' ;Cha Among. The Farmers Federation 1 Ags-ienltuso Newsletter TROUILII aulthIathIeloICpCla& ,.,.egk we received aletter b""”” """' 1"!” "'9' Ti mug of our members Thihnloill fIllllfil'i"ll' pro- "”-?!-lg me gs-gde and price winch likely be received much u- "' received for a shipment thusiasm. on some of thus ""1 me" With t manna In In- ou in a posi- gg the merits or other- will be contrary views. There will be people who will believe and state tlist such things should not be said in public. However. we believe the egg business in Prince Edward Island is in a mess and unless drastic steps are taken that before too long cu Production as a part of the mixed farming enterprise is going down the drain. While in many places egg production has become strictly a commercial op- ""”" Juan; protest but we do M M tdsiotrsspectlor ”"...L.8':itn track the time and M enough interest in this - to write us about it. dh g producers are - f;'f,?.y.. itgith the Krades they are '3 "g for eggs. They think - somethinl wrong and I0 but the real trouble does . ages: readily. 'eratlon with thousands of layers Wm ".15 Province egg production comprising flocks. there is. nev- W. many years formed a etheless. we believe a place on it of the mixed farming oper- the island farm for a flock of 930" m a farm known as a hens but there must be improve- ' noctr, Modern Pr0dll0ll0l1 men! in production. grading and marketing methods if Prince Ed- ward Island eggs are not once more to achieve the unenviablo jreputation held prior to the or- ganization over 40 years ago of the old egg and Poultry Assocl. ation. POTATO BOARI. M r.:"'”" at ' birds confln n oors an Egmugnilormly with high quality M-as tend to produce OISE Oi ummmiy good quality which Mm. promptly cooled: carefully andled and gotten to market in , very short space of time. all mulls in an article which meets ullfl the approval of the consumer- ". many cases the lam flock (mg at liberty and has the op- wmmiiy of consuming at leisure The Federation": views on the new Potato Board have already appeared in the Press. Whether or not these views coincide with . wide variety of PGFDBPI P3"”pthe views of potato growers in inhifl and nutritious feeds which lgeneral we do not know but the ,t.. mil. however. tend to Dlimillcellfederation has spent a lot of pggs having yolks and whites lume and energy in promoting the tit-tiralile colour and consistency. icause of producer control in mar- lhr result is an 988 which Wmlketing. This is a principle and not grade up or if ii dlles Will it is not to be expected that this Ciiyand Central IOTIIAH-Half-X. CIAIWHL hr ICE Phob- graphs. ..AlKYoUlpeecfuHnd gsownplums t JILAND GIOWN plums are bet- ter flavoured. ..Vlll'I' II-Style Millinery. Great George it. where style is El-Bwle. non IIJILDIII have your house wired on time. One year to pay. Consult Brown Electric. COLUMBIA Television and Norge refrigerators, easy terms. Brown Electric. In Memorlam Ill roving memo, of Reginald L. Dryeatoo who passed away September I. I052. Thoughts drift back to days gone . past il.lfe moves on. but memories last Deep is our hearts. his memory is kept We who loved him. will never forget Lovlngiy remembered by his wife and family. writing has not started to function. It has no Officers and must or- ganize itself from scratch in the face of what now appears to be of a large crop on a buyer's market. BRIEFS g The world's biggest terminal elevator. with a capacity of 16.3 not stand up in quality. principle could be swapped over. with this brief review of whatpntghg m exchange ,0, E Pmaw goes on on the farm we DESK l0-Board responsible only to the 5:38 H3597 W10 defidetl 8'0-lGovernment. No criticism of il0l'd1"'I: i0 Sllllldlilds "'9 HWFWY Personal nature on the score of in which the ego will fall. Usually ability is implied with respect to he I5 C0mP0l9l"- EKPEVIEHCEG llldlthe new Board members. As I tries to do l,.l0b Ill”! bill lhelfe .Gm'ernnienl pBoard it is possible IS reason for believing that in that they will render outstanding runw eases. PEl'hEDI ll Bl" i00pserHce to the industry. Many of mzmy, he is not allowed to. do a them must however spend some -jtlh properly. Ill PIN" Ellizlish Ilelllmfl gaining experience and will is interfered with and dictated to tin some instances also have to ht his employe . the station op- develop son... additional respect tratiir who must compete forp-for marketing legislation as s tolume with other operators and menus of improving the agricui. . guru! grade is usually the best tural t!COIl0ll1y. mil to draw business. A good. The press release wlilch annou- zradc- IS. of course. 8 800d thins -Inced the appointment of the new tut, if it is given for poor eggsglioard members expressed the I is in bad thing and will in the jhope.that harmony would L-hag. ong run undlermine and destroylacterize its existence, with um nalpkttl Oi lei Industry. While it .hope we haveconsiderable sym- us) be annoy rig and unjust for.pathy. We believe in peace but he farmer to receive a bad grade there are times when peace goes for good eggs and we doubt-that . not produce the desired result, thins u-ri often happens. It is per- rhe new Board has on it indi- aps not as serious as the re-pviduals who up tothe present loge l h i 1 th I. k . -time have held widely divergent the eI"(Il(I:(ralC Innspegtione S:1rvic.:!:1l1e;1wStgn pom!" markeunt P"- whose responsibility it is to en- biiiflv wfiiiaccegmnce of mummi- larch the regulations and kee the. d. d mo emu mte"- View "amms up to the mark Ugh)". an Pro ucc a determination to 0' lice seventy stations and the re-' Th? new Board at time of Now :12 3-0-A-o CO et; ” fimzz the Maritimef to Britain for the low Montreal-Britain fare alone! . IUOV ITO?-OVII PIIVIIOII W MONYIIAI. iMAGlNE.flying from here to Britain-with a stop-over in historic Montreal. And all you pay is the low, tourist fare from Montreal to Britain. It's B.O.A.C.'s newest CORONET all-tourist service. You fly connecting line to Montreal. Theo board B.O.A.C.'s' giant, double-deck STRATOCRUISERS for the quietest. smoothest of all transatlantic flights. Enjoy traditional British service and delicious meals. And you have complete run-of-the-plane freedom from the s sciourupper deck cabin to the gay downstairs oudge. LUXURY FIIOHT. Fly B.O.A.C. MONARCH. all-irsr class service Montreal to London direct. Deluxe accommodations. Sleeper berths available. Pay only fare from Montreal. 'MnIns'I-Brilein mu 4 fl) Is psiinsyu underlie; sf Frdcrims. Ifslsfu. nsrms. Isis: John, Ysmuub. tllllk Past differences in an effort million bushels. is located at Enid. Oklahoma. It is owned by the (Union Equity Co-operative Ex- .change. a federation of 92 local '.co-ops in Oklahoma and Texas. The U. S. Department of Agri- culture is conductlng research on killing turkeys by carbon dioxide . it is reported this is a pain- less and for the turkey and pre- vents bruising of meat and broken bones. 1 Good weather over the Canadi- on prairies has led to forecasts of a wheat crop this year of be- tween (50 and 500 million bushels. The price of butter in New -Zealand has dropped to the e- quivalent of 40.6 cents (U. S.) .a pound. It is estimated the New Zealnbd Dairy Products Market- ing Commission may lose about '33.5 million on the 112 million pounds of New Zcaland butter still to be sold from this season's l production. A announces the initial guaranteed price to be paid to.- lil55-56 grain is set at the same level as last year. The initial price on deliveries of wheat will be 31.40 per bushel for No. 1 Manitoba Northern in store, Fort William- Port Arthur or Vancouver. cmoiiir 3&3 Q tperhour it J Dark. drehry days depress cariaria. too. They just don't feel Dutnow-good news for canary coloraturas! if they'll an-snge to have the bottom of their cages bed with aluminum, theylfl sing through the darkest day. The light noleomd from the sparkling metal foil gives their souh that springtime lift. People find endless household mm for alnmiriinsi foil. So does ' r '5' everytling from mo-lijttiig clothing to photo- E bniln, to wrappins for undyud food. Canada used I miiiim pounds offoil last year. ALVMINUFCOMPAIIY OF CANADA. LTD. (ALCAN) For information and reservations, see your local travel agent, railway ticket office, or BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION iii B-0-A-f ' ATTENTION Annual Meeting of the Prince Edward Island -lfoiato Producer Association will be held at Prince Cmlllty. Tuesday, September 6, Canadian Legion Hall. Sllnimerside. Guest speaker, Hon. Eugene Cullen. Minister of Agriculture; Kings County, Wednesday, . Sepiember 7, Orange Hall. Bay Fortune. Guest speak- 9l'. R. A. Pierce. Department of Agriculture. Queens Cmlniy. Friday. September 9. at Birch Court. Char- lottetown. Guest speaker, Supt. R. C. Parent, Experi- mental Farm. Provincial Annual Meeting at Birch Court. rlottetown, Wednesday, September 14th, 1955. litre meeting will he addressed by the Premier, Hon. It W. Mathason. H ' All meetings at 8 PM. S.'I'. Every interested ph-oduosr is urged to attend. Iisnod DONALD G. ANDERSON. . Secretary-Ts-aasviru Gander - Montreal - Tonnes Winnipeg - Vancouver H G g.. , Boot & Shoe Notice This store wll be open for business stoning Sept. 1001!. Saturday afternoon and night until 9:30. at the request and for the accommodation of our many friends and customers. a very difficult period in disposing 3 lgIAlll.DIOIIlloN . IlnaIuPseuldWrIc cial said loads: to Canadian tour of the Russian farm exports has become "s bit botehad up. lut than were opposing views as to where the responsibility lay. Diplomats blamed the agricul- ture department w trip. Agricultural lals said they took over the arrangements only because the ' affairs depart- ment did not want to handle them. one informant said handling of the tour was a top-level decision between E t ' Affairs Minister Pearson and Agriculture Minister Gardiner. He said Mr. Gardiner aslied to have the tour handled by his department. 8. J. Chagnon. assistant deputy minister, of agri- culture. was placed in charge. DEPLORE INCIDENTS Meanwhile. the external affairs department issued a statement say- lng the anti-Red demonstrations against the visitors at Montreal. Winnipeg and L o ii (I o n were "deplorable." But a department official said the statement could not be taken as an official government apology because the incidents were not suf- ficiently serious to warrant such ction. The statement said. ' "These visitors are guests of the government and the unruly demon- strations are deplorable. One can understand that the emotions of the New Canadians are fairly strong owing to their personal experiences in some cases. However. this does not justify and action against individuals which reflects on our hospitality." MUCH CONFUSION Federal officials were generally in agreement that there had been handladtlsv Call Tour Of Russian Farm Exports "Botched" aIdarstaa&glaIaadliaghstor. !siiesGleflebut'l'aItdWh- orrsws (OP)-A federal oli- ""5 ""l" "'""" ”""' " reststshoIlarittsassfss-sholi- Religion and LHe By Very Rev. George C. Pidgeon. D l)., i.!..D. lint Iodarator al the United Church of Canada (Copyright) we hear a great deal these days preferences, or the conclusions day, told rsportars Monday that about the violation of the law on drawn from the preferences of isipeg were "the best-kept secretl since the war." , TIE II!!! If the (W0 IIGHII .nlpeg arrived at Winnipeg's Sta- venson airport at 8:1) p.m. last Wednesday. Chief Taft said his force was first infonned of the arrival time at 8:10 p.m. The iplanas were is the air about three, lhours t "We kept a man near a tel- ephone all day to get the arrival time from the RCMP lust a soon as it was known," he said. "Ws got it just a few minutes before the arrival." i If he had been given more time to prepare. he said. he could have had the planes land on a military strip adjoining the civilian airfield and had taxis whisk the Russians away without the demonstrators .getting a chance to come near them. i'PEG DISPLAY WORST l Winnipeg was the scene of the worst of the three demonstrations. About 300 anti-Communist Ukrai- nlans turned out at the airport 5equipped with placards, pamphlets land even a big wreath dedicated to "brothers murdered by the Bol- sheviks." Four RCMP plalnclothes- men. apparently mistaken for Rus- sians, were punched. kicked and. spat at. Demonstrators cursed the -Russians as they were taken from; ithe airfield in a police-protected. motorcade. As. Chief taft spoke to re- lporlcrs in an Ottawa hotel lobby. Avlaidmlr Matskevich, Soviet del- egation leader. and some of his colleagues happened by. The chief and Mr. liiaiskevich shook hands. a great deal of confusion and mis- More people borrow from HF C than any other company in our field I Whenever you need money, for any good reason, do as thousands of others do. Get the extra cash you need at Household Finance. Loans are made in one day. Folks who borrow once are satisfied customers. That's why today I-IFC is recommended consumer Inanoe company. Canada's largest, most sauna vans iSlMliNMW his-ieaullmmssts vesuss':avs r'i::'s'IIv's 'Ii7i':ts" Hill II III lwlli O sios.1s tio.oo is """""""'"' aos.ss ss.oo is I -. sIo.es sr.oo as .50 I. "00. 1u.ss so.oo as "mm" "kn." III Os-out George 51., MONEY WHEN YOU NEED WI lgioussiioiitriiisiics w.sws..iu,st-..& GMAILOITIIOWN. P.I.I. essha I. phone III? SHOWING A COMPLETE LINE OF- I I l..adles' Children s Man s American Girl Teen Agar Koch Tetrault Savage Ritchie Duchaina Zld Cap and Gale GIIO Ilealtil Shoal Groin John Palmer LLLMAAAtslliIL P.I.sDoattforgetIsel.tl.IioeOisaraneelaielaevv as H De Goal: Dalltiing. & Queen Street.-largalsis For-,All. loot-sltSlioes lubbor Footwear and Men's Woril Clothe! aoiisaquances. But what impresses an observer of the traffic on our roads is that many drivers are unconscious of any law governing their actions. Anyone driving on Route 100 at the legal rate of 50 miles an hour will be passed repeatedly by men driving at a far higher rate of speed. A young man alone in s new car will usually be the one that will pass most quiclsl , and he doesn't feel that he is breaking any law: he is just unaware that such a law exists. or that he ought to do anything about it. Is not such a man a type of his generation: Books are being writ- ten to prove that there are no absolute moral standards and that what we have been calling our laws are just the social conven- tions of our time and place. We draw lessons from our sa- periencas and than we draw up rules for the guidance of ourselves and others- Ws forbid this and we allow that because our experiences and ex- periments with life have shown that this is harmful and that help- fill. Or the traditions of our family or race and our consequent up- bringing have formed our prefer- ence. and we want our young people to live and act as our fathers did. "It isn't done" counts far more with such people than the ”Thou shalt not" of Holy Writ. NATURAL ORDER What are the facts? Is there a moral order. or is there not? We know that there is a natural order. When we violate its laws we suf- fer the penalty. When we obey them we reap the harvest. This applies to economics and politics as well as to bodily health. What a man sows in these fields be will reap. Is there similar objective real- ity in the realm of morals? Is there a difference in the very nature of things between right and wrong? When conscience con- demns a certain action, does it echo the judgment of an eternal law on such a deed and on such a man for doing it? Is the "categorical imperative" rooted in the nature of things or are the commandments just the ” mnwhut .5-1"; ,1... .gw1..l our highways and its dlaastrouslour race and generation? Many thinkers of tod and many more doors are adopting the latter hypothesis in action whatever in their heart of hearts they may believe. We can give only the Christian answer to such questions. It arises out of our faith. Back of all the laws of God is the revelation of the naiure of God. The moral character of Deity is Israel's dis- covery. The moralists of Greece repudiated gods of Greece: they drew their ideals from other sources. The moral teachers of Israel drew the truths they taught from the character of the living God. Kings of other lands consider- ed it their prerogative to do with their subjects ihat King David did with Uriah the Hittite and King Ahab did with Naboth's vine- yard. but only in Israel did uch kings crumple under the condem- nati I of a just God and learn the hard way that the king as well as the slave must respect the rights of persons. The social teachings of the pro- phets liad their God's righteous character behind them. and every law they laid down had God's authority behind its enforcement. For Jesus His Father's will was that which was sbsolute'y right and good, apart from every per- s al consideration. He saw the possibility of conflict between His personal will anti the Father's will. and at every point. even in Gethsemane with the Cross before Him, He made the Father's will His own. ALL JUDGMENT For example. the Father had judgment to the Son, and that the Son's answer to this responsibility was: - ”I can do nothing on my own authority; as I hear. I Judge; and my judgment is just because the character of the' He tells us that; committed all; ' Tutsduy. Sept. 6. 1955 The Guardian Page 3 God his laid don. the laws I Above All. user II the example pills Kingdom in His Word. There of Christ with His ObE'"'"ll.'e evcn is no mistaking lh: meaning unto death. He lived by the law the Ten Commandments. of love unlimited which He laid Through the proph: i He has (WWII in the Sermon on the Mount. given us specific application of and died rather than use the pm- or such I; s to the co.ditions of at His comr end in His own tie- their tlm' and we cannot ques- fe :e. tion their bearing on the social What God is as revealed in His problems of our own time. ve are called to becomr it Back of all this is the revela- our measure. and to express what lion given to the prophets of what we see in Him in our words and God ie hate injustice: He deeds. loathes impurity: He is the defend- er of the widow. the fatherless and R If ly glaring bgmiahes Pirnplss. the stranger. Where rsgan gods less glt.culi'i.n;a:e.aiLlkln. Psoziaillsd oos-ins r k. demanded the sacrifice of the sons even of kings, God re"ealed Him- I self as humane, loving mercy and "" A kindness. ffering forgiveness to the chief s nners. and finding His own glory in the sinner's restora- ' through pardon rather than in his suffering the penalty to! his transgression. i HUSSMANN COOLERS POI IRISH AND H-OIDIIOOIS - (ll.0SED AND OPEN MEAT CASES OPEN DAIRY DISPLAY COUNTERS FROZEN FOOD CASES WALK-IN COOLERS ' INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER DOMESTIC REFRIGERATOH8 mi We Service and Repair all Mechanical lefrigeraatioii. HUSSMANN FREEZERS Upright -- 12 cu. ft. G350.00 I seek not my own will but the will of Him who sent me." i No matter wliai philosophers say! or what they think their systems require. there is no doubt about the Christian position on the issue bcfore us. There are absolute standards to which our conduct must. conform. or the craftsmanship that weave: of first touch, a superb fine quality 'ffsoI”7 Give it a name? It is an Irreplaceable bigredieuf that for centuries has made, and MT! and; gritish yfggllensjlsbriasfersvsr W STOREY ELECTRIC E" El.EC'l'RICAL CONTRACTOIII 1'75 Grafton St. Dlol823'I aplacessblo Ingredient Is it the climate, the centuries qfskil a texture into British Woollen: betraying, "---s-'-2::-.:!..'t.'n.'.:'..".......'-'-..'---' gI'IIase'II0.-UIIIIEV-I-Lhlwj