GUARDIAN -cw... Prince ad-md inland Like sin our Published every week-day morning a: 136 Prince Street. Charlottetown, P. I. l.. by The. Thomson Company United. latter and Manager. In A. larnett. Associate Editor, Frank Walker. Branch. offices Summerside. Montague It and men, has gone at the 10D all along the Mex- ico-Callfornia border; for some time now around 1500 of the illegal workers have been apprehended daily. In order to ensure success of the new campaign it was essential to have the good- will and support of the farmers. This, it was feared at first, would be difficult, since -um-in: 1 fin-m.v L- Igar Goua'cnkc'a first -novel pso- bs.bLv enjoyed more sdvanotiiillh n...c - lfondIl1oi.ltIl!'13.'-1064 "ilihlfihe in cil6url&lirl.. By, Patrick Nicholson er Maxim Gcrki - trslcharactcr-an I0 l-. - 5 s l T- m is at ....4.::' .11 bl-httl. l Alberton. Authorized as Second Class Mail by . book . y I N "" Pm om" D”'"'""''" O"""- chef”) laboun espe?'ally in these days of "f'bsw!:il”:fu: A great contribution was made” By Carri:-I: Clgarlottetown. Summersldc 815.00 Der falling farm prices. 15 something 1'0? 3 fa-"'1' min" hll l1!0ldV.590n 501181135 W 3. 09"”nn"m,:u;g'5 ' mu annu i P. . . ' ueord price rvyn Black, -13.9. incesndnd Ufa; Ae:eSl;00 De? slnntsmqa om" Pmv. IHowleve:'. to sthe iapparent Illnogvwoodhocamemllh: Xritull-It choice of leGwhc;Igans!late1 at A ,ggg e mmgra ion ervce, once .b,'3o,,kg1ub, . . ouae 'a essrponaog- "Th t - - , 1.. th Russian revolution are true ts- . e uronggi lI;..3eeI-n than . the farmers were convinced of the serious- "nW:&1hp':bl?:lfe-:!W:o!n'::;0'm";n "1; I W” mm by um um 0, Scottish parents. who was born is. st. Pctcrsburg (now Dcninsnd) . 04 years ago, and was raised then until, in his own words. "I was in the revolution with both feet.” It was eight years lstertthat he came - to Canada. . . Mr. Black says he made an so. the notoriety of the first refuses from the espionage network of the Kremlin. It is more a vivid. , light -- the first authentic one in nearly four decades - illumlnatinl the darkened and terrifying life behind the Iron Slui-.'t:&n. to d”, ,,,,f,'”,',',,,,fl,,,:f,1,,'?,,,,,',,,., fgml. ., curate and close translation of the "life behind the Iron Curtain": I 311910” "It the”! WWW”! "10 should say "beneath" the Iron local atmosphere and giving the Curtain. For through Oouaenkds SW1? "1 919 c0nV1Mi”8 "MGOYMU eyu. wmeu ml, new 3,, my”). language of the author. One thing ness of the problem from all angles and that the Federal authorities meant business, they volunteered whole-hearted support in the war against the ”wetbacks". In return for their co-operation the authorities will do everything possible to find suitable work- ers, either from local sources or, when nec- essary, from legal labour pools from across the border. It is hoped now that the low Zealand Anniversary - New Zealand's government, like a suc- cessful citizen revisiting boyhood scenes, re. cently returned to the city of its birth and put in a busy day. The occasion was the 100th anniversary of parliamentary rule in only Mr. Black changed; he c the British dominion, established May 24, 1854, at the former capital of Auckland. Legislators, the Prime Minister, and cabinet members arrived from Wellington, the cap- ital since 1865. They not only celebrated the date by speeches and civic parties; the Executive Council conducted official busi- "ness and announced the floating of a I30,- mutual effort will bring good results, social- ly and economically. Those who are at all familiar with farm- ers and their ways will not be surprised at the turn of events in California. As a class, farmers are not given to conniving in il- legal practices; moreover, they know very well that, in the long run, employment of ed the repulsive and sordid kind of existence which one sees when one lifts up a big stone in dank forest undernowth. . , Nine years ago. Gousenko per- formed a priceless service for the Free World. when as cypher clerk for the Russian spy rings at the soviet mnbsssy here. he revealed the danger of this Russian secret service operating in foreign coun- tries. In his novel, Gounenko has UP the long involved aentcncgi" typical of the Russian language; and by making it staccato, almoai ' journalistic. prose. Mr. added much to the readability oi this book, whose simple unflow- ery prose makes its horrible warn- lack has lng ring true. ROTARY MEMORIAL 000,000 national development loan One A. '. . . . ' l - 1 c f ed a. second great service WATER-'ION All-L - (GP) - A 10031 feature was missing. however. The local me” at fa" Mges mews more "3 -N-Eid5 lTEMw ii? gwmlns the danger of the memorial piaqile dedicated to thl - . late Tom J. Davis of Butte, Mont, secret service operating in a Com- munist-dominated country. themselves and their families than employ- ment of itinerant and illegal workers, who .: original parliament building in Auckland no WM,” mumem at Romy mu” national, will be unveiled at the longer stands. On its still unoccupied site a memorial park now is planned. When New Zealand's first parliament met, organized settlement in these south- west Pacific islands was just getting well under way. Pioneers began arriving in numbers in 1840 with Britain's annexation of the territory and the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi with the native Maoris. Previously the region had been largely ig- nored by Europeans, with the exception of a few sealers, whalers, and a small mis- sionary party sent out from Australia in 1814. The march toward self government be- gan in the earliest days of colonization. In 1841 former administrative ties were cut with the tlmother colony" of New South Wales in Australia. New Zealand became a separate crown colony, with its own gov- t ernor and other officials appointed from London. Gradually the settlers won in- creased representation through elective of- ficers. Their first General Assembly in 1854 included 37 members of the House of Representatives and 14 Legislative Council- lors for a citizenry of less than 30,000. The problems of the delegates to the first ses- sion recalled those of early parliaments in this country. The New Zealand rep- are here today and gone tomorrow, at much lower wages. It is also much better for the social order of the community, a mat- ter which means a great deal to farmers. A Welcome Decision Canadians of all opinions will welcome a decision made recently by President Eis- enhower. He refused a recommendation from his tariff commission which would have raised the U. S. duty on cod, haddock and other ground fish fillets; it would also have imposed a tight quota limit on the quantity of such imports. If the President had endorsed such restrictive measures, Canadian fisheries-particularly in the At- lantic-would have suffered heavily. .In this matter, says the Winnipeg Free Press, self-interest points to the same view as common sense; everyone on this side of the border can recognize that restrictions and higher tariffs against Canadian fish would have created an artificial scarcity in the United States. This would have made fish dearer for the American housewife; and by doing so it would probably have duce Americans to eat more fish by pre- frustrated the efforts lately made to in- Esq Old Charlottetown and P. I. 1 UNION BANK ESTABLISHED "A general meeting of the stock- holders of the contemplated Union Bank of Prince Edward Island took place, pursuant to advertise- ment, at the Colonial Building on Tuesday last, the 11th inst. The meeting was largly attended both by town and country stockholders. A series of carefully prepared by- laws, rules and regulations for the management of the affairs of the corporation were passed, and the meeting proceeded to the election by ballot, of a Board of Directors. who will hold office until the reg- ular annual meeting to take place on the first Tuesday of April next. A call of 35 percent on the subscribed stock was ordered to be made. "The following gentlemen were elected to constitute the present Board of Directors: Charles Pal- mer. Esq., Hon. W. W. Lord, Henry Haszard, E.sq.. George Dav- lea, E'.sq., Hon. George Beer, Mr. Owen Connolly, W. E. Dawson. Jrho Islmder. Feb: 17, lacs. NOTES BY Prejudice la a great time saver. It enables a man to form opinions without going to the trouble of lea.rm'.ng the facts. - Port Arthur News-Chronicle. ”No" is never a pleasant word- and most. especially not when it appears in front of "vacancy" on a motel sign at dusk on a hot day with a couple of worn-out kids in the back seat.-Hamilton Spectat- or. Luckily for the barefoot boy of poetic memory he flourished in the day before every country lane was uttered with empty cans and brok- en beer bottles.-Hamilton Specia- tor. Curtis Publishing Co. has chang- ed the name of its 101-year-old magazine "Country Gentleman" to "Better Farming". It's not that our agriculturlsts are any less gen- tlemen thanx they used to be, it's just that they're better farmers.- Cleveland Plain Dealer. In a child marriage at Baroda. India. the bride was 18 months of age. the bridegroom two years. It could be their baby talk after the THE WAY. bothered by mosquitoes. "Don't worry," said the host, "I'll fix that in a jiffy." He went out to the darkened kitchen and secured what he thought was one of those insect bombs, with which he sprayed the living room quite freely. Squirt-in! quantities of the stuff here and there with abandmi. After the TV show was over, the lights turned up on a strange scene. What was supposed to be an insect bomb had contained aluminium paint. The re- furnishing lob cost a reported S8001 - Montreal Gazette. The question sometimes arise! whether strikes pay. 111 Pittsburlh a strike of bus drivers. which put the public to great lllwuvenlence. -has been settled after five weeks. The employees had a base rate of 31.92 pr hour, plus six-cents cost- of-llvlng bonus. The strike was settled on the basis of an addition of three cents to the base rate. Each man lost 200 working hours during the strike, which at 31.98 per hour is close to 3400. The thrte cents additional will take them six years to make up what they lost in wages. --St. Thomas Times - Journal. Whether at the level of the mal- icious and self-seeking commis- sar, or of .the drunken and lech-I rank. the all-powerful secret police creates a. kind of life beside which any concept of fire-and-bll tone, hell would appear Paradisian to'a freedom-loving Canadian. Gou- zeiiko's descriptions of brutal tor- tures, of child encouraged to be- tray parent, of minds enslaved, are vivid but not new, It is however surprising to read that many in- nocent people are tortured just to satisfy the brute instincts of these strange Slavs who. says Gouzenko, drool saliva. slobber, and become as if intoxicated when inflicting wanton suffering. And all this torture. brutality, bestiality and rape -- goes on in a mist of permanent vodkarousel. Charming country! Delightful sys- temi Just what the don't-let's-be- beastly-to-the-Reds type of Canad- ian no doubt would like to see in- stituted here, preferably starting with himself and his wife and daughter. This vivid warning is part fic- tion, but accurate in descriptions and topical is that the story is set in actual places and introduces actual animal beings such as su- lln, Malenkov, Berla, the great writ- erous tool in non-commissioned , International Peace Park's annual ssembly here August 1. . For Quality Mildness ' Value CA X DA 5 fl-1.S'7'f'.S'I .S'!:'lZl.V(y' L'l(iARl7.l"l0l7. Tt)li.X(l('t) with an resentatives traveled long distances over sentlng a more attractive product-although ;,';.,,",,;l,:l,',:;3ql:,e,:;',,,::ptKt WT. wedtdhf mmfi ””"”” brlfmlajfg 1'0U8h and lmd9V9i0Ded t9l'1'it0Py- A N8- such increased consumption, not protection nounced that Mr. Charles Palmer f,”,2,.f;,,,. 5”, ;,',1::m::,?1L., Ly pm 1" V'"””'""' ”" '"'"""””"' 4 MOI "C60 " tional Geo ra hic Societ article states that in t t't' '" th k t 1 "id be” "V9”"”ed Pmldmh W- William T""55-J0W"'”- . M” M me provmm who 1. not . I V . sl 3 P Y 888 S Compel 10". IS e 9y 0 8 Pea mm Mdmon Mshm ...,.,,e physician, sat in with coo doctors eayearewa gnclwn ugome came by horseback; others in small solutionn of the U. S. fishing indusirys Bank is to be held in Gl.tg5' Brl& usdlmwberry soglalc; are one 1:1! as gitzngiiig ihedaalrlvirglgacnuooln thus: No bmhbbm,udtynuded.E,y4o:mm mums Ship” But only two missed the DI'0bl9m5- Bumnm" Nmm 3'" Queen Sq"”"' 3 am 0 0 n "'0' an e watch on colour television the requirements a Fast.one-day service - Wm” '5 "0"" be” med "9 "" mm" ” opemm am” "am birth 'nl a baby by I Caessrean meeting. One was ill and the second was hunting gold in Australia." New Zealand's government developed along familiar British lines. In 1907 the nation, whose population is overwhelming- ly of English, Scottish, Welsh and Irish descent, was promoted from colony to do- I minion rank, with partnership status in the British Commonwealth. Since the upper house, or Legislative Council, was abolish- ed in 1951, the New Zealand parliament has consisted of only one body, the House of i Representatives, with 80 members. Maoris, l s Polynesian race who came to New Zeal- and some 600 years ago, have equal rights with other citizens. Numbering about 124,- 000 in a total population of 2,000,000, they elect their own representatives to Parlia- mcnt. War on Wctliacks In the days immediately followingithe end of World War Two the farmers of situation, added to the condition of wide- spread unemployment across the border, led to illegal border-jumping by thousands of Mexican itinerant workers, who came to be known as "wetbacks". and who were glad to work for as little as fifteen cents per hour, whereas the average hourly problem is causing much concern to Fed- eral and State officials; partly because the illegal workers are taking work away from 1003"? unemployed men, and partly be- cause many of them have been involved in crimes of one kind and another, thus adding to the burdens of police and social agencies. From time to time sporadic efforts have be!" mlde by bolder patrols toiround up the illegal workers for deportation; theatl efforts, however, were not veryvsuceeaaful. Only a few of the ','wctbacks" were ciugiit, at any one time, and this meant that some Those are the arguments with which President'Eisenhower dismissed the protec- tionist case. ”Canadi:-ins," says our Winni- peg contemporary, "will recognize their economic realism. Public opinion, in East- ern and Western Canada, can surely recog- nize that the same arguments apply north of the border, when it is some special inter- est in Canada that is hurt by competition and demands protection. And if we hope that President Eisenhower's point of view will triumph over protectionist isolationism in U. S. trade policy, we must ensure that our actions are based consistently on the same view." EDITORIAL NOT-E18 This is George Eastman day in Roches- ter, N. Y., the 100th anniversary of the birth of the ”i'ather of modern photo- graphy." He was not born in Rochester, however, but in Waterville, N. Y. of the victory of William of Orange at the Battle of the Boyne, 1690. According to the calendar then in use the date was July 1, 1690. O I I The British Government is anxious to encourage the establishment of subsidiary plants in this country. The developments on Alexander Hamilton, American states- man and economist, was killed in a duel this date 1804. He was one of the men who had most to do with shaping the constitu- tion, policies and politics of the United States of America. He attracted the at- tention of General Washington during the Revolutionary War and became a lifelong friend. He represented New York at the Continental Congress of 1782-88: and other . , VH9 was onesifilie authors of "'l1le”Federallst" a classic exposition of the Q Gum TRANQUIL VAI(LEY There is a tranquil valley that I know Far from the ocean. brook I found In yellow sands, seashells of long But by its a o. Thoughs now not billows make the air resound, Here once the main and once over This meadowy calm the maned sea- bi-eakers tolled. Where dream this herdidnll "id this crimson clover Great. waters their reverberations rolled. ' so sometimes when I look upon a was master; face. Quiet and beautiful, with life at peace. I feel that out of storm has come a grace. music deepening as its clangors cease. Of grief but few memorials re- Life's -Archibald Rutledge, in the New York Times. Not Know-tr (Edmonton Journal) The other day this office receiv- ed an envelope .addressed as fol- lows; "The Editor, Edmonton Jour- nal, Edmonton, N.W.'r." Our hands shook as we ursl -resources, and commissioner of the Northwest Territories. Was Alberta no more? Had we me, by some secret set of parliament. part of the Northwest Territories under the benevolent tutelage of Mr. Robertson's odicef fears proved to be on- foun ad. The contents of the on- velcpa took the fc cent nave publi of an inno- on called -thc "Northern Affairs Bulletin”. not who had made such a horrible er- ror Perhaps one of Ir. Robertson's ml! was at-fault; but we can be wrong in this. The deputy later may yet be unsure of the ex- tent of the domain he helps to; - he may need some further government. He was in effect the father of the Republican ptrty, as Jeffer- son was of the Democratic party. He laid the foundation for the protective an-if: staskl patrol- ccso lag In his new and arduous duties. True. what is now Alberta once was part of the Northwest Tcrrii. criua But the province was formed in ms and Edmonton has been its capital since. 1008. The system that has been so notable a feature dAmarlcanpollcy. ' -'- IIIWI .II)illl,lu!eiy hobs filtered I through to Ottawa by tl-lb tuna: Those strawberry socials are lavish affairs. The strawberries are choice ones. Th idea is that each should have all e or she can eat. -Windsor Chief Constable Knight would ban jaywalking in London. He would ban walking across the street against the red light too. As there is no by-law here to force a person to walk circumspectly the chief says Jaywalking should be stopped. It is the measure of the growth of London that a citizen should not be permitted to cross over to the other side whenever he feels like it. Having to walk to the intersection is the custom of people in metropolitan cities. How- ever. as traffic is today, jaywalk- ing is definitely dangerous. It will take us longer to shop but the chief is right. To the corner, it is! -From London Free Press. The other day this olloe received an envelope addressed as follows: The Editor, Edmonton Journal. Edmonton. NWT. The envelope had come from the office of R. Gordon Robertson, Deputy Minis. ter of Northern Affairs and Nat- ural Resources, and Commissioner of the' Northwest Territories. Was Alberta no more? True, what is since 1906. The news must surely have filtered through to Ottawa by this time.-Edmonton Journal. A localita had a few friends in one evening not long ago to wimgg Wm! SPOON Navcnt on television. The lights was all out. A couple of the guests complained of being operation in a hospital two miles away. The mother of the child was the wife of the attorney-general. Whether the assembled doctors learned anything from the opera- tion they watched we do not know. of course. If they did it could have been learned as well if the identity of the subject of the operation had remained a secret from the convention and the world. As it is, we think a great many people will be most impres- sed by what they will consider the incredible vulgarity of the whole performance.-Ottawa Journal. Taxes are queer things. In con- necticut. we learn, you don't pay a sales tax on an ice cream aun- dae, but you do on an ice cream soda! This is because sundaea are included with food and food prod- ucts, and are therefore exempt, whereas sodas and milk ahakca are classed with beverages and candy which are taxable- 'rhcre's no tax oh milk, but mix it with ice cream (which is not taxable in a sundae) in the concoction of a milk shake, and it becomes tax- able. Nuts are tax exempt. unless they are coated with .chocolate. when they become taxable. Yet cooking chocolate is tax free!- May there be which say of my soul, There is no help for him in God. Bolsh. But then, 0 Lord. art a shield for me; my glory, and idle lifter up of mine head. I cried unto Han Lord with my voice. and - he heard me out of his holy hill. Wrlll EVE! niivilmrsn NO MORE Flljis TO BUY MAIL Hm ssavlcs P. 0. I08 11 CHAII.-,.0'ITl1'OWN. P. I. I. in new FILM FREEI '”d'.,'”u.'.i” min - . Sensible repayment plans a Phone or come in today for ; quick, signature loan for any good reason! ' RIM IMIHIII a Ci 2 out of 3 prefer HFC HOUSEHOLD Finance? J. W. Chisholm, Manager 150 Great George 81., sons 1, phone I59! CHAILOHITOWN, P.I.l. ). , . ,Snuthern California and other regions near Today is celebrated as the " l ' ""”"” "W Amm M" '"” 9”” ” ih” From --------Rum Hun Dam. - it the Mexican border had considerable diffi- twelfth" by Orangemen in commetrizogitijgs 1” uanglaulllgod new but mm" "M l)ql?(1rl:Ilr.il'tv!:'tWlaTefr(:'l1li'loi:ii”.in iilots Hts; I V cuity in finding capable farm workers. This M""”"'”” h" b”" "" ””m The Age Old Story . 1952 Chevrolet, sedan . 1062 Pontiac. Sedan 1949 Studebaker, Coach 1 6.11.0. 112 Ion Truck 1951 Ford,” mucu- NOW on DISPLAY ' A THE IEST am on THE aoap s .. .2 1951 Chevrolet. 4 Door sedan. Power Glide wage for legal workers, when they could Annacls Island, British Col bi lth . " "".'- W ” "' "W": "' be found, was about sixty cents. At the commodation for 200 flrmsuisniniligiitiveagf 383&".l. ':lli'::ree.:ivelc:Ipe,hl:i:mlliinli'l gg ggwmltz imgn Twat? GM. . , g g , 50dllI OWE! :i::Si:i2 fglflle. i;'(l;l(:n legal farm "labourers what might be done in this part of the :f.'a:::o,ff;l:b::&:ln' 2:,,3,;.k:f,,,?,f wnmv You smug) Yobn, FILMS To 1958. lf3,1'on Truck , . ry g supply, this wetback country. later of northern affairs and nab 1&1 Pop M ' - 113 Ton Truck use (ilievrolct. Power Glide no W. my Reconditioned and o...a....a an all in: am it -toil Tconi AW? '. . .. as-'...c-:...ll Prll-vie I I I: