THE GUARDIAN _ situation. one might say with Mr. Hughes "PAGE FOUR ; 1 ma GUARDIAN. CHARl.0T’I‘E’l‘0_Wl\ it almost lmpossible_for these people to develop their natural abilities. It would seem, according to C01. MacKay'a state- ments, that the position is worse in the Maritimes than the other Provinces. At least in the rest of the country it is not the policy of the Government to segregate the children in the schools. How such" a i policy came to be adopted in the Maritimes ‘is not very clear, but the sooner it is re- CH-“i|«0'"'*-'T0“'N SM‘URDAY- -“"“L ‘- ‘W’ lversed the better. Probably no better solu- "4 tion could be found for this particular pro- nlfl nefifaf car lmhmguo gblem than assimilating the younger gen- One of the minor mysteries of the :;,:::l): :l1tt:°Ltl:: gifiniesug ::1::.:?:lb”::£i%: reefer car imbroglio is the purport of a to provide ways and means. ' letter which appears to have been written by an official ot' the Provincial Government to the l\’lllllSlel' or Deputy Minister of ’l‘raii- sport at Ottawa on March 10, two days. after complaint had been made by the Conservative member for Queen's in the House of (‘ominous that there was a seri- ous SllUl‘litf.'.C of rcctei‘ cars in this Prov- ince. Excerpts from this letter were quoted by the Federal Minister to show that Mr. I/lcLure's statements were unfounded, and that in fact there was no shortage at all, a statement which the railway authorities also were making at that time. A Provincial Minister's statement in the blaming Dally (Founded ll IM1) lullim-lac-cl an rle:mul Cllu Illll Poet Offleo Ilrpnrliiuvnl. Oltnwl ‘I'ti_o luluml tiuarillln Publishing Co. litlllor iiml lluglugliig lure-'lur. J. It. Burnett .«\--uu-Int» rlcllliir, I-‘rank Wnllier. | "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." Peace Treaties There is much thought being given just now to the drawing up of a peace treaty for Japan. It is nearly five years since hostili- ties ended, yet the Western powers and Rus- sia l_iave not succeeded in writing treaties for that country or for Germany. Perhaps it is not possible in this modern world to sit around a conference table and put on paper anything that would remotely re- semble the complicated inter-relationships oi :modern states. There is food for thouglii in a comment by Associated Press News Leglsla_ture on the same day as this letter Analyst J. M. Roberts, Jr. “Peace treaties,’ was written. on a question of privilege in he writes, “like declarations of war, seem reply to Mr. McLure.'s complaint in Parlia-3 to me to be a little outdated and unwork- ment as published in The Guardian, was able in a world which is subject to constant- also interpreted in this light by some mem-i ly changing cold war pressures. Letting bers of the House. Subsequently the Pro-! peace evolve, step by step, as it becomes a vincial Minister stated he had merely risen fact, seems a little more realistic. It's what to report that his department had received; Dean Acheson says must happen with Rus- no complaints of any shortage, and to give sia.” the number of cars supplied to date com-,' We live in a pragmatic age, and perhaps pared with last year. He emphasized thatlattempts to make life conform to any par- he had not stated there was no reefer car ticular theory, or formula, are so out of shortage at that time, nor had his official l line with present trends as to be simply un- so stated either to him or in his letter to} workable. the Federal Minister on March 10. The of- ficial himsell has also been insistent on this ED|IOR|A|_ N0[E§ point, carrying the controversy into the non- political seclusion of a Board of Trade --A1] 1.-0°15" Day, meeting and complaining that his letter had 0 not been fully quoted by the Federal Min- lster. Premier Jones. however, on information presumably supplied by the same official, insisted in the Legislature the other day that there was in fact no shortage of cars until the “middle" of March, in direct con- tradiction to a telegram sent to the Federall Minister on March 10 by the P. E. I. Potato| In Ottawa they know today a good deal and Turnip Marketing Association advising more about us, our mihvay troubles, and him that the shortage had by then reached our fa!-_fan-led oysters than they did when I condition of urgenc.v- {the present session of Parliament opened. If it were not for the seriousness of the| o 0 . i O 0 Tomorrow, Palm Sunday. Tomorrow, sixth Sunday in Lent O o 0 Seven more days till Easter. 0 O 9 Royal Air Force formed this date, 1918. O O O . , “ f " _ The havoc wrought by winter on streets that it \\ as all a ‘Comedy 0 Eiiois , with‘ an? roads is hecommg apparent spring the authors, like Shakespeare, appearing in! brmgs hope and promise to many’ but to the qual role .0 .aCt°rS and p1a3_"‘”:‘3m5- {the street or highway authority it must be Why an official of the Provincial Gov-|dm-k with fo,.ehodihg_ ernment—-not the Minister or even a Deputy‘ 0 . Ministeil‘)-—slio\1il<li be writing to 0tta\ti1/1aaftalll The devahmtioh hf stflhhg is doing it on a su Ject o_ he contimersy on 9 091‘! firm in Lincolnshire, England, has con- zf 1::-irliginelrituisflifilcult t_‘:tu"de1t5t3'}d-tEV"!signed $215,000 worth of road rollers to fell 3’ 18.0 _f?ll “I38 \I\!‘i englt ,t;“"[e* reach Canada in ‘time for the opening of d9; §:3m9 Pfglltclitfil PUlP°59- U ‘:1 3t- t the road construction season in April. i n say a ere was no car s or age, a 0 . :l;l1dt8fil!Jal'0ntly it thditi tuaive anyti1i‘idic:1}t1I<>1n, _ Gaetano Donigeti, Italian composer, - {it file. “af-t den 35 “:5 fore b‘ ;If|died' this date 1848; was a very rapid and IF:/I°‘I': ‘55“‘3‘~V1'_3‘}5‘°th V: dais] ffiniete-Y h d-prolific opera writer; produced over sixty Cd Ulevko" ‘ ‘I19 V .9“ 9'9 an ‘d5 ‘ 3 loperas, some of which rank among the best “"\°~1Y't“ _‘;“.‘°"*"1I‘etd 5“‘‘‘’:3' _’:‘*_‘t3_- 'bf_the Italian style, the most successful vtcjls 1 tin levy 31: “is 1?‘ tie‘ °':I3ym‘.being “Lucia di Lanimermoor", “The mum ion 0‘ use in eense 0. ie raiuay Daughter of the Regiment," and “La on the [loot of the House against Mr. Mc- F-avorita-»_ His bi_Cemenm.y will be cele_ Lure that the Provincial Government offi- mated both in England and on the (_Omin_ cial's letter was written? That is the obvi- em this year. ous interpretation and explanation, in viewl of the manner in which it backfired and’ the striking coincitience of the date on which it was concocted. What the Opposition should have de- manded in‘ the Legislature of course, and from the 1' lrst. was the tabling of all corre- spondence — telegrams as well as letters, and the substance of telephone calls if any ——exchanged between the two Governments or anykof their officials on this subject. That wguld have settled the matter, and' cleared the way for a more open approach to the problem by all concerned. 5 O 0 Industry and Resources Minister Cullen deserves congratulations on his Town Plan- ning Act, which regulates building in the Royalty of Charlottetown. Whether the precise provisions are the best ‘possible ones ‘or not, they will at least bring some order to the expansion of the suburbs, pending their organization either within the city or as an independent municipality. O O O In expropriating property, indlvidugl i“bargaining deals" are against Government ipollcy. So Deputy Public Works Minister +j—-—-—~- ‘-53- 9- Murphy recently told a Senate com- |m||an flu¢at|" imittee. The policy is to file a general ex- ‘ .propriation order on the property needed the education of Indians in Labrador is and take it all at once, it having been found being left" in the hands of the Newfound- that an attempt to deal with the individual land Government with the Federal Govem- owners meant each wanting to know what ment footing the bills as well as those for. the others were doing before making a deal, relief and social Ma: and, “the price keeps climbing all the time." Kay,directoro e an are nine’ '00 has explained to a Senate committee that! It will be admitted that an old age pen- Indians in Newfoundland have the same.sion of $60 in addition to any income from citizenship status and privileges as white savings and investments (that iii the "means Canadians. and thatlthe Govemment does test") would prove a strong attraction to not propose the "retrograde step" of bi-lng- those _who love leisure for leisure’: sake, ir- _ lngvthem under paternal Federal legislation. respective of who pays the score. Mr. Ross is a wise and just one. as is the That.cher, C.C.F‘., put it mildly when he said M to grant full citizenship rights to that implementation of his own party's" full in the other provinces. The 3 WWW flllllllfl I«\\ ‘H SIIALL NOT BE l\l0(,‘l(l5D (Dedicated to Surety) How fearful. and how wonderful, is man the crc:I.t.urc made; With brain to tiliiiik. and soul to cleave. and hand to ambus- cade, ’ The sciences and art; to ease.--the ways of death and life: In peaceful pl‘0gre§s to pursue. or to destroy in strife - What. nature has prepared for him, within this life mundane, Placed here for all, that we might live. secure upon this plane. But in the lust of man there lurks the wickedness ad’ Cain, Who slew his biothcr in the‘ field. when jealousy o‘erca.me The better instincts of his life. that had been placed within, The virtue of creiitiveness, that lost itself in sin',. When Jealous rage and hate impelled the angered slayer‘: hand. To cut a curse upon himself,- mmrked with a murder brand That show l.i"lc Calnfiil ciueli.y.—- and Abel victims slal.n. On battlefields across the earth, of death and boni-bi-d ten-sin. That. bears the mark of cross and plaqur. upon the sacred mound, Of \'ict.i-.iis oi‘ each holocaust. who sleep in liallowed ground.-— That. was created iii that Day, vtihen God Sll‘ebCl‘lCCl lortli His Hand. To make the astral spheres rotate. and His earth to abound. In picnishnicnt niuc.‘i multiplied. in ways devoid of sin. - To recreate and iitilizc. wliiit has been made tiy l-lim- To use for belt:-rmrnt or lifc.—i.o heighten man's carter. By giving surety to ill, and ban- ishing their fear- Througlitout the ciirtli fiom pole to pole. in every sea and strand. so freedonrs flag can wave un- furled, lll every naizlve land, Without the fury of the bomb, or rocket from the sky. That proves the evil in h-ianklnd, and causes it to die—- In infancy. and in. old age—in childhood and in prime.- As victims of man's cruelty. in war‘: destructive crime- Agalnst the creatures of this earth, that. were destined to dwell, In happiness upon this plane, with- out the fears of hell- Te cast. its shadows in the sky. of wars black gathering clouds. Lke mantles oflinpanding doom, in deatl-rs forebodlm shroude- That would envelop all mankind. wltihln moi-ttferous folds.- I! hydrogen and atom bombs. dee- tmy whatrer earth holds; Then. Jhould this planet be a void. with death in birth and womb- Where sounds of life could not be heard. within its silent tomb sui Eaou man not be mocked by :11-ah’.--l|fl' shall no niotntooi ny *a.ny 'nnneiuii ‘act. of llllll. uuvuah but an in,im made- !'at planned ll - °i*..':.#.‘i.i...ai.i.li.~.‘.".li.i am God «handed me in mi. a. .i.lil‘i’ii. "i.......i"""‘.‘i"i‘i..“l2_i.’i. , "You left Iellbx (’«. / ./. ‘Q’? . MKS‘-l‘-IME MAai<eTsTo ABSORB E66; W ' Old Charlottetown (And P. I. I.i ME. COOPEWS MISSION "Con pondence oonneeted with the delegation of Mr. Cooper, Speaker of the House of Aiueunbly, to England. is extracted from the Gazette of Tuesday last. in which it was pblished by authority. A letter. we understand. has been received f.rom Mr. Cooper. ad.- dreased to the Commlttiee of Cor- . pondence. in which he ex- presses his determination to re"- main ‘in England for the winter. for the purpose of br'nging the matter with which he eri.t.ru.st- ed (the settlcmenrt. of the Land Question) before Parliament. see- ing that no expectation exists of obgining redress from any other source. In that case an interim Speaker will have to be appointed. and speculation is already busy, as to who the individual will be who may be selected to fill that die- tlinguished situation. "As to the nltlma ratio. the up- peal to Parliame ‘. we cannot say that we are very sanguine as to the result. Had the Ministry, in- deed, been with us. we might have entertained hopes; but in gppgu. ing to such a body as the House of Commons is \.Om'P0O€d of in a question» affecting land. with all the weight of Government against us. backed by the powerful in- fluence of the proprietors. we have fearful odds to encounter." —Colonial Herald. Nov. 30. l83tl. ‘ ' ‘ ‘ ' ' ' ' -‘ -v'~i:im-mo * The Age-Old Story .\OOODdO\.'JO0QQ\'J9D'9CtD0'ZlCv<2i¢‘lL"I The eye. of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth. to show Himself strong in behalf of them when heart. is perfect to- ward Hlm. ' .90.: Ar ~ - INDUSTRIAL PROCESS The manufacture of coke from coal has been carried on alnce the 17th centuiy. be ever safe and free Ram fool: who would exchange their soul for acts of cruelty. 4 _ rclkld 2/////a Welcome Visitor (Ottawa Journal) Moscow mun tzhlnk well of Rev. James Endicott. of Toronto, or * he never would have been given a visa to admit. him in Russia. Moscow does not welcome strangers, and even working newspaper writers who want. to visit Ruasln more often than not are refused permission. But. Mr. Emdlcott, chairmen of the Canadian peace Congress, seems to have had no t.rouble,st all, which is a significant fact. Mr. Endicott enlightened the Mas- cow reporters by telling them that “everybody who works for peace in Canada is listed as subversive." This must mean that in Endlootvs opinion the great majority of cuis- disns want. war-—and we know how much truth there is to that. cane.- dlans are for peace, to a man and to I woman, but. not for the sort of peace the Oommunlsta and their fellow - travellers would impose upon me world. The accuracy of this former clergymazrs observations -on Russia —rmi- A.’ ueiiiy. mm: 21. 1950. ' mom. n_-c. yo-_e'-H-v-;.-I-iuiiiciy eedty. yoI_|l'd henceforth may be judged by the nonsense he has been giving Moa- cow about Canada. Washington’: war, he declares, maintains in can- ' Electrical contractor WIRING AND REPAIRING eiuvasr ii. nanssu. riiuiu rem IZOEIIIAVO Order Your SPRING Sun‘ and TOPCOAT from .I.P.MacI'|iemn & soii COMPLETE visiiiu. iucrnacrion and ANALYSIS G. F. HUTCHESON In SON optometrists 58 Grafton St. . , I Almost every municipality breaks out in I run of “lree" names. and Sudbury was no ex- ception in this regard. We have, our Pine. Ash. Spruce. etc. but we also have streets named after early settlers and sugveyorl. al- though there is prob: ly not one in 100 of our.population who cu. tell you the story of people as- sociated with street names. -- Suclbury Star. A lady in Moose Jaw says that the male members of the human family are becoming less and less courteous to the female members. She's probably right. Yet haven’t. many of the females brought it on themselves by assuming the male characteristics and asserting "equality?" It is our guess they chose the wrong word. They should have claimed "superiority" or pandered to man‘: vanity by praying his protection for their "inferiority." A man just. can‘! threw his coat in the mud for an equall—Ot.t.awa Journal. ada “a vast espionage network.’ and “rem of thousands" of cana- dtans have been excluded from entering the United States “because of their activities on behalf of peace." That is wholly gro‘ea:t'e. but it may be swallowed by the suspicious Russians. We have had Mr. Endicott speak- ing in Ottawa. and some good people may have been fooled by his smootti propaganda. There is no excuse for anybody being fooled in the future. The fact that he could penetrate the Iron curtain, and his reception in Moscow as an honored guest, remove any possible doubt: Notes By The There seen I natural retloéu. on the part of folks on the land to admit ever having made a dial. far. According to I recent aur- V¢¥- HOWOVGI‘. the farmer in’: doing too badly’ at all. In fact, ‘his cash income has the average bucksitoo in town backed rlgtf on the map. — Lindsay Watchmen . Warder. _ one/of the Beltlaos who wlll be moatzrelieved when the King’: position is clarified will be his brother. Prince Charles: splu- gent. the Prince has not bad" a very comfortable time. Before the war he was to most Bel-glans a gay young man known with ming- _led affectibn and disapproval as “our Prince of Wales." Slneeju became the sole tenant of the Royal Palace. he has done his best. to pursue a dacreet policy 01 non-interference in public affairs. He has'always refused to corn- ment on ‘the royal crisis. and scarcely appears in public. He has even postponed 'till after the plebiscite the announcement --.0! his engagemen‘ to Princess Marie Louise of Orleans and Braganu. But. as one of his aides recently said. "in his position whatever 3. could do would be call wrong. and new they say be u been wrong for doing nothing." The two brothers have never been very close to each other and the regency has driven them further apart. since Leopold a fly felt that bis brother should not have taken his tbii.-one even tan- porarlly. when the King’: daugh- ter went to Belgium to vote for her father in the pldilnclte. lho did not call on her uncle. And Prince Charles did not vote him- about his sympathies. self. - London Observer. . \ THERE ARE MORE carefully to elude Supplemental Coven. Olllceaz C” lottctiown - iiwisuiiic i=iiii=.s THAN ALL ornn rnuis ooumirnn." Dwelling and llouseluild Fumltune Insurance should be checked ensure adequate protection and which should la-' ‘We will be glad of an opportunity lip serve you. HYNDMAN & CO. LIMITED Insurance Since 1812 ‘ Bumfierslde - Montague ALLISON P. DloLEAN—D|Il:rlcI Manager at summeraldo CYRUS A. B. SHAW-—DllIfIcl Mlnlger at Montague THOMAS blcAVINN—speclal Biepreunhtlvo Agents Throughout The . F. L. MacNU'l"l'—lI...i-eeentotivo at Remington IE. 1‘. MYERS-nepneentotlve at Elmsdnle EABLE S. JELLl'—Bepreeenlatlve at 0'l4eu-y vlnce PROFESSIONAL CARDS Dr. ' W. R. Carson Phone I!!! loll &' Mutllieson ILIIIITIBS. BOLIUITOIS. Cc ILL- IAMNB ON crrv AND IAIN rlornrne IN Ilefuneud It. Obarlotutewu. PL! , A. Walflien Goudot. Joseph II. M1IcMiIlun. LL.B. IABIIISTER. B0l.l(ll’l‘0l.. II». 10 Queen street ciias. R. Moouuie ' IA. Ii Dr. L. Mccleaae DENTIST Dental X-lay GLOIIIA uon.nnv¢1 in Gtlfloll so. Phone 201 x J. 8. TAYLOR Optoinetrln Eyes exunlngi glance Ill- Coruer Rent a‘ Queen. Oh. Offlrr Phone Ifl5fi—Hnuu loll I . BABIIHTIR. sul.l(tl'I‘ult. Ito. Charlottetown P I! I Palmer 8:, I-Iaslam I. J. IILII-L31. 3‘: l.a..l., lull of Non uebtta Ulianbon Oblrlowetmviu l‘.I.I. HONEY ro IBAN Mullieson Ii Paulie A. w. nimncson iw. A. a run ea. u..s Qflbtlffiblc. Uelloelon llpnv Ml-IQ! . llama! tlcorgeetren XlIlrhfl0I"I .. i-nous no Ilene: to Loan ‘ - “ M. Alben Farmer -1- A- M=G=-teen uoiniv 1-0 mm NUTMW GTO. iu. .i.n IlAl'lllIl4'l'lCll. 81II.I(il’I'0II. oiiimiii auu.mNo Macfliee & trainer n. e. MIoPlllfl‘., J..‘., mu. 8 SOMERLED TIAINOR. M heelelei-1 me. r mbe um. Ice Queen at. Frederic A. Large. It.c. aannmrlclt. -iouornl. onuv N aoyu lleali of Canada onus: Olurlothtgiwl. nu Guinean Goon-geJ.l‘weeIly.h0 Jolie r." Nicholson. ' MI I IAIIIITII. IOI.l0l‘lOIu lie. in Prince IL. Oblews