.;,g,i'”'r:i-is GUARDIAN mlull-I-uD!'l5'lIQsu '&II!IPlhOOIIIlldlIlIllnlkoHIDII" Klk.hIlI'IlhI I-si-IlIsIslIr.lsIA.Iurustt Irlulsmesssshnnnnds. Bllsissaldsnlnllbytlshnolflnsbepai-tmcse. otters. Easiest Du-httswwl. fsP.I.l. use 9'' I Dunner-uh 115.0: per Otber Provinces noun Duh-seven-ueoyi-nnnuuissrasc-so-u.cuu csinoalyunlfss Isltllussslhlbcwnlutho annual. and DJ. Il.I.N' movement. Iliillifhl.” no direct relat-ionship with the moral law, FRIDAY. JUNE 3. III! Poor Old Time Act mentioned during the election campaign. standing that the matter would be ironed ll: conveniently afterwards. The fact that we have an ' anomalous ' 3 , law on the statutes, which is observed only i in the breadi, was called to the attention the Federation of Agriculture. But they were a voice crying in the wilderness. Perhaps our farmer members were con- vinced that the Act as it stands is unen- forceable. Certainly it has proven obnox- ious to the m.unic'i-palities, which want Daylight Time and have shouldered the iodiun of ignoring the law to obtain It. This is bad practice, as pointed out a year ago by the then Attorney General, Hon. Mr. Darby. If we want respect for law and order in this Province it is incumbent on iour public men to pass measures that are fair and reasonable, and to do all in their power to see that they are enforced. We have dealt with this subject before, and lthere is lzitflle in be gained now by labor- ing the point. llt has been I discredits.-ble performance all around. We can only hope that it will not create a precedent leading b consequences much more serious. Constructive Policies The program of the Provincial Depart- ment of Agriculture in the matter of Bangs disease control, artificial insemin- ation and veterinary services is of great interest so all our livestock breeders. Hon. Mr. Baker's outline of these policies in to- day's issue will be appreciated, and no doubt stulhed very carefully. They rep- recent 1. libstiantial extension of services hi a field which 3 of importance to our wholeisgriculiiural economy, and which is in line with recommendations made by our farm organizations over a period of years. It is to the credit of the Department, end of iris Government generally, that this Fogiran was not enunciated in detail on the we of the election, although it has evidently been under preparation for a lot; time. Thus it is completely removed from the field of partisan controversy, and represents a constructive approach to the problems in a manner which will appeal to all concerned. Public cooperation is just as important as government initiative in -these matters, and where the we go to- gether-as doibtless they will in this case i.-the-re is no question as to the success which will be achieved. Pulbllcity is essen- i iiial in obtaining such co-0Pel'a'ti0n. TOT it i- 4, obvjoug that the more the people know about the activities of their Government we better they will appreciate its aims and objectives. Such publlcl-ty, week in and week out, establishes that close con- tact which builds up confidence and under- mmalng on the one side, and keener ad- ministrative efficiency on the dther. It is all the more effective when coming. 88 11 does at this time, after a fresh mandate fmrn the,D.e0Dl9- iA Sensible Resolution um. olmum expressed by the General ”AhAd&.,dvflIe”Pral7yteria.-n Church in r of disarmament is 'i &ss&n oonceminz the world. i T and realism with respect to ', estbeysi-e.Itishard ' away; couiil-qus.rrel with the Iisolutlon whidf stated that "the uM"dggrufl' & wespons of man inc piling up :;um'-1-lmntfi , with the rev P9 --In 4." nations. maintained by III!- . Mi , dis- in The poor old Uniform Time Act took another beating yesterday, when the City Council decided that from and after mid- night, June 4, until September 24, Day- light Time, "being one hour in advance of legal Standard Time," shall be in effect in Charlottetown. It is all very confusing, especially since the issue was not even . ;- g,. It is rumored that there was a "gentle- men's agreement” among the candidates of both parties not to do so, on the under- of the legislature at the last session by a ' ”'tlie dancer at mr"ljr Meanwhile, unilateral disarmament on -the part of the West-or of any individual of madness. It might bring peace all versal slavery. Indications are dence that, if the Western powers will keep on patiently in their Search for a settlement of world problems, without weakening their system of defence, the Communist States will eventually coime to terms which will be acceptable on both realistic and moral grounds. Alberta Election Discussing Alberta election prospects- the date has been fixed for June 29-, a Calgary correspondent in the Ottawa Citizen says that despite the uproar in the up to be a quiet one to -the point of bore- dom. Certainly there is no sign of the sort of Prairie fire that usually sweeps tired old governments out of office. Normally Alberta goes to the polls every four years. This time Premier Manning called an elec- tion after only three years in office be- cause of opposition criticism of business transaction between Social Credit mem- bers of the House and the government- owned Treasury branches which function as chartered banlu. .. Calling the snap election heiped the government party and hurt the opposi- tion. There are something less than a dozen seals in the province where a dif- ference of a few hundred votes could swing the election. The Liberals are counting on getting those votes swung. Given an- other couple of months and they might make some headway. But the time even to get a campaign organized before June 29 is very short indeed. A factor sup- posed to favour the opposition is a general feeling that the Legislature needs a strong- er opposition; but we know from recent results in Prince Edward Island that this is a poor hope to rely upon. "The most compelling motive of all for ipolitical change, empty podket books," says the Citizen writer, "isn't operating anywhere in Alberta. The government it- self is embarrassed by its riches. The peo- ple are enjoying good times. Agriculture suffered less here last year than anywhere else. Cattle prices have been good. The fbuilding booms go on to greater and great- er heights. Albertans, at the moment, arenlt mad at anybody, with the possible exception of the weatherman whose be- havior has been frightful. He is not a candidate in this election.” EDITORIAL NOTES King George V born this date, 1865. O O O Davy Crockett, whose slogan libe sure you're right, then go ahead!" is now being held up to American youngsters as repre- senting the summum bonum of life, de- serves juvenile remeinibrance for yet an- other reason: his attitude towards good spelling and correct grammar. The form- er he called "something against nature," and the latter "nothing at all worth fus- sin' about." Canadians will get no pleasure out of noting the difficulties that the United States has encountered in distribution of its polio vaccine, but we may nevertheless be proud of our own system. The federal authorities have given a fine lead and the provincial Iauthoritles have carried out their part pf the project with care and despatch. ' bratloris next month the village of Lake George, N. Y., has issued an official pro- clamation requiring all adult male citi- zens-but not tourists-to grow heavy beards. Women must appear in the long drones (I the 17th ipntury and west Poke bbnnefs. Luceoeoigeiseiiivosedtohave been founded by Father Isaac Jaguar. 1 1' French Jesuit missionary. moral suaslon and a common sense of justice to resolve disputes that might arise. Unfortunately, that ideal has" not been reached, although there are some signs that the world is getting a little closer to it;-tensions, fears, and war talk . - notwithstanding. It may be that a real- , ization of the altemative-utter and com- pletc destruction for all-is helping the That, of course, has little or and it is certainly not the best motive on which to strive for peace. Butilt is bet- ter than none at all; and more than once in the human story necessity has mother- ed moral judgement as well as invention. 7 nation of the free world-would be an act .- right; but it would be the peace of uni- in evi- T last Legislature, the campaign is shaping As part of its 300th anniversary cele- V 31' Speaking Of Mo niaini i .3 iii v5 , g, ! Climbing .,. One thing about Hilda Neatby. you may agree or disagree with her; you cannot remain neutral. in the maiden issue of the Cana- dian Journal of Theology she has done it again. She has come out with all banners fLvlng, trigger- ing her word-bullets with deadly aim, as she attacks the subject, The Challenge of Education to the Christian Church. The Canadian reader first be- came aware of Hilda Neatby in her book. So Little For the Mind. The very title was a challenge. in the body of the book she cast about her like a crusader of old against the Saracens whom she conceived of as having captured the Holy City of Canadian educa- tion. It was an all-out offensive against a branded enemy.' While the furore over this book as still at its height, she came out with another volume, the title of which was designed to lull the enemy into the hope of a truce. She called her second volume. A Temperate Dispute. The title was entirely misleading. " tween Hllds Neatby and the forces op- posed to her there can be no truce. In her latest effusion she has got her title back into line. There is no subterfuge -- no camou- flage of war -- in The Challenge of Education to the Christian Church. 0 C D The trouble with Hildsiblestby for many people, is that she has opinions. And she has the dis- turbing -faculty of forcing other people to have opinions too. She refuses to let sleeping dogs liq. Her challenge this time is not to the Church at large, but to the Protestant branch sf the Church. More specifically. it is to the Protestant branch of the Church in Canada. She has opin- ions - very definite opinions - about the Church's role in Cans- diaii education: a mic which she sees the Protestant churches in Canada in losing by default. Miss Neatby. belns I flzhter. hates to 399 Illylllllll to by default. If she has to bi-owbut the churches into action. she is prepared to browbesf. The result is that there are times in this article when it is hard to tell whether she is the- cbsmpiou of the churches, or only their t rmeutor. But. as is everything else she has written. she has things to say that cannot be ignored. Her opinions. which she has the dis- turbing faculty of backing up with factual evidence, forbid her readers - be they churchmen or not - from remaining neutral. Csnadlsu education. at the primary and secondary levels. she sees historically as s tug-of- war between Church and State- ln which the State has virtually won the day. "As the state he- came more highly centralised and soculsrlzed, State 'sutliorities took an increasing interest in the edu- cation of the citizen for service. The spread of secular rationalism. ' ' popularity of ideas of liberty and equality. the ex- lonsfon 9 II for train soldiers. administra- tors, and enlists to serve the state. all contributed pi-sduslh to bring about the system with which we are all familiar: unf- edu- by Is this developmuit Miss Nest- by nosmfhs Protestant chu.rlch';s Dr. Neal'by's Word-Bullets meat of such desirable attltui... in the child 8!” will assure his lsociallzatlcif - that is, his abil- ity to take his place happily and usefully in society. "But if edu- cation, ignoring moral impera- tives aud rational decisions, should make 'desirable' attitudes, and 'socialization' in terms of the world its chief alm . . . it was coming too obviously anti-Cliris- flan." ' O O 0 it will be seen that Miss Neat- by. here as elsewhere in her writing, is not firing off her word- bullets indiscriminately into the wind. She has a target; and, with her usual deadly aim. she man- ages to hit the bullls-eye more of- ten than not. In the business of Canadian education, she avers, "The Church must be concerned for the obvious reason that the secular group is ii body without a head; and it is a body whose members make no use of the means of grace, no claims on the power and goodness of God, who show no recoguitiuu of the truth of God and no obedience to His will." There may be those in Can- adinn educationi - and in the Pi-otestan churches of Canada- who may care to refute Miss Nea'tby's statements. With her usual disregard of the conse- tlie enemy, she leaves herself at times hopelessly vulnerable. For myself, I view her Ama- zonian tactics with not a little wonder and awe, and the least hint ofadmlratlon. After all. it is no inconslderable achievement. In a country, as traditionally lethargic as Canada, to be sble to amuse public opinion on any sub- ject. on the subject of education slie has .educed 'the number of neutrals; and for this. at least. she deserves our thanks. 75! , mam maps BEFORE TODAY ll OVEI Fine and fresh in each white petal Of the first-opening cherry blos- soms Upon the brown twigs still leafless By this beautiful garden pond on my way to work This morning I-passed by this garden pond. And I noticed full-round pink buds on the pond-side cherry tree: I stood there I while, Wondering when the earliest buds would . Wondering if hey would open by this evening Or by tomorrow's early fresh morning. By this pond-side cherry tree. Amend by the few just-opened blossoms. Amazed by this beautiful nature's work. --Naoshl Korlyama in the Clubf- fan Science Monitor. l-lappyl-lolidayrl I! run! J I O 0 "fr , .' i , 5' I queuces. in carrying her war to C l The Age Old Story l mm 3' l Chinese In Thailand (Reuters) Hodiug court one day is the early part of this century, the King of Slain ordered any of his courtlers with Chinese blood in their veins to stand to the right of the room. Nine out of 10 did so. The problem of the Chinese in Thailand has beset successive gov- ernments for three centuries with- out solution. ' At the Afro-Asian conference st Bandung in April, the Thai for- eign minister, Prince Wan Wait- liayakori, again raised the subject. Chou En-lal, the Chinese premier and foreign minister, said that he was ready to discuss the problem. That the dual nationality of the Chinese in Thailand was one of Prince Wan's main concerns is an indication that to the Thai govern- ment the Chinese problem is as pressing today as ever it was. Accurate statistics do not exist. But it is generally agreed fat of Thailand's population of 8. .000 about 3.000.000 are Chinese. The Thais have three main The first is economic. From man who trots along the streets of Bangkok with a portable ms- taurant on his shoulder selling bowls of noodles and port. to owuerofsl:luinhie.t.hoCIiin are In trade. Chinese here will tell you that they invigorate economic life and that without them there would be no trade. The Thais say that the liluese are sucking the lifeblood of the country. The fear of Chinese competition has made itself felt in lsgisla" the es- gf water heated to about I) grees. eYou can remain in the tub half an hour to two hours. Squeese your body. Wash off the mash be- fore leaving the tub. Pat yourself dry. Cornstarch sud Soda Ball Use one cup of cornstarch and one-quarter cup of baking soda to make a cold water paste. Fill the tub half full with warm water. Staylnt.betubfroInIHoH!nin- utes. You can bathe each day, if you however. you can baths less fre- qusntly. These remedies are only for im- mediate relief. They won't cure your hives. Your doctor will have to help you do that. QUESTION AND ANSWER J. D.: My four year old son's teeth have become partly covered with his gums. This condition is a recent development. What is the cause? Answer: The condition which you describe is not an ' one. It may be due to ovsrstimulatlon of the gums from some source. Immediate examination by the dentist is advisable. Bangkok and no Chinese rickshaw drivers. Twenty-seven trades are banned to the Chinese. But still they have s grip on the economic life of the country. The second objection to the Chi- usse is that the Thais dislike the are bonds which keep together and separate them from tlui'l'lisis Diirlngthslsstm or so. the Chinese have mm tlielrwomanwitb There are no Chinese bsrbers in Under s new scliems to settle Israelis unpopulaled border areas. ancient Lschlsli. west of the Jor- dan-hold Bebrou hills, is to form nucleus for the Tgarojectod Lschlsh development. first settlers already have arrived to prepare their future deserted centuries. '-Tbs Lschlsh project. conceived by David Ben-Gurion. Israel's min- ister of defence. while lie was in retirement at s Negev village. aims at reviving the use of which once supported large ulations. l STRENGTIEN BOBDEI Perhaps the main under 5 motive for Ben-Gui-fan's pro however, is the desire to frsusls In-sel's hold over remote new: lugmffurrltory and against the fear my On I flat-topped liil ova-looking I sheltered vsllsy lie the ruins JC)Fill Deed-o'er: lqieivessoe Israel's Plans For La cliisli Reuters NOW! BS7100, 'NI AVIV. homeslnsreginurlx nearlyaseoreof, to border” i f E 223? ifigsgi 2 ,; i -E 2 isiiiiiiiiii DEERE EQUIPMENT iiAsiiowe- eddesses onieoaolosn 33? 2 wish. If your skin continues to dry. from .9" E ii iii .255 iii? 535:: g Q3: 3' E? C iiigi ii'5E gg Erika: aiggsaig E3 2''- gift Eiiitialii come hlslniurles. cunsl. however. in the state of Mass- achusetts. they have s 3100 fine for throwing litter in the high- way. and their roads are the cleanest we have ever seen. The 3100 flu is imposed for the first offence which is why there are few offences. -St. Catherine: Standard. If the level sf public manners drops as our numbers increase - and this seems to have happened liirecenttfmes-tliciiwewlll soon be in danger of spin; the ways of the Jungle. Basically, good public behaviour stems both -respect and respect for one's fellow men. If you think well ofYOIll'fClIoWl.fII0llIWIlibe usturslfiryoutesctssif u know they were around and lizd rights, too: rill!!! which may often conflict with yours. Then you will exhibit kindness. deference courtesy. This is what we mean by "accommodation." There must bemuchiuoreofftlfllfeinCsn- sde's public places is to be not only bears" but pleasant. attrac- tive and rewarding in the crowded years ahead. - Sherbrook Record. PROFESSIONAL CARDST BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Eic. 3 T 53.2 :3!-Egg-i : E E ushes. They lay about 300 at s time. sad the larvae doles on aphids. Beacon-Herald ll doubfedly be necessary. This mu: fer deserves a place of ham, once on the agenda of the pi ' i .. vlncial conference not fall. -Edmonton Journal. We are at I lose to unilenini why fluoridation has created sud an enormous opposition. 11 dog not claim to do Enyllllllgmon than help children to resisl ioou decay. The principle involvedh putting it into the city water sup ply is exactly the same as iii principle involved in add chlorine to the water supply present. And. as a recon! cu respondent pointed out, when all drink pasteurized milk buy processed and cliemic heated food every day, it se an unnecessary waste of ener to get so heated about nunri lion. -Kingslrw "'kii,siaml ard A.Wslfl1cIIGsudotoLL.B. niuiuuig. ulfirslfoest. Pshuorlllsslam Issksflfevslcetlslllll. Math D Foster " -.---””"'u--?-”'-- .i.nmeraianinni,a.A. " ””",,,' III ones at 0 Phone 618 5: GT-iTonngi.rcuEsoN llilg if. A. or, Q.0.. LLB. J. A.,Gsrruthei-s, R.'Q., Isak sf Bldg. 188 Kent St. Dllll M, LL33, Byron J. Grant, 01). mm si.Gm.' pm on III Kent 8t D!!! o7 Corner Icsf I Queen sis. Office I13: lease 1 H. J. Mnboll. 3.0. Montague P. hi lsthcson. Peeks it Nlchohou manna: ltroef J.A.IlsoGuIgI.II hihlllg.-Dlslifl-QIOGII. 0hss.B.IlcQuald.B.A. lillsllsesllt. ll.soPheo . Ilhlnory SCsCIf. DMIBSI I &'lhII1c IIGIIIIGQOQ9 PDIICI-III! - Palmer nannuafews fr -Ileioseesl DlslIIl.. CHIROPRACTOR Dr. W. E. Carson :01 Prince st. viii ARCHITECT; G. Keith Plckardi 3. Arch. M.n.A.i.c.. " P.E.l. mu EILDOANECGOMPANY Charlottetown ABTIIUB J. oannm-r IM Flflrey Street siuw SPEEDTIfl Charlottetown. by iippollllllfi Dill 7315 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS llcDONALD, ouiuim e co. (harfeftofows Stu i l l l