PAGE FOUR THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN ___ _ FEBRUARY 19, 195i) tional Film Board pictures of Irish moss W-"PMH-vcg?» THE GUARDIA-‘N llornlnl Dally (Pounded In I!!!) Alllhorlnd u Ilorund Olnn hlnll. Pout Olflu Defllrlmrnf. Ottawa. The Inland Guardian Pubiinhlnl Co. Editor and Ilnnnfln: Dlru-mr, J. II. llurueti. Alum-lute Editor, Frank Walker. ‘The Strongest Memo y is Weaker Than the Weakest ink" CIIARLOTTETOWN. FRIDAY, FEB. l0, 1950 Island Teachers The statement by Dr. Lloyd Shaw that there are now only three schools on the Is- land without teachers indicates a decided improvement in that situation, as does the fact that the number of permit teachers has decreased from 126 in 19-16 to 62 to- day. The elementary schools or rather the combined public schools and high schools wllich dot the Island, form the backbone of our educational system, and it is the quality of the education provided there that largely cietcrnlines the standard to which higher education can be brought and, in fact, the whole formal education of the great majority of our people. The im- portance of providing good teachers for these schools can hardly be overemphasized and the Department is to be congratulated on the improvements shown. Still Non-Citizens An anomaly in the status of recently ar- rivcd refugees from Europe is becoming both’ more apparent and more troublesome, says the Globe and Mail. Canada has offi- cially adopted the designation of New Cana- dians for those who generally have been known as DP's, but the preferred name has little significance except in a human sense. Most of them are placed on a kind of one year's probation as workers, but their legal status as non-citizell New Canadians docs not change until five years ilavc been spent in the country. All of them have passed through a double screening-that of the International Reill- gee Organization, and that of a competent body of Canadian officials. Their aggregate number is not so great that they cannot be easily checked. The suggestion is made that so soon as they have shown reliability and the promise of becoming good Canadians they should be given some kind of interim status which would at once more closely identify them with the country of their adoption and dignity their position as ill- dividtlals. The “first papers" which pro- spective new citizens are able to get in the United States provide these advantages. The Seaweed Industry A pamphlet on the Canadian seaweed industry, by Dr. R. C. Rose, of the division of applied botany, National Research La- i boratories, has been published by the na- tional chemurgic committee of the Cana- dian Chamber of Commerce. It is not un- duly optimistic with regard to the possi- bilities of developing this industry to the processing stages in Canada at the present time. The grmvth of the carrageen (Irish moss) industry was assisted by the wartime shortage of agar and the fact that carragcen could not be imported from Europe. Now, however, the position has altered; agar is competing in some fields, and European ex- porters are offering some dried carragcen at prices below those paid in our Atlantic Provinces. The lower cost of European weed is due to loxvel" wages and in some cases government subsidies. “Can we mcct this competition?” the report asks—but un- fortunately docs not provide an answer. llowcvcr, it ir; suggested that further rc- scarch would be helpful. In ill-iii, following a conference at Halifax called by the Na- tional Research Council on the utilization of seaweed, rm zlssociatc committee was forlncd lllldcl- the chairmanship of Dr. W. H. Cook, director of the division of applied biology, National Research Laboratories. This committee is still functioning with ten members representing the principal Cana- dian institutions interested in seaweed. Its object is to direct, coordinate and sponsor research activities. The members of this committee are unanimously agreed thai our best hope of meeting the competitio on carrageen is on the basis of quality. Factors affecting the extraction of car- rageenin are now being studied with a view to adopting a standard laboratory method of extraction. When this is done it is planned to study the yield and quality from weed collected at various places and sea- sons. Reference is made to harvesting, drying and bleaching methods studied at the Atlantic Biological Station at St. Andrews, N.B., and the Station's general series circu- lar, No. 10, July 1947, is recommended in this connection. “As the markets for carra- geenin and alglnate increase,” Dr. Rose con- cludes, “these products should be extracted from Canadian weed, in Canadian factories, by Canadians." But he hazards no guess u to when thlx desirable consummation Will be effected. The pamphlet I: illustrated with Na- gathering activities in Prince Edward Is- land. EDITORIAL NOTES Now for a bus service over all. O O O A Montreal firm is reported to be turn- ing out ladies’ stockings of finely spun steel. Whether there is any magnetic attraction built into them or not is not indicated. O O O The fame of P. E. I. advanced registry Yorkshires continues to spread. It seems that Island stock is helping Western breed- ers to take prizes on both sides of the border. ' O Should the C. N. R. obtain control of the Province for bus service, in the event of a railway strike we would be complete- ly cut off from traffic service by road as well as rail. The visit of Mr. M. G. L. Stewart, Presi- dent of Imperial Oil Limited and directors and officials of the company has indeed been a welcome one. The Island is far from being at its best but at least we are able to show what winter should be like. O O O The King's County Federation of Agri- culture has been experiencing severe weath- er for its organizational meetings. That should at least ensure that the first officers are enthusiastic and not readily deterred by difficulties. Canada's atomic research centre at Chalk River, Ont., is a remarkable place in more ways than one. According to Dr. David Keys, in the nearby village of Deep River children outnumber adults three to one, a truly astonishing statement for which there must be some undisclosed explanation. O O Federal Government expenditures are increasing at a rate which worries even Ot- tawa, now that the exigencies of election- cering are well in the background. It is much easier to promise every sort of social benefit than to keep down the cost of pro- viding it. A way to judge the value of health campaigns is suggested by an Ontario doc- tor, and the method seems sound. The question to ask is not merely is it for health, but does it assist the men who assist the men who are doing work to further health. O O O Chancellor Sir Stafford Cripps‘ state- ment that the American dollar has fallen five per cent more than the pound is some- what startling but, in a very real sense, true. A rise in price levels such as we saw in this country and the United States is certainly devaluation of the currency concerned. O The rotten-egg reception of a Spanish 4-man “cultural mission” in Havana, Car- acas and San Jose may have relieved the minds of the throwers of some of their antipathy towards Franco. From every other point of view the incidents are all to the advantage of the Spanish dictator. O O O O O A “ruinous rate war" between railways and the Canada Steamship Lines is warned against by counsel for C. S. L. What has been equally ruinous to the Maritimes has been the virtual elimination of water com- petition these many years since the depart- ments including railways and marine were combined as “Transport? O O O Joseph, 1st Baron Lister, English sur- geon, died this date 1912. He held the chairs of surgery successively in Glasgow, Edinburgh and King's College, London. A disciple of Pasteur he began using anti- septics in all his surgical operations. The immediate and definite success of the Lister- ian treatment soon led to its adoption by surgeons everywhere. He was president of the British Association in 1896 and the Royal Society 1895-1900; was raised to the peerage in 1897. Has many technical pub- lications to his credit. O If, (writes a correspondent to an Ameri- can contemporary), by any chance, the so- called “mercy killing" of suffering incur- ables should be legalized, the proponents of such a bill might just as well carry the \vhole business to its logical and inevitable conclusion: (1) the extermination of the malformed, the insane, the criminal, the so- cial and biological misfit; (2) the slaying of the mentally and physically weak, the blind, crippled, mute, diseased, alcoholic, aged; (3) the liquidation of all enemies of the state. Then, as we progress, the law might be stretched to include the rich moth- er who has been hanging around a little too long, the “unjust” father who will not let us have our way, or the neurotic wife who is something of a bother to us. . . . Is it later than we think, or has the anti-Christ al- ready arrived! 7026' 6mm LASTLY CAME WINTER (From ‘The I-‘urlo Queue) Lastly came WLuter, cloth-ed all in freize. Chalttcrlng his teetlh for cold that. did him dhli ' Whilst. on his hoary beard his breath did freeze. And the dull drops that from his purpled bill As from u. llmebeck did adown distll: ' In his riKht hand a tipp-ed at-afl he held, And with his feeble steps he stay- ed still- For he was faint with cold. and weak with eld; That. scarce his loos-ed limbs able was to weld. -Edmund Spenser (1560-99). he Science and Politics (Winnipeg Free Press) Some light on what. is happin- lng to Soviet. scientists today is provided by the case histories of the two Lysenko brothers. One i; being lauded in Russia as a Isad- ing scientist. The other is in vol- untary exile in the U. S. In considering the position of the two Lysenkos, it. should be re- membered that. since i946 all international trends in the sciences in R/ussia, and also in art. music, literature and the theatre have been under contin- uous attack. and almost all con- tacts with western thought cut off. The new tack taken by Soviet science is well illustrated in the WOIK oi’ Trofim D. Lysenko, now regarded by the Politburo as the Soviet Union's leading biologist His fame there is mainly based on his work with wheat, plus his ability to draw from scientific research findings that jibe with Communist; doctrine. . a . - In brief, Lysenko further de- veloped a known method of speed- ing up the maturity of wheat. He also made great claims about in- creasing wheat. yields, (though they have not. been confirmed), and claimed to be able to produce plant. changes by grafting. At a meeting of the Soviet Academy of Scientists lust: year his work was highly praised by most Russian scientists. But. sev- oral straddled the fence, and sev- ernl more were fairly outspoken against his theories. Ami- they'd had their say, Lysenko announ- ced that his views had received the prior approval of the Polit- buro. The dissenters were trapped They were denounced and remov- ed from their positions. Following this, a letter was duti- fully sent to Stalin, praising him for his interest and "guidance” of biological research, and stat- ing that: "opposition between the two grpups has taken the form of an ideological class struggle . . , between the majority of the So- viet scientists and the few re- maining Russian scientists who have retained traces of bourgois ideology . . , ," The other brother, Pavel D. Lysenko, specialized in ndustrial science. In 1940 a Soviet publlca- tion "USSR. in Construction" devoted an entire issue to yhe scientific achievements of the Lysenko brothers. Pavel Lvsenko had discovered a method of ob- training coke from low-grade Bus. sinn coal acknowledged as valu- able by western scientists. He had made several other notable contributions to industrial re- search. In i942 he was captured in his native Ukraine by the Germans, and liberated by Americans in 1946. When he in due course saw the direction scientific matters were taking in Russia he decided against returning. It. is fairly evident now that the purge of intellectuals in Russia is part. of a drive to re. indoctrlnnie the whole porlula- tlon with the true faith of Com- munism. The impact of this purge on science will take some years to assess, but the reaction to it. of Soviet. scientists ls well illustrat- ed by the opposite roads taken by the two Lysenko brothers. One readily accepted the interference of political "guidance" in scien- tiflc matters. The other rejected it. us incompatible with the true scientific outlook. Electrical contractor IVIRING AND REPAIRING ERNEST R. RAMBAY, I28 Elm Ave Phone 10031 “GET ACOIIAIIIIIED" OFFER! y h. TUBES umnn enu IIIIGIIES liiiil STORE. OD band, the \ Iilng From The shes xIQQDICIUDUDUUUDDUUDGCIUDUUIg I3. The Age-Old Story I Maker is thine hus- Lord nf Hosts is hi! name; 11ml thy Redeemer, the Holy mm 0f Israel. the God of the whole earth shnll lIo be called. For thine The Dog Gol Honle (Stratford Beacon-Herald) Some years ago a hunter, whom we knew intimately, lived in Cen- tral Michigan and went north across the Straits to hunt deer. taking "Ring" the family PM "mi deer hound with him. Two days before the hunt cndcrl "liinlz"_dls- appeared, and my friend remained a week after breaking camp, hop- ing that his do: would return- Ai. the end of a week's waitinfi the hunter sorrowfully returned home, and felt that no deer hunt was worth losing his dog. One night, five weeks later, bclWPPlI Christmas and New Year's, "Rirli!" scratched feehly at his master's door In Central Michigan. He was worn, tired, thin and \\'l‘Z1I‘y~'Illli. was the same old “Ring" and he received n royal welcome. l-Iow did he rzct home? Did he cross Lake lVlichlgan on the ice? Did he hitch-hike on one of the ferries-or did he come home by Chicago? Treat your dog right, and he'll come home, or perish in the attempt. Queen St. Old Charlottetown i» l (And P. E. I.) A ROWDY INCIDENT "On Monday night, a number of the crew of H.M.S. Rose were on shore, on liberty, indulging in the usual froiics of sailors ashore. and were scattered through the different taverns in this Town; their conduct was certainly most inoffrnsivc, and yet, will it be believed, a party of rulliianly assassins collected under the walls of the Province Building, and there al-mcd themselves with bludgeorls. evidently with the in- lcniion of doing bodily harm to some persons. Whilst I noticed their conduct, and feared for the result. I observed the portly per- son of a _weli-known medical gentleman, distinguished for hi5 personal strength and fearless bearing, approach, when, to my astonishment, the whole party hasllily dispersed, whilst he as- sailed them ln language calculat- ed to cause thorn to feel shame for their cowardlly conduct. I ob- served the sanle gentleman. sub- scquently, vainly endeavour to induce a fellow, in company with three men of colour, to give up I fearful bludgeon with ‘which he paraded the streets, and to threat- en exposure if any accident. oc- curred." -— From the correspondence columns of The Islander, July 30. i845. ‘ Delft Just Buy Chicks Buy Production " Other things being nquul, price usually represents mine. not; I-he price of the chick that will muku or Insn money for the poul- trymun, but the production of the flock. the procession when you can ride In the Band wagon‘? Ella Crossbrcd Chicks are the product of years of effort and money spent to Improve this inylni: strain. Auk your neighbour who has them his opinion of Ells Crosshred Chicks. our Islnnd representative who is A. H. Bryenton, Charlottetown, If II Why walk In the tail of Discuss your requirements with 222 CYRUS k MANNING ELLS LTD. Port Williams, Nova Seotll ‘I0- BIDDI- ofl the loll. CIIUIIS". Queen" Street, C‘ Iottetowll. to greater yield and better farm crnpll of Inquiries received since advertising this Ibroduct lens than two weeks Heavy llbor and drudgery hu been , It In ulready Dissolved and becomel Immedintoly lvllilble for plant. uuurinhmenc Ind growth, no mutter how dry the weather. It given crops n week to fol day: earlier ltart that curiae through to maturity, n higher yield, and an Improved product, It can be used In advantage on Potltoee, grain, vogetlhlos, orch- lrdl. garden clgilvnllon, or any product Ihnf develops In, or grow: out Liquid Fertilizer Many farmer; are lerlously considering switching over m Ilia ule of "NA-GIIUIIS" Liquid Fertilizer ac plant nourishment and ctlmullnt. We know that, by the ‘ ‘ e Notes By The fact that about 88.000 Na- groee now are enrolled, part time or full time, in all American col- leges or unlverwitlel, while alight- ly over 25,000 of thece attend the institutions iqnesented in the United Negro College Fund, is a hopeful sign for the full-scale participation of Negroes in Am- erican dBIHOI-‘fluy. Christian Science Monitor. The mourning of a few ‘months ago over the prospect then seen of the disappearance of the color- tary scene now seems to have been unnecessary. According to a Department of National Defence release, no less thunJB Canadian Army Reserve Force units still are authorized to wear the kill, tre-ws or tartan slacks, in addition to the battledres normally issued to all regiments-Sank Daily Star. Canada is a greuI country and calls for people full of courage, of unquestioned loyalty and ready to educate to a greater loyalty those who have had their early training in foreign countries and to whom the ideals of British freedom "were hitherto unknown. Courage and confidence, coupled with faith and works on the part of Canadians, and Canada will soon cease to hear the word “menace? — Timmins Press. A Welsh firm Is now mass-pro- ducing prefabricated mobilc bung- alows which can be moved by loading the complete house on to a four-wheel trailer float. One of these transportable bungalows -fuily equipped and furnished — recently has been on show in the City of London. Three workmen are said to be able to erect it in six hours, and dismantle it. for moving within four hours.—Strat- ford Beacon-Herald. The Japanese are disappointed that the Colombo conference made no definite move towards a peace treaty. but are still convinced that a treaty, or its equivalent. will be theirs this year. Others seem to share this belief, judging by the fact that Japanese bonds are twice. or more, last sum- mer's value on the London Stock Exchange. The crux of the mat- ter is whether a treaty could be signed without Russia. Internally, the Japanese government has re- covered almost normal control. The Communist Party is at a very low ebb, due to the haired it won last summer by its unbridled violence, and is not now seriously feared. But Japan cannot be left defenccless externally, as she would be if the American troops were withdrawn. What the Ja- panese most. want is to sail their own ships and travel freely about the \vorld. They suggest that this could quite well be allowed, while ful kill from the Canadian mill-i The Way in; for a "formal treaty 1,, L,‘ signed. — The Observer (London Angus Ward, the U.S. cum,“ General at Mukclen, who Suffe ed imprisonment by the Qommu‘ is! Chinese. and whose name wL on front pages for Weeks be cause of his arrest, is c.-,,,',,,,,°. born. He is a native of Alvihsla: in Lambton County, 011131-10 i0‘ since being released, one o; t? first visits he made was to his hi‘ home village. Like a gnqd d, ° mat, he refused to say anymfm; about future relations of the pug" with Communist China. Thai? largely the businem of anodlef man, with Canadian fliiilCiilflgliLs. Mr. Acheson, thd US. SOCfCiary n; state. That gentleman is a grand: son of one of the famous (ifiiidh hams of Toronto. - l,(.ihb..,,lj_ Herald. i "‘ We are pleased that a "n", wood designer has said that m}, therhood is good for I'm. q He brings to his aid the t of Lana ’1‘urner, Betty L . ‘ Belly Hutton, Gene Tl..,.‘n°;:' Esther Wliilfllfli. Kathryn gm,‘ son. Susan Hayward and i\i'lli reen O'Suliivan, all of Wilum mothers, and all of wllolll renowned for their he“ v form. Motherhood, he quently improves the flgl.<, even if there is no Cilflllge o, measurement a new quail > o, softness may be added to it. 'l'!lel'- are not many girls who from motherhood these {lit {In I. fear of spoiling their E-lppcnlqngo d:l_ but there are a few. It will b. good for them to compare ~\ appearance with that of, Maureen O'Sulllvan, who ll children, and is 5111i very scntalbie as ‘Farazan’: matc- Peterboorugh Examiner. Ill“. SJ Representative Williams n, Mississippi has introduced a hi1 i0 forbid [federal elnpltwylncl“. at any husband and wlfc if one h" them earns over $5,000 1r their combined pay ls ow. 500. The bill, he said, L: "l balloon to sec what the l." is among government wo. . and others. Our own l-ractlnzl ; that we hope the balloon lvzl‘. p», speedily if it has not dune s.» n. ready. Mr. Wllllanls may cw. sider us old-fashioned, i-u‘. xv think very highly of IVIZIFFWZ-‘I n, an institution and we sec m reason hy government rrlv" '. should e penalized for ill’ Some very respectable l pcopii are married, as indeed their pan enis were before them; and tile; are none the less able to ilcrforn creditable work III the (‘I\".i 1c: vice on that account, 'l‘h<~ Furl eral Government is a vcry hi; employer with u great man-l branch officns. And we riw M! see what harm can flow from ‘.1- employmcnt of a husband n om agency while his \Vli(‘ i3 n‘. ark American troops continue to oc- cupy esential bases, without wait- in anothcn-Washi ngton Post. PROFESSIONAL CARDS J. S. TAYLOR Optometrllt tyne examined, [lanes III- tel Corner Kent a; Queen. Sh. Office Phone l956—"0Il5Q IOII Joseph R. MccMillun, LL.B. BABBISTEB, SOLILITOII, Ito. 15 Queen Street PHONE 110 Honey In 1.0m Bell 8r Muthleson BABBISTEBS. SOLICITORS, lo. B. B. BELL, Ml». . D. L. MATIIIESON, LB, LO. Attorney: at [Aw LOANS 0N CITY AND IAIII PROPERTIES I50 Richmond 8t. Charlottetown, PlJ Dr. A. L. Muclsccc DENTIST DQIINI X-Illy GLORIA BUILDING I10 Grlffon BI. Phone 29f "NA-CHUBS" Liquid Fertiliser In not l-Il experiment. It hu been Tented and Proven In other provinces, Ind found w be the molt util- Inctory way to fertilize farm crops. lean labor and will Positively IIVB you money. “NA-CIIURS" Liquid Fertiliser In cold under Gover Hon certificate and cannot: be lduitnntled. It duel not Involve expenditure on now equipment In applying it to II; will give Greater Yield with "CO"; eliminated. And It In not Expensive-OHM per loci lhould be the ouhlde emf (or potatoes, and grain can he Imam! u law u 81.60 per lcre, other products at equally oonnervltlve rein. Yon can out your farbllller cosh Ihln your Io Ion than half the ununl expenditure, nnrl we reepocflully mlt yourself In purchasing any fertiliser, you lnqulro about "NA. that, before you com- "Ileloro You Invent Involflpte." W; wolmlno mull Inquiries. or a cell at our offldo, 5a Fitzroy off The road front building with the white trimming where "NA-CIIIJRQ" IIIIII‘OI'Q on dllplly. I. A. GILLIEB I SON Livestock Food Agency Dlntrlbulon. Palmer 8. Heslum A. l. IIABLAM, 5A., LL.B. BIIPIIMI, IIAL Bonk of Nova South Chamber: ‘ Charlottetown, P.5d. MONEY T0 LOAN Dr. W. R. Carson Chiropractor Palmer Grldnlto cm. a. McQuuid 1A. OABBIBTEB, SOLIOITOI, I NOTARY. Illa, IllIorn Trust Building OIIABMYITTPDWF Phone “III ll. ll. iillliii IN GHABIDTIETOWN: Phonon also - rm lill. W. fol. I080 A. Wulthen Gander. LL.B. BABIIISTEB, SOLICITOIS, Bu: Phillips Building 11f Grafton ‘trees Money Io Loan Collection - Frederic A. Large. K.C BAIIRISTEB, SOLICITOB, NOTARY Royal Bank of Canada Chamber! Charlottetown, P111. _ Suceeum- * George l. Tweedy, ILO. MccPhee & Tremor B. I‘. MnoPI-IEE, ILA-l 5-0- l SOMERLED TRAINOR. ILA. Barristers, Etc. Toombp Bldg. 16s Queen BI J. A. McGuigun NOTARY, ETC. BARIIISTER. SULICITOII. CURRIE BUILDING M. Alban Farmer MONEY TO LOAN B.A., LL.B. BARBISTER, SOLICITUR. Eh!- Charlottetown. P. E. I. John P. Nicholson. LL.B. BABRISTER, SOLICITOII. [M Prince Sh, CWMW“ PHONE 2888 Mutheson 8| Penile A. W. IIIATIIESIIN. ILO. A. I1 PEAKE, BA. I.I..B Barristers, etc. Collection: - Mon v to In!" 00 Grout George Strut Cfi-rlnmwvw , Gender 8. Hazard rum-mu. soul-rum. Helm"- l“ Oehadlln Bank of Com mrc 5| norm! r0 1.0m J GILBERT n. o/iuum. M- '1' Clnldiln Bank III damn-m‘ i" alIi COMPANY GI-IAIITILIID ACCOUNTANT! ' OFFICES: Charlottetown, Rllihx, Mont-Mn, Amherst, N" Gillll". Tfllroh-Kantvillo. o‘ a u.“ n olph W. Ml I , . . H! M- inn. 0A.. lnrne n. rm, ca, w. Olzilylllllllillzfmv M- Box 247 __,_.__- manna» ACCOUNTANT a cunt: nmnmo ’ oauurrrnowrv, r. n. I.