J I I he needs and a teac':er with fa high stand- ing and an adequate income; or he may trek to a drafty, ill-heated shack presided over by a permit teacher who kills time by reading comic books to the class. If he lands between thme two extremes, he may """ "5"""'l cl" "Il..'f.' ""P"'om" D'""m""' :be faced with still another problem. If :3 S;-hll.lt;:f7hcPr:'f:-3h;:"”-t &u:;ng3:nn;H-rwN5lsf":3'ha;ihls family moves from one province to ianother, as many Canadians do these ,d.ays. he meets a different curriculum, dif- THE GUARDIANI P n- shed week-day morning at as Prince IIIIII. Char u lmigloilviiirir l:.l.. by no company Limited "Conn rnnu ldwarl ulna us. In new" Editor. Prank Vlalkar Ganornl Manner. Ian A. Burnout 5: "lift offlcu ll summer-Itde. Ilonlaxua Ind Albenon. Autbo par Innum "The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink." sarunnnvfxpmi,-;,'i9.r.5 mode of school life. Passamaquocldy Agaln First proposed in the 1920's and actually begun in the 1930's, the Passa- maquoddy tidal power project is again in the news. President Eisenhower has ask- ed Congress for S1,000,000 to begin a full- scale survey with Canada. recommended by the International Joint Commission on United States-Canadian Boundary Waters. As originally conceived by hydroelectric. engineer Dexter P. Cooper, ”Quoddy"l power would depend upon huge gates sxulng by the sea. It has often been said that the real TOWGFIYIS tides are Pulled by the mOOh difference between a true statesman and a Ind Sun agalhst the melt C0a5tS Of Malhelmere politician lies not so much in their and New Brunswick. In Passamaquoddy actions as in their attitudes. The states- Ba.V they range from 13 t0 25 feet. 3Vel"llman. that is to say, considers every ques- illiiflg 19 feet- Under the POWel' Plan theltion from the viewpoint of what he be- bay's island-studded entrance would be lieves is good for his country; the poli- l0Cl(e(l hy Sea gates that W0UlCl Open as tician from that of what he feels is good high tide neared and close again as ltifor his personal ambitions and the furth- turned. The trapped water would fl0Wlerance of his party's interests. In the out through hydro-electric turbines driv-fmain this distinction is borne out by the ing electric generators. Below the power,respective attitudes, respecting the recent been coming through this process fairly well: but they've been doing it the hard has been getting his moneyls worth. Large sums of money will have to be spent on education within the next few years, both to maintain the'plant we've got, and to expand our facilities before the second wave of postwar babies hits the schools. Itls time to start thinking about it." Slatesmanship & Politics building. with all the b"”';s and mt-teri:-list lferent methods: an upheaval in his whole "On the whole, Canadian children have, way, and, it's doubtful if the taxpayer, ' ssi Unforeseen Develiipments LENTEN MEDITATION dam would be I second gate-cont:r0lled.Yalta disclosures, of President Eisenhower pool or basin, Cobscook Bay. which would and William Knowland, Republican minor- be kept at the 'low-tide level by doorsiity leader in the Senate. opening outward on the ebbing tide and The President wasted no time In as- closing on the flood. Thus the differencelserting that he himself wanted nothing to in tide levels would be maintained be-;do with any political chicanery that might tween the two basins, An enormous un- develop from the publication of the docu- falling flow of water would continue 24 ments. "There is nothing to be gained," hours I day through the penstocks of the he said, "by going back ten years and power plant. Such a system for ”harnes-fshowing that. in the light of after events, sing the moon" would yield, according toisome one may have been wrong. Let us recent estimate. some 1,310,000,000 kilo-itake and lay out the thing dispassionate- wait-hours of electricity per year, I thirdlly, so that we, in our turn, may profit by the output of Hoover Dam. ltheir mistakes. But don't let's try to President Roosevelt, who had a sum-damage reputations." Nothing could be mer home on Campobello Island just overifairer than that. It shows that, in the the border in New Brunswick, saw tlhe.Presldent's view, whatever reason there potentialities of Quoddy's tides and madeimay have been for publishing the old re- their harnessing one of the New Dealisgcords at this time, there is no reason at most controversial projects. A villagevall for bringing them into the rough and was built to house construction workers3tum'ble of partisan debate. before the project was finally abandoned! Mr. Knowland, on the other hand, sees in 1936. It is privately owned today, I in the documents-or thinks he does-a neat settlement not far from Eastport.-ready-made vehicle for Republican ad- Maine, whose people have largely helped vancement in popular favour. "I intend," to keep the Quoddy project alive. lhe said. "to discuss Yalta whenever I Only a few places in the world can believe it to be pertinent." That means capture the tides for power. The Nationalthat the mistakes and wrong judgements Geographic Society recalls that someyof the late President Roosevelt, as infer- time 320 a plan was made to harness the.red by the documents, will be trotted out, Severn River in southern England. Thelernbellished, and exaggerated, whenever Rance River and the waters around Mont'and wherever Mr. Knowland believes a St. Michel on the shores of northern hearing can be found for them. There France might be developed for huge will be no limit to the use of statements amounts of tidal power, although the lat-iattributed to the late President--most of fer project would need I dam 14 miles them taken out of context and, therefore, long. Argentina has studied its Gulf ofleasily misinterpreted-save that of Repub- San Jose and Deseado River. Some en- lican political expediency. This may- gineers think the Hudson River could pro- though it is by no means certain-win 3 duce almost as much power from the tides few votes here and there for the Republi- 85 Pessamailuoddy. and in a far more in- can Party at some future date; but. after dllsirializcd -area. There are also sites the hue and cry has subsided, it is hardly other than Passamaqlloddy farther southllikely to enhance Mr. Knowland's stature in the Bay of Fundy, where the springyas a statesman. tides sometimes rise more than 50 feet. , , , EDITORIAL NOTES Llp-Servlce Wont Do The latest pre-payment plan to be re- Relcrence was made in these columns ported has to do with education, It is esicrday to the strong recommendationibeing worked out in the State Colle'c ii the report of the Canadian School at East Lansing, Mich. Parents will be l'ustccs' Association for substantial aid invited to pay 9515 ll month into a special from the Federal Government in the fund from the child's birth to college age. inancing of school education. The grav- With added interest this would amount to ity of the present situation is emphasizedin ,enough to put the young person through thc report, and the Association is by nolfour years of college. So the sponsors of means alone in stressing this problem. Re- ithe plan believe. ccnily the Financial Post noted that from, every part of the country come reverbera- tlons of the struggle between provinciallthe and municipal governments over the ques-I tlon of who's to pay the soaring costs of says that I colony of Alberta bees, elementary and high schools. These costs that had wintered in in hardware store, are going to continue .to rise. We are go-lcame out on a particularly mild day, only ing to have greatly increased numbers oi"to find themselves a few hours later in the children to educate, and we'll have tolmidst of I honey-less blizzard. No doubt offer them more education than we havelthey will take the lessen to heart and be in the past. more careful in the future. "We still pay lip-service in most partsj 0 0 0 01' the C0lintI'Y." Says The P0St. "t0 the; Dairy farmers can now operate from fiction that the property tax supports the a swivel chair, if they adopt a milk plant lChO0l8- Whit O09! 911PPOl't the Seh0Ol5 layout developed by an American research ll 8 iY0m'Pll08ted Structure of h3"d'm9t organization. Built of steel, with plastic downs. that makes money available in the inner walls nndlconcrete floors, the units m08t lheffleleht W835 Underlying thlslcontain I swivel chair located in I shal- wasteful system are two fundamental ideas tow pit, from which the farmer can open whichgnre invoked whenever it is sussest- and close doom to let the cows in or out, HI tlllt SOME Chill!!! ll heedetl Che Of measure feed into I trough, and wash and these ideas is the proposition that educa- milk 30 head per hour, without having to tltlfl. ll Ind must remain I local matter. move' from his seat. Feed is stored in the hand! of Ichool trustee! Wile Ire lh an overhead bin, and each turn of I crank puts exactly one pound of it into the feed lltrough. Oneach Ildeoftbeaeatedop orator is I raised stall. high snoigh so It seems that human beings are not only creatures to be misled by the weather from time to time. A news item Opportunity And Challenge 1 The Times, London The parable of the Day Labour- ers seems at first sight almost to suggest that God's rewards have no relation to the service renoered, but are solely a matter of his own choice and will, even of caprlcc or favouritism. in one sense the divine rewards are always I matter of grace, for men can never by their own efforts merit the generosity of God. Yet his rewards have some relation to desert, as the parable of the talents clearly indicates. The teaching of Jesus lays much emphasis upon the truth that it is not so much the fact of the reward, but that the degree of it goes far beyond anything man could earn by his own ef- forts. But this particular parable is emphasizing I somewhat dif- ferent aspect of truth. It is that men are judges not so much by what they achieve in comparison with others but by what they ac- complish, or even attempt to ac- complish, in relation to their own capacities and opportunities. Clearly these opportunities differ, just as men's talents differ. ; The men in the parable who were given their employment It the eleventh hour were not loung- ing at the street corners, they were there waiting in the mar- kei-place-”Ihe labour bureau.” ywllere men were to be found who were seeking work. And their ex- icuse for their idlness was the Equile adequate reason that no iman had hired them. When work was offered they apparently ac- cepted it with ieadiness; and so, when the day ended and the time lof reckoning came, they were lrcwanicd even as those who had j”borne the burden heat of the Iday." The spirit of service, not line amount rendered. was the basis of that reward; the will rather than the achievement. It is always this which turns ”the common dust of servile,opportun- ity In gold.". man worth lies rather in the realm of character than of endowments, of quality than of quantity; not in what a man has received but in what he strives to contribute in the service of his fellow-men: it is possible for all to fulfil the div- ine conditions. "She bath done what she could" is the expression of supreme merit in the Gospel. By all external valuation what this woman did had little signi- ficance. but it was all that she could do, and that qualified her for the highest commendation Jesus could give. The outcome of I man's life is to be measured by the ratio between the gifts bestowed upon him-his intel- lectual equipment, his privileges. his opportunities, his favourable circumstances-and the service. no matter of what kind and in what sphere, that he dedicate: to the common good. But the parable is also I chal- lenge. In this age of mass pro- duction and mass thinking. the in- dividual tends to be submerged. m..j....j...m..m. Stuck In Mud (Manchester Guardian.) The trials of the United States nuclear-powered submarine Naut- llus will recall memorl of the occasion in 1887 when the British admiralty arranged for In experi- mental dive by another pioneer SllbfIIIl'II'lc named Nautilus tn Til- bury dock. That little vessel. crude by modern standards. submerged if the true assessment of hII'l and his importance reduced al- most to vanishing point. But Christianity, above all religions, enhances the value of the in- dividual, and see his contribution, insignificant as it may appear to be. as an essential element in the fulfilling of God's purposes for human life. Man's high- est achievements have depended not merely upon great men but upon the work of humb- ler individuals who have so often laid the foundations upon which greater men have built. So with the Christian Church; the work of its leaders is made possible by the devotion and service of the Church's members, often work- ing withoutrecognition and with no obvious reward. To use one's opportunties to the full, whether they be many or few, is to merit the greatest of all rewards, "well done. good and faithful servant.” The 6 I7o'e&'&-tzzw. A CHILD'S FOOTPRINT The brook came down in silver stairs And caught uI walking unawareil. saying the things that people say When one in nine and one in grey. It sliced the hillside like I knife. This obstacle of roistering life That we encountered. undlamayed; only you jumped it. and I Itayed. Though stars and sun cannot Itone For the lost spark that fires the bone. Time's reason in intagllo Briefly in set here. heel to toe. And who would think that ground could hold So firm, so delicate I mold? Your single footprint. fleet and free. , In dubious immortality. -Sarah Litsey in the New York Times. (Following is the second of a series of three articles on the new Criminal Code which came into ef- fect on April 1.) Payments on the instalment plan. widely used these days on almost any kind of purchase. now will be made available to certain law offenders. - If I judge is sympathetic, de- spite finding a hard-up person guilty. he may permit the offender to pay I court fine by instal- mcnts. That is the purport of I section of Canada's new Criminal Code which came into effect today. It applies to offences punishable on summary conviction, r o u g h ly minor misdeeds tried before a judge alone for which the maxi- mum penalty is 5500 and --or six months in jail. Under the old code, fines had to be paid in I lump sum within I lweek or two of conviction. DISCRETIONARY POWERS However. the new code, stream- llined to 750 sections from 1.100 after five years' study, gives a judge discretionary powers to fix the terms under which I fine is paid. That means he can order the fine to be paid by instalments. But if he misses a payment the offender is likely to land in jail. If the code is more lenient on respects. It makes it a crime pun- ishablc on summary conviction in a ”peepin, tom." Under the old code it was not a criminal offence to trespass on somebody's property. But now it's a crime "to prowl or, wander on someone elIe's property, at night, near I dwelling house." Even in the revised code I word out of the middle ages - witch- craft - still has its place. A section says anyone who fraudulently pre- tends to use any kind of witchcraft. sorcery, enchantment or conjurin- tlon or tella fortunes for I fee or pretends to discover lost articles is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction. MUST BE FRAULULENT The section making I reading ille bu been , slightly by 1 the crown to grove thIi' the reading wII'done Iuduleufly JG The lull ha: been drop as puniahment for assaults causing actual bodily harm to I woman but it may be ordered for robbery and armed burglary. The death penalty for rape has j . Lteacup Criminal Code Provisions By Vernard Dufresne Canadian Press Staff Writer such fines, it is tougher in othcl” been abolished. Courts cannot order I man's property to be sold to recover I fine. A witness with I faulty memory may get I break from the new code. which requires the crown to prove that the witness intended to mislead by giving contradictory evidence. In the past, when I witness made contradictory statements, all the crown had to do to prove per- jury was to allow that one of the statements wII false. TOUGIIEB PENALTIES But the new law in tougher on motorists convicted of dr 1 vin g while their ability was impaired by alcohol. The courts now may lune an order prohibiting I person from driving anywhere in Canada after being convicted of ' ' d driv- ing. In the past the sweeping order was limited to those found guilty of drunken driving. Dropped is I provision of the old code permitting Juries to acquit motorists charged with manslaugh- ter in motor Iccldents and to find them guilty of en driving. The result is at the offence known as motor manslaughter now will be charged under I section providing I maximum of life im- prisonment for causing the death of I person by criminal negligence in the operation of a motor ve- hicle. Gunmen will face I charge of murder if their . enpon. even though it II pocketed. accidentally discharges and kill: someone. Un- der the old code. the weapon had to be in the gunman's hand: to result In I murder conviction. A new offence puninhnble on summary conviction prohibits the sale or on of HIM”! hit"! or switch knives. Le Islntors hope this new offence dlseourlzd merchant: tom sell this VP! of knife to round 300 IN- (YPTAWA (OP) - External Af- faln Minister Pearson laid on Thursday IIMM RIIIIII III! III- vltedcanadataoaendalmllvet '. Medically : Speaking Ilfllll N. IIICUCI "-3-. NEW "MEDICAL ADVANCII BRING BELIEF ID MANY our monthly report OI MW medical advance: brtnn new: of help for victim: of rheu- matic ever. leukpmla and certain R3-an-of non-pulmonary tubercu- The Arthritis land Rheumatism Foundation of New York City re- cently announced that I new form of penicillin has "proved unusual- ly effective in the control and prevention of rheumatic fever." Effects of the new Intiblotlc. called benzathlne penicillin. were described in I recent issue of the Foundation's lliulletln on Rheu- matic Dlneases, issued monthly '0 phyxlcl and scientists through- out the id. The report states that the In- tlblotlc eradicate: the streptococ- al infection that may lead in rheumatic fever. One injection will protect I child for In entire month. I'll have more to say about this new discovery in I later column. Antl-Folfe Acld Dru; A new Intl-follc acid drug, Methotrexaie, has been announced by the Lederle Laboratories Div- ision of the American Cynnamld Company. Methotrexate is chemically simi- lar to another anti-leukemia drug. Aminopterin, developed in 1947. When used in combination with ACTH, cortisone and other com- pounds. Methotrexate in said to help give 70 per cent of children d d with ' ' I t my return to good health. Animal tests indicate that the new anti-follc acid may work on children who do not respond to compounds now in use. Development of an enzyme jelly useful in treatment of certain types of non-pulmon y tubercul- ous lesions was reported In I rec- ent Issue of the American Review of Tuberculosis. Dr. George N. Hatelhuret of New York University College of Medicine wrote that die jelly "was found effective in henlng I num- ber of Iupperatlve tuberculous lymph nodes.' 'Each lesion, he said. must be treated on In indi- vidual basis. Areas of the disease not in di- rect tact with the jelly, be ex- plained. are not affected by the application. QUESTION AND ANSWER R. L. J).: Are alcoholic bever- ages harmful to I person with sugar in the urine? Answer: It is advisable that such people avoid the use of alcoholic beveragea. Let the heaven: be glad. and let the earth rejoice: and let men say Im , the nations. The Lord reigneth. , TAX DODGERS PUNISIIED NEW YORK (AP)-Judge Archie T. Dawson sentenced Henry (the Dutchman) Grunewald. Washington influence peddler, Friday to five years in prison and imposed I 10.000 fine for consp any in I 160.000 tax-fix case. He compared Gnlnewald and two co-defendants to "termites which could under- mine I structure until It collapses". He imposed I five-yenr term and In 38.000 fine on Max Halpern, 70. New York lawyer convicted on four counts of the indictment. and Id- Journed until April 14 the senten- cing of Daniel A. Bolicb. 54-year- fld assistant commissioner of Internal revenue, who is ill. BARBERS - IIAIRDRESSERS VIAIITEII Learn these Trades It TRANS-CANADA BEAUTY INDUSTRIES LTD. Monctaon. N. B. Burke Electric Authorized Dealer- Electrical Wiring Repairing and Supplies Oil Heating Household Appliances Telovbton 156 Green 500. St. - DIAL 4021 parliamentarians to. nuuta. I The Age Old Story I use .9... Jr. r 1 beritht. What dfl . 1 .- Kitchener-Waterloo R.ec- than the recipe. - i'f,.dJ.”i.-'12: the M-Iml-u..' In In the bad peo,,,e than the ilood People Stratford Beacon-l,l.eln of others. At the moment the vast majoriw know precisely nothing about civil defence.-Montreal Star. t The people II this coun In reflecting their confidence tlrn, the future in the most fundamental and lm EEISIVG way possible, by simply vina more babies, many more babies. Man knows mofg efficient ways of creating masu death: than ever before, yet life Inawera back death defiantly..by gt!-I-oi:luclng more life. - New York ea. - fee break. Do the other half keep Illm by doing the work of the half that are out eating the rolls? --Winnipeg Tribune. PIIIIM! I leeway Ihoald be allowed men of the sea. but the lolly Mnuachuaetta crewman who has accumulated seven wives seems to have been overdolng I bit. A IIllor'I wife I IIllor'I Ital- should be. not his colutellntlon. -Windsor Daily Star. More eouultatfon fa prlvnfo uni less public bluater would help in international relations. Open diplo. mlcy. Upellly arrived at. has been one of the curses of the world for the but 20 years. It has led to too much Iabrerattling. I conunng war of nerves. I cacophony of pro- Pllanda and has placed individual eadera and nations in positions from which they found it dwlcul 01' to retreat. - inni- Del Tribune. From April ea you will be able to adorn your car with blue, green or chocolate brown tire: to match the colour scheme of Your family chariot. The new tires are to be coloured from the 1" mum" "ht "9 Pmdllet 0' outer edge of on white sidewall "M 9'0"" l' 0 limit at or io the top due of the tread. The ''''”"1''' ti" metal mind: by automobile in beginning to copy Wu”! " f0r8inK- The method some of the charm of the surrey Sumumu "3"? I935": cut! the with the mug, on top, the snub need for machining and handling, plated buggy harness, the pumed Ind Permit! Illoyl not otherwiu wake, of an bug”. wheels, the possible.-WIII Street Journal. sheen of the Illver lamps, the re- Iplendent grace of the landau, the T" M""""" illlll - ll" phuion, am View”. .,,d an Proved that men often look far, A 5.000-year-old way of mania, things from powered metal is heading for new heights of pop". larity after I modern-day let. down. The Egyptians of 3000 BC, having no furnace: for melting iron, powered the ore, heated it all hot as they could and then shaped it by hnmmering. simi. larly, todnyln metnllux-gm. gi-ind iron and many other metals into powder, pour them into I die and apply preuura of five to so tons per square inch. "Then the metal ll POPlled into I furnace for bak- int It I tampon-atlu-e Just under b 1,. Th 1. ,1, and unsuccessfully. for something .:o"1;:nln8g I bofhndonpepgg that was under their feet at home. pan The Montrealen didn't invade dlrhlt Mflcl. or to lcrambllng Icrou the hard face of the Pre- cambrian shleld. in search of rich and rare metals. They went thir- ty miles away to Okn. famed as I cheue town. and Itaked out claims that made them millionaires. This ;aIn't done Juat on I hunch. Tbemnnwhoeataapoorlygogu. ed breakfast. bu words with his wife during the meal. Ind dishes off to work without I warm make- up kin. II I menace, a traffic menace. In Boston. Chnrlaa Ray, vice-president of an in I u r I I c I -you-old mapa of the Iron, company insuring truck: and indicating depoulfa of low-grade buses, told the New England Com- iron ore. IIVI them I clue. Their nnerclnl Vehicle Auociatlon that gelger counter-I did the rest. Their I food breakfast. I happy home occupation? One In I mining pro- ntmouphete and I hearty good-by feuor, the I lawyer who makes the good driver. NIg- Ipeclallxoa In mining law. Never sin: over money. tn-lawn. and be- let it be Iald again that such peo- havior of children produce I bad ple live h ivory towera. The tow- driver. Which IIIOVII (III! III! home era bejowned prospector: is still more important than the live In In compounded of col. hilhwly. or the day's Job. If the umblum. in-Inlum, tantalum and om: in faulty nothing also can thorium. - Windsor Star. vwmuw Dlnm0n,,m0nlH FOB -l-an ans-r ovlinrrr AND vawn nlvions HIE ELLEIIS LTII. H Y N D M AN Allll co. IJMITEII insunnncn” slim, um. Oflleui OBAIIAVITETOWN BIJMMEISIDI - IIONTAGUF PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. Etc. i an lIl!:.:eeIh:1-II:5tIr 0”" m”I'i2t...lh ili.oQuTm'nlI;a'IAi91I OPTOMETRISTS 7 G. F. Hntcheson & son I . . llJ'l'clfE8ON. mo. :' II Graflu u.' . pm I. A. Onrrnthera. 3.0. in not It. Dial uu nym.G 0.1). amen, nntmuuii humor B.A.i IIIQIIIIICJ Phaaollll I.A.FIrmer,Q.O.,LL.B. laakafloemmareelldg. AlIhoIM.GIIlb.LL.B.' lllllnhlnadls DIIld'I4'l- A.W GIndet.LL.B. Phmhgltgr IIIGIIIIIIR. Palmetlllalm IIQINIVIIIIIIIIIJ. latIiIIoI.Peah8 rntnnualinu J. S. Taylor. 3.0. '”""'u.... 'i.'.'.'. "......"""'..'t.t II. J. lane. 10. Idaue it CHIROIIRA TO pr. '1. ...g....g . 0-"lr... AR HITECT I NW1!!! to truck . P.l.ll