THE GUARDIAI. 'UhlI.IIIBII awry weak-all Iluu-mu It DI Pl-luau Dunn. Cliu louclowu. P.E.l.. I1 IE Company Lllnltld "Conn Prlnu IIIIII Ilhld I-ll! lb. 00'" Ddllflr. Frill lllnlku GIMIII Iluuxcr. III A. Iiu-null II:-nun Dlflliel ll Summu-I-nu. Montague Ind Alblnol. Aumo ' ized ll second ClIu III! by In Post Ollfco Dgpurtmeat. ouIwI. 5: Lurlu-. Ckulullclnwn. Sumlneuido 115.00 per Iuum. Iluwhero tn P,E.l. 30.00. other Province: Ind U.l. 011.00 , per Innum r "The strongest memory is wenker t.bII the weakest ink." TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1955 No Curriculum Ln speculating on the itsummit” meet- ing which is only about a month away, Mr. Dulles, the United States Secretary of State, has said that certain specific inat- ters having to do with the Soviet satellite States should come up for discussion. What Mr. Dulles evidently wants is a Soviet pledge to let these States go their own way without military, political, or economic direction from Mos" iv. The Soviet leaders, on the other hail. 'iave intimated that any such discussioi would be out of order. So. already birriirs to amicable dealings at the summit have been erected. Whatever virtue or whatever praise there may be in Mr. Dullesl pre-confer- ence disposition. and regardless of the right or wrong of the Soviet reaction to it, it is interesting to recall that Sir Win- ston Churchill, in introducing the summit idea to the world, did not relate "it to any specific problem. His hope at the time was that, by getting together without any pre-arranged plan, the executive heads of States might concentrate on ttryfing to build up an atmosphere of mutual trust in which, later, the Foreign Secretaries would be able to turn to particularities with I reasonable chance of coming to terms. but other words, the summit meet- ing would be more exploraitory than def- lnivtive, more social tihan political. Whether or not that remains the feel- ing of Prime Minister Eden is not exactly clear from Inything he has said on the subject in recent weeks. It is noticeable however, and perhaps significant, that, unlike the Unilted States State Depart- ment. the British Foreign Office has not come out with any hard and fast curric- ulum for the impending meeting. No Cure-AII The 'House of Commons has before it the unanimous report of a special group which would limit members' speeches in eomimons to 30 minutes instead of the present 46, restrict debate on the Speech from the Throne to 10 sitting days and the Budget Deba-te to eight days. 'Whether or not the House adopts this report, says the Ottawa Journal, the trend of thinking obviously is towards hastening work in the House. That of course is de- sirable but let it never be suggested that speed is more important than proper con- duct of the public business. And it should also be l'f1l'llGfllbP1'9d that members of Par- liament now have SllO.()00 a year, enough to live on, and it can'no longer be said that they must be home atteiiing to private business for at least half the year If their families are to be fed. ”The fact remains," says the Jo.irnal. "that Canada does not want full-time mcrnivbeis of Parliament who make Ottawa home and fall out of contact with their follow-citizens in their constituencies. If there are to be sessions lasting no more than about six months all the changes in House procedure ever devised will not he siifficlent as the business of the ('.'Vl'lIl'y and its government increases. ”Wh;i)t must be done is that the Gov- . ernment give more and more es-llnites to the new Committee on Hstinates and thnis remove. from the floor of the I'I')'lSF) 'tlic protracted dolvitns on lf"llS of ex- rponditure. ”"'”his year only three do-pai"tnients have lion,-ii l'XRl'nIl1Pd by the es” halos (”)ll'Tlli- tee but it has been agreed by bath gov- ernment and opposition members that its work was effective. Proper ennlov nent of the committee would end the unseem- ' ly spectacle of the Government man- oeuvring controvemial estimates to the last days of the session and critics speak- ing under the chilling frowns of other members who have their reservations for the trip home. A reyision of House pro- cedures is helpful and none would wish to underestimate its value. but lit. must not be thought of as I cure-all." A Reactor For Peace What an the citizen: of I free Ind democratic cotmtry. as distinct from Gov- omments Ind their direct agendas, do to pa-Iuade the Asiatic people: that, con- ta-Ii-y to Communlstle propaganda, the West has no aggressive designs towards E -dlcaeulentotliovidud stuealadby luasls of need and the ability to use the gift to maximum advantage. The Committee dial brought in the P11790581. a part of a report dealing with nuclear energy, was made up of several prominent citizens, including Marquis Childs, celebrated Washington columnist, and Dr. Calvin Warf-ield, a nuclear phy- sicist. After commending efforts now being made by the United Nations to bring about a satisfactory agreement on disarmament. the report went on to say: "It is not enough for a Church merely to support efforts of goodwill; it must lead in such efforts. And that is possible. We could raise the money for, we could pur- chase and give an atomic reactor to some people in a less fortunate area than Am- erica. Such reactors are a practical real- ity. It stirs the imagination to envisage at some medical centre or university in the Far East. a reactor. given by us as a Church. bringing health and healing to the people of Asia and standing as a sym- bol of penitence for our sins, a witness of our common brotherhood, and an earnestness of our deep desire foifpeace." The sponsors explained that the'Far .East was selected for this experiment in Ipractical goodwill because ”that is the ,area most hurt by the discovery of nu- lclear weapons and the place where thel Igreatcst tensions exist and where thel greatest good could be accomplished." They see in it also an accord with Pres- ident Eisenhower's proposal of an atomic pool for experiment and study in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. The reactor will cost. in the vicinity of a halfI million dollars. I Longest Day T0lll0lTOW'S dawn will bring the north- ern hemisphere's longest day of 1955. However, neither the year's earliest sun- rise nor latest sunset occurs on the long- est day. The sun makes its earliest appear- ance in mid-June and disappears latest near the end of the month. Summer bows in when the sun reaches the limit of its ap- parent nortihward journey. Then It shines directly overhead at. the Tropic of Cancer, an imaginary line that encircles the earth 2314 degrees or about 1.600 miles north of the Equator. For several days the sun's noon posi- tion seems fixed. The period is thus known as the summer solstice, a derivation from the Latin phrase "when the sun stands .stilll.” Actually, as a National Geographic lsociety bulletin points out, the sun begins Iits annual southward migration at once. Six months later it shines directly over the Tropic of Cap1'icorn, starting summer in the southern hemisphere. As the sun seemingly withdrawsea phenomenon caused by the earth's own canting.-the summer days get hotter and hotter. This is because the sun warms the cold earth during its northward swing, storing so' much heat that less sunshine sustains uncomfortably high temperature readings. The ancient Greeks had a word 1for this oppressive period of four to six weeks. They called it the "dog days", be- cause they usually coincided with the rise ,of the dog star Sirius. The star rises at a different. time now, but the name stuck. EDITORIAL NOTES The magazine at Fort Edward could , not be turned over to better hands than to Busy mothers cIn't devote lev- E 8' 3. I ::E:' sriit S E E uh, the country ll golni up with I net of stoop-Ibouldered women.--Windsor Btu-. hard enough to bark his knuckles. no you're ,Ipt to mis. it for the do: tapping iii. M the floor.--0ttIwI Citizen. lone day. Anorleu men may put their necktie: in mothballs l'.)I the whole summer. along with hi 9 S I: .4 n. w an : Ilbll, judging from the findings 0' Dr. Maurice E. Barker. who ha: spent live you: studying the DCS' wIyn to when for comfort. ”Tiu hottest thing I man can wear,' says lie, "is I necktie. It stops -.1; the hot Ilr outlet It the neck ant Idds In much warmth as anothei shirt would." Dr. Barker's author ltatlve voice may help spread nu wearing of open-necked short- Ileeved sports shirts in summer. ei-Il hour: I day to keeping bIby from raising I ruckus. Eowover. It lent. capsuled the things into lial And we can't overlook the chance to point out that it started In An Englishman, Dr. Vivian Fuchs, is organizing In expedition that may make history. It is an attempt at the first land crossing of the ice-covered Antarctic Con- tinent. The effort will be I Com- monwealth venture; New Zealaud has announced her intention of participating and it is expected that Australia wll also join; South Africa may also be interested. The advance party of the ex- pedltion will leave the U.K. to- wards the end of this year on their long Ioutbward journey. The main body will follow early In 1956. They will follow the tradi- tion of many famous Englishmen. since James Cook made the first crossing of the Antarctic circle on January 17th. 1773- But there were numerous other islands further south and the as yet I.lIIdlSCOV8I'I:d vast Antarctic Continent. The South Slietlands. the string of islands that borders the Continents, were discovered by Captain William Smith in 1819. during the course of a trading voyage between Montevideo and Valparaiso. In the autumn of the same year. be made I IDGCI trip to the region where he had seen the ice-covered land and went ashore on the King George Islands. U Q I following y 2 I r. Edward . The lBr:-insfield of the Royal Navy dis- covered part of the adjacent Gra- ham Land coast. the peninsula of the Antarctic Continent that iuts north towards Tierra del Fuega. The peninsula of Graham Land takes its name from Sir James Graham who was First Lord of the Admiralty at the time when John Blscoe. another British ex- plorer and retired Master of the Royal Navy, first went ashore on one of the adjacent Islands in I882 and. thinking himself on the Antarctic Continent. uuistened If after his former chief. Thr South Orkneys which lie nnrlh east of Graham Land were rliscov:-red by a younlz British Captain nf a sealer, In search nl new territory because of thi- dwindling supply of seals in the South Shell:-nds. lthe Historical Society for use as a mu-. .seum. This is a small bcginiinz, but an Iim-portant one. in establisliimz mics; ililr imuseum faciltiics for the Provi ice on (II lpermanent basis. ) 0 I 0 Young people may be leaving the Ifarms but, according to a s1r.'w by Cor- lnell University, most tcenazors frnn both Ithe city and country prefer rural liviiirz. Chief rr-:ison given for the nrrifcrc ice was 3”a better chance of ohtai-ii it a standard of living.” Several noted tliai liz- ,ro'.inlry is m'.i':h better tfiin tic city for I rearing children. 0 I O 3 First test flights of new equipment-the radar sonde theodolite-designed to re- place the existing radio sonde and radar Mnd-finding apparatus recently . took place at the United Kingdom Meteorologi- cal Office at Crawley, Surrey. The most marked advance offered by the new equipment is its ability to compute the up-' per wlmh when the balloon has been car- ried distances up to 100 milescovnpsred with only 50 miles with existing equip- ment. The air borne unit. complete with batteries, weighs only about 61A poumt. 0 0 0 ' Of important centennial celebrations this year there seems to be no end. The latest to be reported Is at Spanish Fork. Utah. which is observing die 100th anni- versary of the coming of the first Icelan- ilI",I'l I The tradition carved nut hy lhcse early nxnlorcrs of the Ani- nrctic area. which r-"'”l""IcrI In tho epics of Sam) ..,.,i -.-i.....v-I--Inn. had already led '-'i"iI'tin in 1"0ll M claim llw prov "pawn as "tr I.-,1-13",: Vrlnnyl n:mnn.I,.",-in. ll rxlnnds in R finger of Ice-rrwr"-rl land from the Smith Fold in the "alkland Islands and ivirhidos all 'li"se islands and at"-him-'nrV In the area first dis!-nvciw-d by Pri- lions. British sciciitisls are now map- pinr! vast stretches of llllSl'l"l("'Cd tcrrilnry. mrintalnlmz was-Hwr eta- Hrms. mid dnlng :er-'rv'i"al and hinlmvical work. They are split un into izrouns of five or six men who are isnlatvd from each r"ier and can M-not-l a visit from a shln only nncr a year They live in mountainous land covered hv Isnow and Ice. Larlle and Em!" ill? .4:ifS;TT? Qwdfnvm HECTOR But oh! not lovely Helen. not die pride of that most Inclent llluin mulch- od with . Man murdered Prlun In lull royal room and Hector died. For even Hecwr'I dreadful dny VII I110?! Than In his brutlilng courage dIred defend. The Irmourod light and bulwark of the In: 'l'i-Iliad his long Itory to the Ic- cuum-nod and. he was the city's buttress. mam”: W The soldier but-I I lune prIfIu AII Hi I IIOII I3 d hilt wan. . Yul an In win unn- l'dd.'LdI& ICC E can ' of photograph: of the sky. Britain's Antarctic: Tradition From "TU! ll Britain" glaciers descend through every valley to the sea which itself is normally frozen for six or nine months of the year. ' Every two years they are re- lieved, their reliefs travelling out in the sturdy little Royal Re- search ship. the John Biscoe. These are the men of the Falk- land Island Dependencies Survey who are carrying on the tradition of the adventurous marines of the llltli century. Mapping The Heavens (Montreal Gazelle) Everyone is aware of the almost frenzied search in various parts of the civilized world for new wea- pons capable perhaps of putting civilization out of business. Not I0 many know about another exer- cise in scientific research that is not aimed at blowing anybody up but solely at finding out a lit- tle more about the universe in which mankind pursues his precar- ious career. Working on top of I Cali- fornia mountaln two astronomers have been making I new series After seven years, they have a set of P246 pictures, each 17 inches square, covering about three- quarters of the heavens tall that can be seen from a given point on the earth's surface). This is the first phase of the project. There will now be a brief pause of 30 or 40 years. after which a fresh celestial map will be made and any detectable changes noted. Meanwhile. the patient watchers at Lick Observatory believe they have detected evidence of I more orderly arrangement of the uni- verse than had been supposed by some modern astronomers. Their map shows up galaxies-vast ag- gregations of stars-as far off as 200 million light years. These seem to occur in groups or clusters in-' stead of being scattered haphazard- ly through space. If so. the uni- verse has indeed a grand design. It is hard enough for an ord- inary man to grasp the meaning of one llght year. let alone 200 million: (which may be by no means an ultimate figure). He is told that his sun, so important to him. is I mediocre star on the edgg 100.000 llght years In ” l but no more than 10,000 light years thick. He lives. in a sense. in a suburb of his star city. His nearest neighbor - the star next door, that ls- is more than four light years away. A journey ”down town" would take quite I bit longer. And of course. he is surrounded by other star cities, which some say are not standing still but re- coding from him. For all the signs of pulsating energy about him. man finds him self in a rather lonely state. Ta-gTc;ng Butte rflie 5 IF: tlian Press) Every summer. millir-in of mon- arch butterflies ivlrtv. mrtli to Can- ada to propagate their species and die shores of Lake Erie and Ontario, they lay their eggs where their Iii- ceston stayed, and complete the cycle of their rhythmic existence that has long been I mystery of the insect world. Dr. Frederick A. Urquhart. di- rector of the Royal Ontario Mus- eum's de ent of zoology Ind pIlIeonto . hopes to solve the riddle by return n t of their gr ii to the p Ind euc grove: of the United sum Pacific coast. Dr. Ui-quh rt believes the monarch b the any true mtgi-Int insect. By fixing tiny gummed lIbIll. C. flu Haj: its no on. "I," onmallamm-r:1-owiu PUBLIC rokum nu an-I u 00- I0 III Glui- Ilou by can-upondulu If Wu: -1 luhlut. -no an-run nu Iuuurlly Illa-Io lb oilli 0' aorrupcululll. WATER. SAFETY WEEK Sir.-In other Province: of our Dominion the Red Cross is nug- ing I "water Iafety week," Ind this week has been designated by the Red Crou iii Prince Edward Island as its water safety week. Therefore. I would crave I little of your valuable space to bring forcibly lo the minds of our peo- ple the capital importance of such I subject. Each your. CV63 in our own Province. HVOI I18 lost needlessly through imprud- ence. lack of ability to Iwlm. confusion in e-umgeucieu, Ind through dearth of propel" "'9 "V" lng facilities. The fact that many such Iccldeuts Ire preventable adds doubly to the tragedy- It is true that death Ind taxes are inevitable, but in many cases the Grim Reapu can be stayed. even If the Receiver General can not be. Falstaff: Idmli-able re- joinder to Prince Hall illustrates the intelligent self Interest that should be our: in regard to im- petuous actions. Before the Battle 'i bearing the word; "Send Museum Toronto," to the monarcbr wlngl, he hopes to trace the journey of the insects across the continent. When the monarchs Irrlve in Canada. they are weak from their long journey, their oi-Inge bril- liance changed to brown. But they give life to I summer brood of gully colored butterflies. These stay in Canada for, strangely common sense should tell you t.bIt Iny baby old enough to be inter- ested in his Iurroundlngl won't bu Iatlsfled to lie and look It the lin- ing of his can-lzge. This isn't Iny more exciting or entertaining than ltistolleinbedlooklngutthe ceiling and walls day Ifter dIy. sointlilng to WItcli As I rule. the Iolutlon is fairly simple. Give lilm somef.lilng- to watch. Place his busily In that be can see branches of I tree waving in the breeze or maybe clothes flapping on a line. Some kind of a whirling toy may be attached to the side of his carriage. Or per- haps you can place him so he can see passing cars or children play- ing nearby. Agaln let me remind you that outdoor dIyllght ll good for your busy even if lie in not in the di- rect sunlight. He will get the bone- flt of the sun. even in the lhude. because the sunshine. reflected from the sky. help: form Vitamin D when it falls on bare Ikln.AI1d sunlblne helps prevent ricketl. QUESTION AND ANSWER L. 0.: Due lo lllncu over I pu- lod of years, I bIve taken I eon. .. -. Ara? I ... .. . Could this be liIrmfI:l lo the ner- vous system? Answer: It is not likely mt gnu. blotlcs, if properly ukgn undu- tlie direction of I physician, would bave I harmful effect on the ner- dozen phi-Ins when he said: in this life I woman may of I prime minister. the nerves of I cold potato, the win- dom of Solomqp Ind the complac- ency of I pi-in cI ."--Wall Street Journal. Mulli - mlllloulre Don Jun March of SpIin bu thrown I 8200.000 "coming out" flestI for lils 18 - year - old grand-daughter. Some 1,500 guests attended and no fewer than 100.000 electric llght bulbs were used to throw light on them. Juan Much was one of the promoters Ind fl- nanclera of the revolution when Franco seized power by the civil war there in 1908-39. From the money be is able to throw around it is obvious Don Juan knew on what aide his bread was buttered. -Windsor Star. Al llie lleep Rock Hotel In A - koknii, guests do not leave I p for the chImbermIld. Betting on the bureau in the room is I neat box with Ilota, through which coin: maybepuslied. Ontbeboxun signed by the maid. which reads to the effect that if the guest winner to express Ippreclatlon of service the money put into the box will go to Iulsttlie AtlkokIn Gen- eral Hospital. Unselftlb c iv l c thinking of thin kind spell! out community spirit that Iugurs wall W” "”'m- for the future of up bustling iron of imewmmy, F-ml" V. ' IJrlo';hrl::l.towu.-Ion William Times- mizhtlly perturbed. Ind wu ro- Floi-ldI.-Mlnml Herald. Inn of the trends in man accidents last year In the United Kingdom. Ihows I reduction in fatal Ind serious accidents to child- PGII. to bicyclists. Ind in motor cyclist fatalities. On the debit side there was an increase in cnsualtiei to In motor vehicle usersf among Idult DOdCS.-Inna Ind an increased number of accidents during the hours of darkness. I provemeiils in the child accident icture are attributed to I I fe t y educational work, and among motor cyclists to the increased use of safety helmets. The principal cause of increased casualties is regarded as the rapid growth in the number of motor vehicle: in use.-Cliatham News. It In good to have public con- fldenco I: Dr. SIlk'I vaccine re- newed. But let us not fool our- Ielves. The problem of polio II not yet completely solved. we stlll do not know why almost hall the children who were vaccinated in lut year's mans experiment were apparently not benefltted at Ill. Nor Ire we likely to know this until! the result of antibody studies in the vaccinated who were stricken with paralysis have been completed. The work done by 1):. Ulrich Kreech of Dr. Salk's lab- oratory lndlcntes that vaccination may stir up latent polio when I vlrul is nicely counterbalanced by the right Imuunt of Intl-bodies ll these implications are verfied we need I Ilmple. rapid test for pollo. -New York Times. buked by Prince Hal thus: "Thou owest God 1 death." But Falstaff. "that fun of man," shrewdly retorled: ""l'is not due yet: I would be PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. loath to pay him before his day. Why should I be so forwnrd with Vin, Dhtlieson & Foster 150 ntclnnondlt. OPTOMETRISTS pressed on the public; and it is to be hoped that "wisdom will not cry out in the street Ind In man regard lt." (to paraphrase Prince Bill). And since the Iwlm- A. Walthen Gnudet. LL.B. Phillipa Bldg. 111 Gnflol st. PI.lmor I llulun him (death) tint all: not on ---:-:--e---A F Hutches” & son "'19- ' Jo EIIIOI BIA! I. up nu-1-CHEM)". no. And this Ipt piece of repartee 155 Queen St. Phone 4282 5; Gum, 5. oh, 332, Ixpresses In I nutshell the whole -T point of this week. II. A. Farmer, Q.C., LLB. J. A. Cari-uthers, R.0. 3OIhub:f pregrudf radlgovarlouu UIIII If COIIIIIINCI BMI- 11! Kant Bl. Dial 5611 alpec wa an ety, th pro 'm . Allkou M. LL.B. Byron 1- Grant. 0-D- veullon Ind rescuing. will be In: I” ammo” 3- nm an 1” K.” at ma. 56” J. S. Taylor, B.O. Corner Kant & Queen Sta. Office 9138: Home 4756 II. J. Msbon, R-.0 mlng season is now upon us. the - lmpomnce of this week can not NH Cl NOV! SOON! 3141- Hall!!!" P. E. l be we.-emphasized. for no one of us know: when he will not find M.'thgl::' Eouk. & himself faced with thin dire at 0 ll -z-Te: Emma. 11: ennui Street In Mir. 3. R. Carslg: I W co a I I Hm-31;: gen ;, A, Mgoqujgu. m..:...........:. S,,,,mm,,,,, and we ,,,,,,,,g currlo Bldg. . mu uu - cum in. ARCHITECT enough. only alternate generations migrate. In late August or September. the next generation will prepare itself for the mass migration. The but- terflies will move in I band. once observed to be 250 miles wide. per- haps containing two billion butter- flies, to the coastal pine groves where they feed. Whenever the voyagerl shop for food or rest, Dr. UrquhIrt'I help- ers will attempt to find one hear- ing a tag. From the lines of flight thus traced he hopes to allow th the monarchs will not cron large bodies of water. and hence tlilt they must have travelled on ship- board to the other continents they now inhabit. The Age Old Story I There came to Jun: Ierlben and Phnrlseu. whlcb were of Jerusalem. nylng. Why do my dlsclples tn-Inugreu the hlditlou of the elders? for they wuli not their hands when they on bread. But he Inlwered and um unto them. Wliydo you also trul- Once they reach the northern grass the commandment of God by your Irldltlolf Refrigeration Repairs To All Mullen APPLIANCES saws a SERVICE Committee Red Cross. B-A. Chas. R. MCQIIDIIL us at r ' st. CLEAN CLOTHES I MIcPIiee 8 TI-alnor WEAR LONGER I65 Queen st. DIII use Dial 8911 R G. Keith Plckard, B. Arch. M.B.A.l.C.. -:3" P.E.l. Dial 226.! Charlottetown, by Ippolntninnt Dial 7315 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS F" Y”'" McDONALD, comm: a (:0. Dry Cleaning Needs Currlo lug. clinrlomtown Dial 3734 H. R. DOANE & C0 RlTE.WAY MI Grenl George st. CIII1ITIT:lelowI . ' . . 24: CLEANERS Phonuul our P o 3:; ARTHUR J. GARBE'.l'.I.' DU 7337 Palmer Electric Building no run-oy sum Dial sazi uvunuan iusunaucul Morons Bewlndlng Ind Iopdn HECTBIOAL BopIln Paluor Elutrlc nun u'uu l.Illl'lEll mu: 3 WIIIIDIE Ionian Bax or Morrrnnx. an an Ipluuungundtumouuuuu ' Zblllhlhny wnnn Il'I"Cp'lAIlAIl'DI Inn can u I'M!” mien II" T