filKfi E‘- a... be may sous-yo a tee him. so... .no end Sou-s l_-\-I—-..- ..-m_ru I en—s fiwdims magma-ammo" «Tani-newn- Joule MW..- ‘ “h. ’Mmuw‘hmflwh ‘kulagm ILL M “uni-an Now-pope's l.- lmmb aim. at Mods-dc. Momegoe. Alh- Mm Action-Hy by mm sump-p— Inventing 53rka Toronto. 425 University in Empire 1599‘. Manual 640 Celine” Sit-d JNivetel'v t-EHMI; Western Mia I030 W— .‘nm‘ie Shem Venebuvel iMA 7037L ~ Mala. Cenedien Dally Newapepev ’oblllm tum end The (undies! Press. The Canadi- Prue b Oltlusive v entitled to the use lot reps. licenc- d ell me dispetchee in um- pen. :1de to It er in The Associated Pm- a: leo Ion. Ind else to who locel nm published M. 0. Al righle en republicsiicn cl sped-I dupes-s.- one»! else reserved. Subscription meet Ncl over 35: per week by curler. "LOO e you by mil a rural routes and ae- nci sew-cod by sun-n. “.00 e eel ch Island end UL. $2000 pm yet: an IJ.S.v and elsewhele outside Inluh Ca- 'ICnW‘lIlh. No! over 7e 90' single copy. V I Member Audit Bureau of Cileulelion. PAGE-I M NDAY._ Arming—179. | Looking Ahead i We trust that to our urban as well as rural readers the contents of our sixth annual Farm Edition. ap- pearing today, will be read with close interest and preserved as a source of reference. The most striking feature of the articles is their realistic approach to current farm problems, and the proof they sfford that agriculture is not only still the major industry in this Pio- vince but is likely to remain so for a long time to come. The contributors are, for the most part. experts in their field. end it is reassuring to note their general tone of optimism. This is " not due to wishful thinking. but to cautious appraisal of the prospects for development along modern lines. In keeping with consumer demands and changing market conditions. Plsiiniy. the old days of haphazard. prvulllt‘lion and marketing are gone forever: but so have our dirt roads. our horse-and~buggy t re n s p o r t muthnds, and other symbols of the ‘[\.l~l The future will see further i changes. even more spectacular. in any phase of human activity; but ll‘ill Is something not to be dopl'ir- ‘ so. but to he. faced with courage l Mil confidence One thing we can count on is “at population will increase. both i“ (‘anmla and in the countrins to “hich we export our food prnduris. Forming will remain es important to the national economy as ever it was. and will provide A far greater varietv of subsidiary industries than before. Hence the emphasis on now or expanded processing plants for our potatoes end other veget- nb‘e crops. as well as on disease eradication. intensive soil research. snd livestock production which goes hand In hand with better pas‘ure care and management. One of our objectives, it will be noted. is to double our Island cattle population over the next ten years. Another. for which $25,000 has been budgeted provincially. is the eradic- ation and control of potato diseases end crmcentration on highest qual- ity seed rather than table stock acreage. Poultry and hog production , trends are underlined. and new ven- tures. such se tobacco growing. are refined with regard to their op pnrtunities. Not less important is the growth of 4-H clubs and the Increasing emphasis on youth ac- tivities generally. Our sgricultursl history goes back nearly three hundreds years in Prince Edward Island. A study of It will show that it has had many ups and downs. but that on the whole its basis of mixed fanning has proved ideal for this vaince. end that it has survived every chal- lenge by improving its techniquee end making quality Its hesic stand- ierd of mm. The years eheed \wiIIbenoleee stmnounorleesde- mending in imitative. but the up poi-militia will be grater and the premium on enter-plies more tr warding. Whose Side Is It On? 3 The Winnipeg Free Preee cm- tInum to blast Prime minister MC for his "81“ Inlllol all. m prune in the levee Im- mediately effected." Here, it con- fcesa. “whether or not the con- structiai of the causeway is in the national interest, the promise to construct it is very much in the in- terest of the Conservative party in the Maritime Provinces." This from one of the leading Liberal newspapers of the country will be read with mixed feelings by its party supporters. And they will Wonder. as they peruse the Free Press editorial further, whether it hasn’t sold them out altogether on the issue. For it claims that It was “in the 1958 campaign that Mr. Diefenbaker sowed the seeds” of .this rewarding promise. “The gov- ernment." it says. "then instituted an engineering and scientific survey to determine the feasibility of the P.E.I. causeway." That is s statement which neither Liberal Leader Pearson nor any of his supporters in the Atlan- tci Provinces would be prepared to sdmit for a moment. It was the Liberals, they proudly claim. that instituted the surveys and made the first election promise on the sub- ject. Prime Minister St. Laurent himself book credit for this. In e speech here In the 1957 campaign. he said the surveys were being pushed forward and if they showed the project to be feasible. engineer- ing-wise. and justified economically. it would be undertaken by his gov- emment. Prim e Minister Diefenh'lker'l statement in Parliament was that. both of these conditions have now been satisfactorily established; and it was on this basis that he made what our Winnipeg contemporary calls his brazen political bribe. As we pointed out the other day. 1 similar “bribe” was promptly given by Mr. Pearson. He didn‘t even wait to get to the Island with it. but wired it. or telephoned it. to his party candidates here before he arrived. How could the Free Press have gotten its facts so badly mixed? The trouble. we imagine. is that it has been reading ton much Consor- vative propaganda. It is they who claim to have fathered the scheme. and the Liberals who have been denying it; and the Manitoba Lib- eral oracle—shame on it l—has swal- lowod the any bait. hook. line ind sinker! Well, If They Insist . . . “Watch the results from tiny Prince Edward Island on election night." says an article in the Finan- cial Post. “for clues to the way the nation is voting." The article points out that since World War I. this province has never backed s na- tional loser. And in 1925. wh e n neither Liberals nor Conservatives won e majority of seats in the House of Commons. P.E.I. also was divided. The Post srticle gives the proof of this in detailed figures of voting in federal elections since 1921. It says that on this heels of our claim to be e true political weathervene. election experts ere analysing the present contest this wey: If P.E.I.—hsving elected f o u 1' Progressive Coneervetivce end no Liberals in 1957-58—electa one Lib- eral this time. the Liberals will win e lots] of 80-100 Commons seats nefionelly. If we choose two Lib. erels. it will be e "very, very tight election." And if P.E.I. c h 00 s e 1 three or four Liberals, then, of mm. ember-e1 victory id indict-Md. So. let's watch our step cere- fully in this contest! A mistake on ourpertcouldbeverycoetlytothe country. As bellwether of the flock. .itleom'dutytolesdtheothcpro- mmmthemclurofdesert weste- end into pastures lush end green. Abig rummlbllity.but who .eeys we'flnotuplbleoflt‘f EDITORIAL NOTE Two Mg facts wee '- tablishcd in the seventh annual sur- veyofeherheblegivlegin the United States. e m on which has just been published by the Amerin- Aeeedeflon of Fund- ReieingCoened: (1) net-private philenthnphy eontinnedhlfllet «Winslow reeehlageeenlcfflfiw mill”; (lltliet-elvtheefl.mmillend thine-teneme with fulfilled-OW tenth-imminent” 81.0. unwinding-cequ m. , TRYING TO CARRY BOTH THE STRUGGLE FOR MINDS Religion In The Soviet Union A call by the leader of th e Communist youth movement in the Soviet Union for greater atheistic propaganda to counter new effort: by the churches shows how lightly Communism holds freedom. The official told the opening session of the Con‘ grass of Komsomol 'Young Communist League) that con- stitutional guarantees of free- dam of religion do not spply to children. While the Soviet Communist movement has traditionally op-_ posed all religious faith and has held atheism to be the Party dogma. it is true that of- flrials have never been grutly concerned about the older citi- zens who still crowd services in Russian Orthodox and Baptist churches. synagogues. mosques and other houses of prayer. The Communisis' approach has been to concentrate on youth and to let nature take in course with the older folk. ALARMING TREND! Recently. however. there sp- peer to be developing elsnmng trends for Communist iifficiele. Mr. Harrison Salisbury of The New York Times has reported in this newspaper that within the most advanced echelon of Soviet science there is emerg- ing I tendency to seek a non- meteriallstic concept of the uni~ verse. Some of the most brilli- enl Soviet scientists. men of great influence and prestige In thelr country. are uggestlng that there must exist in the uni- verse a force or power that Is superior to anything crested by man. what a shock this must be to Premier Nikita Khrushchev. whe once said that his coemcneuu hed looked everywhere in space but hed not found any Heaven. Concurrent with the emeo PUBLIC FORUM ii: iii: Globe and Mill. Totem gence of religious faith in the higher echelons of Soviet soc- iety. s new movement has em en within the Orhodox Church. Mr. Salisbury says. which is strongly backed by the young priesthood A key figure of the new move- ment is 32 - year-old a: Nicodemus. who lest yeu became head of the Church‘s department of foreign affairs. The new, young priests are seeking to break the image of the Orthodox Church as a fort- ress of superstition and back- wardness end to develop an up pcal to youth. One priest. for example. ls pre- senting a series of sermons on ‘Iopics of immediate and cos- troversial interest. He announ- ces them in advance. like I lee ture course. and encourages discussions after the mom. i Other churches such as the ‘ Baptist Church also are appeal- ing to youth. Activities such I: sports program. football teams and hobby activities are being introduced which interest partl‘ culerly the young people. The Komsomol has realized that this approach poses a far more sen lous threat to Communism in- doctrination then the earlier purely s " ‘ .u ‘ ‘ the devotional practices. The struggle for young minds in the Soviet Union will be bib ter and it can be feared the! even In the poet-Stalin era the Communist Party will not hee- ltete to waive the regime's so- cellcd constitutional freedoms end liberties if it considers this to its advantage. Yet. even in Russia the basic gwareness In men of e Being beyond and above himself diet hard. It may be forgotten and it may be repressed but his- tory hes sh0wn all too often that. like a seed. it needs only to be driven Into the ground it grow and to flower. Continuing Berlin Talks By Alan Hervey Celeth Press M Amid I general wringing of hands over nuclear tests. some small solace cen be gleaned from continuing Soviet-Ameri- can talks on Berlin. Though the super-powers an ment. perhaps because of psy- chological factors. there are signs that both sides would like to find a solution on Berlin ll unable to agree on disarma- [powers have carefully Writer ‘ I propaganda about each other. have realized that a cool end objective understanding of the I other fellow'l difficulties is the i beginning of coexistence." The impression that the big sized {each other up. end are aware I of the dangers of allowing mu- tull antagonism! to pass a cer- tain point. was strongly felt dur- in: beginning of e wider mile 1 in: the early stages of the l mom. i Some British observers even detect symptoms of e develop lng twopower dell. despite the .netemeut by American Stale ?Secrctery Rusk that he sees almost no progress In the eighb month negotiations on Berlin. One theory. edvsaced In Low don ny labor member of Perils- ment R. H. 3. Cinema. is the! e "herd - boiled end nicely- l cllculetcd" compromise on Ben Iln would be exactly the stroke needed to dissipate "irrational feats" ebcut the militer bel- ence of ehev u the "first lenders who, Iinstead of believing their owl i ll ii fl ll ill ii i If.) m meet-t rural! ii if [I III 2!: l [l I. b h - envy-wie- huh-“H. a eel-m web. .1: t “h Il’l’lll‘l'. . ll- Ill Geneve disarmament c c .1 fe :- . ence. Increasingly. Russia end the U.s. begin to look like lumberi- inv heavyweights in the prize ring. They circle each other warily. flicking out mean~look- lag Jal- from time to time. but always conscious of the dyna- mite they peck inside lhoee big mes. There is a sort of muted in Meanwhile. a tendency grows In the West to fell thet Russia's stance conceals u g i thought. from a reluctance to let the West find out how little Uniform Curriculum ii i it; ii? i I II ll ill Drugs, Bed Rest Recommended For Lung Cure eesuative germs en ed tissues are so swollen end filled with debris that they are as hard as the liver. Occasionally the lung M I Is slow to resolve. revs continua and the individual hacks from time to time. one: briagiag up little plugs of firm mucus which are loosened from the all cells end updled with each emh. The delay may continue for three months or more. depend- ing upon treatment. During this time the victim feels listleu. often lsch appetite. and is dis- turbed because strength do. not return. Meanwhile. the family and physician also ere concerned. Tuberculosis. canoe, or eheceu is mlpected end bond-em tioa is sdvised to double check the original diagnosis. This is understandable because Xny shows a shadow that wee ems- sidered to be pneumonia and. by the law of averages. should be disappearing, But the orig- inal diagnosis could have been wrong. Should tests fell to uncover other possibilities. the unre- solved pneumonie is treated with appropriate antibiotics and bed rest. This plan fella ocu- slonally and the body takes the upper hand finally and replaces the pneumonia lesion with scar tissue. This does not disturb the func- tion of the lung and the individ- ual recovers completely even though the shadow remains on the X-ray as a reminder «1 e stubborn attack of pneumonia. (Dr. Van Dellcn will answer questions on medical topics It ‘ eelf - addressed en- velope Iccnmpaniel request.) BEE THERAPY 15 OLD IA'I' E. A. S. writes: Ihave had arthritis for years and em el- weys on the lookout for new remedies. A friend tells me that in Germany this disesse is treated by letting honey bees sting the patient. Have you ever heard of this treatment? Yes, This silly remedy also joyed a brief period of populer- ‘ ity in this country several years I ego. An extract of bee venom also was usNI. But the method did not stand up and all the been trained to treat erthritis ' may have been sent to Ger- many. ROUND SHOULDERID .1. 6.. Jr. writes: started working one year ego Since I j l have become round shouldcr- ‘ ed. I used to play ball a lot but don't get lny exercise now. Do you think sitting at a desk ell dsy is responsible? REPLY Yes. especially if you do not sit properly. Ml’Fl-‘LING THE BELL! L E. P. writes: Can bells ringing In the ears of an ll year old man be silenced? Yes. provided the cause can be found and eliminated. High pitched sounds usually menu I disturbance in the nerve cen- ters of the ear end are mad difficult to mud. ~ See dam m3" .. FIRM: w to- sue rece- A! meridian- Egrnm-M-m “I'm!” Tbe 8.8. Hocbelsge Ieevu Hallie: today and will begin summer service on the Pictcu— Charlottetowa route on May fin! it was ennuinced last night. Captain Carl Himmelmen will command the ship. TIN YEARS AGO (Apll I. 1052) Extension course lectures are being held here this week for the pharmacists in the province. thus affording the practising phermecisle to keep abreast of modern deulopmente In the field. The committee in charge of arrangements are Roy M. Smallmen. Ralph E. Jenkins. Charlottetown and Barry W. Wedge of Summenlde. Judge Harold L. Palmer. QC. Judge of the Probate Oran-t of Prince Edward Island and Vice Chancellor of the Anglican Diocese of Nova Scctie. is to receive the honorery degree of Doctor of Canon Law. at the mnth cf the Unlvmity of King‘s College Halifax. May I. “5' 2.. ill" 52 In 55; i E i E E l i the inventiveness of Russia. which deltas discovery of the electric light. the radio. the steam angles and basebell. Cleveland Plele Ml. [mall’s Ililk Inked-g Boerd expects te can, some 50,000 gellons d III-plus skim milk down ebendoned mine shafts. because it can‘t think cl e better way to dispose of it. With e half er more of the world's children still going te bed hungry every night. we can‘t ‘ think of a worse way. — Sarah Observer. Octane scbcel buses will have flashing lights at the rear to sig- nal I stop. Projecting. Illumin- ated arms. of the kind used on many United States school buc- ee. would be better. When rele- ed at the side of the bus. they can be seen for e considerable distance. and ere effective in stopping traffic facing the bus. .es well as behind it. ~— Ottewe Every MON. - WED. - SAT. The PATRIOT Duly plIs ween Magda. Citizen. COFFEE BREAK By Ralph Cemcrol TBA fl AIR TRAVEL BARGAINS! : comma-nutmeg: s... mew-m an Ex cum no BOUND-TRIP «guns... “[333” I —-b-fi _ newscasts-on. cementum-Ileana...“ “fifl*h~fl