoiding all, or at least most. of your dis- comfort. If. however. you wait until the pollen season kicks up your allergy, your chances dimin- ish. Injectlous begun during the pollen, season aid only about 40 per cent of the patients. Some doctors advise patients to continue immunization shots all year round. Antihlstamine drugs such as diphenhydramine and tripelIuuI- mine are effective in relieving symptoms in about 70 to W per ceut of the cases. There are other things you can do. too, to help prevent or relieve your own discomfort. But we'll wait to talk about that until the pollen season begins. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. A. R: My womb is in the wrong position and is pushed back on to my back. Will it. re- quire surgery to correct this? Answer: Most such cases re- quire surgery. particularly if backache. stomach pains. painful menstruation and severe discharge are present. NOTES BY A naturalist points out that ani- mals used the rinciples ofradar, poison gas, jet, propulsion and the airplane long before man. Sure, but on account of not having our high ethical and moral develop- ment they never realized what they had from the standpoint of wiping one another out-Winnipeg Tribune. Canada is Involved in a war. but doesuit know it. Nor is this war merely a figure of speech. It is i about as many dead and wounded as the actual wars in which this country has taken part. And in this war. all Cau- adiana are in the front line of danger. What is this war? It is the war of traffic accidents. The statistics are astouudin. They are given by Mr. C. W. Gilchrist. OBE Managing Director of the Canadian Good Roads Association. in the News. THE WAY I traffic accident every three hours. Fifty-six die every week. some 225 every month, 3,000 every year. To this total must be added 57.- 000 injured. As Mr. Gilchrist says. during the dark days of the war the casualty lists that came In from the fighting fronts were scanned with great. nDDl'8hBl1lI0lI. But this is the fact: more Cana- dians have lost their lives on the nation's streets and highways since the end of the Second World war than were killed in all the land battles in which Canadian troops fought in Sicily. Italy. France. Belizium. Holland. Ger- many and Korea. And In this war we have yet to secure an armisticerMont.reIi Gazette. A nutrition expert advise. on: whenever p o s I I b I e vegetables should be cooked in their jackets. Most food value in them II near- monthly leaflet, Merit one Canadian dies in I eat their skins, he says. In earlier days in Ontario many housewives . PROFESSIONAL ems? BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. Bronze Age. They closely r early Phoenician tombs. but some scholars doubt that the ancient seafarers lived or traded to any extent in the Persian Gulf. It is certain, however, that Bab- rain was I trading crossroads in remote times. Babylonian and As- syrian inscriptions cite the names of Dilmuu (or Tiiwuu) Ind NIdllIl- kl ("The Place of Taking Oil")- botli believed to be identical with Bahrain. If this could be proved. BIhrIin'I recorded history would go back about 5,000 years. The mysterious mounds now lend In arcbslc mark to nab- rain's kyline. They loom like earthen blisters close to .moderu homes and the gleaming metal lllnlle of the Bahrain oil refinery. Whatever their origin, the tombs Bell, Metbeson 5 Chas. R. McQusid. ILA. our an 156 Richmond St. . J. Elmer Blanchard, BA. 4231 A. Farmer, Q.O., LLB. Ink ef Commerce Bldg.- Alllson M. Glllls, LL no Iucbmead St. A. Wnltllel Gludefp LLB. ruunererruum BankelNovl leech Ila. OPTOMETRISTS G. F. Ilutcbesou & Sol r. G. lm'rcuEsoN. 3.0. 5: Grafton si. mu J. A. Oarruthera, ILO. - 11) Kent St. V Dial Ill! Byron J. Gnu . It Keai II. t. giblnllll J. S. Taylor, 3.0. Sta. Corner Int 8 Queen office 0138: llslse fill '-i--et:.mr- mmgr 3 u.....'.I; J' I. I. . us win mu CHIROPRACTOR J. A. Iullulgal Dr. W. I. onu- Cunlalllg.-BHNII-COCO. l1PI'h0III- IIYI-Ill g. 3. Ioggn, 3;” ARCHITECT U-I 0..K9ltI . 2..-I--.-.r..e......... man It ,5, - Luna 8 mafia! .. m1 - ACCOUNTANTS 1 The of Gresbam's ms of its own nobility. The meek do not remain pennaneoily rushed. but survive to inherit the earth. This reversal of human judg- ment: and expectations underlies much of the teaching of Jesus. especially that given in the Ser- mon on the Mount. Here are sketched in rapid outline the linen- ments of those who dwell within God's kingdom. To the world their way of life may Ippesr par- adoxical if not insane; yet they are ekmplars both of human sanc- tity and of divine sanity. They are both irrepressible and irre- sistible. It becomes boring to smile I man on the one cheek if his invariable reply is to present the other for airnllIr treItmeut. A men forced to accompany a roidier for I mile through hostile country becomes I comnde when he of- fers to continue for I second mile. Human goodness bu driven out the evil of compulsion and the pride of rank. St. Paul was echo- ing his master when he wrote: "Be not overcome of evil. but overcome evil with good." , Before this can be done. how- aver. I fundamental Idjustmeut has to be made. There are few things from which men derive more self-satisfaction than from judging others. Within the Christ- in community this function must be reduced to I minimum, for the right Ind power of judgment be- long primarily to God. ”Avenge not yourselves," writes St. Paul. "but rather give place unto wrath" -God's wrath, that is, Is Profes- sor Dodd has expressed it the "principle of retribution inherent in I moral universe." When judg- ment lIIs been left to God it be- gins to be seen how great I task remains to men. i "If thins enemy hunger, feed him; if he thirst. give him drink." Eumity is not necessarily destroy- ed. it is made irrelevant by the claim of human need. There is I talk of this kind to perform in ev- ery age, but none has been great- er than that of the present cen- didn't peel the potatoes before boiling them. They merely clean- ed them well and dug out any defects. They then tossed them in I pot of plumplng water. Nowa- days most every housewife peels them, and peel: them liberally. some will suggest it, was I lny housewife who wouldn't peel the potatoes, and perhaps some of them were saving time. But they also were saving the best put: of the potatoes. It is much enter to peel I potato Iller it Is boiled than when raw. The skin comes off almost by itself. leaving the potato white and meuly if it be I good potato. And nutritive ele- ments still are in it. not in the wafer to be poured down the dnln. The old-time housewife may not have known it but she was feeding her family better potatoes.-Windsor Star. I r.uN-rm I pronou- Power Of Goodness Over -Evil ' -r-ufri-m. nun ' raps ,- --.... .. WU. which is wlnnlnd the title II drives'outol"i.beoenhu-yoftlrarelug, good. lnvouftIl.buali extended tolaoople who are comfortably pelig. . work bumanltarianism. unlrnpox In relation to tbegnater fun of Ialmlns the Gospel. St. Paul was I t missionary no I mu o . but be run gm-any have . to thev:ord lrumaniterisnlsm." had be known ti” 0333 hunsry himself. He was following a master who often had no where to lay his bad, Yet it remains true that the most ' constructive and lasting rgmoam work in the wide field of human sorrows Iud dlstresses is not done by those who are prompted by lvl'lh3ll0T5' " . but by those who have accepted I permanent status of discipleship. They know Wllli 1110? Ire flthtlnl for and love what they know. These are the meek. who remain It their tnsks when others give up: who in. herlt the earth that they may hand I'll: their master to be .emade by I The Age Old Story Teach me to do thy with im- "IMI UPI III! God: thy spirit is good: lead me into the land of -rprlgiltuess. Willi IE till NEW SIIV 0 Got 350 to 31,000 income ineriicelespanuu - -- Borrow the money you O Easy-fo-meet requhemenfs. One-day Iervlcr O Choose your own repayment plan to fit you 0 Loans also made to pay OH HIII, clothing, LOANS FOR ANY OOOO N-IRPOSI Buy the things you Iced and want now, without waiting, with cash from Household Finance. More men and women borrow with confidence- ion HPCIIIII any oiberoompsuyin outfield. You don't have to wait another day to ilx your home or repairyour car! need-on your own signature-It Household I I K L uaunaui ..-.':.. ...-'-.'.v. f''..''.-..: . 1 news 1:: o .11 in In today! . am 3 ii l -" i VII-It - with if