77: G nif "(overs ran. hdwnrd in--I mu Ila nov- Published eiery ue:k- in; naming at in: PKIIIEI Sued. cu;-lotteiown. P. E. l. by tho Inumnon Company Iain. M lung 51. w.. Tannin Manual Oifice. :25 Lnneniiy 'l'I:wnI' Bids. Editor. Frank Walks! General nlnnagei, Ian A Burnett Member tan-adiau baiiv yeiupapu Punhshen Association hlcniber nl The Canadinn Plflb Member Alldll liuruu ol t”in-ulauonn anncii oiiiiu II summemrie. liitoniasuz int! Alllmoi Authorized II second (tins: Hall by the Pool Ollino Department. Oluinn. ay Larrler Charlottetown, summmm. moo pa n- g Illm. Elscwnera in P.I:.l. S9 in). other Provinccn nu U. S. 3i2.0il per Innurn. T-"Thewstrungesti memorVyWkVTweakeTrT ihIinT the weakest ink." wrfim Sl)".(l'...TU L i' At (1956 Disposal Oi Surpluses l l 'l'rciLle Minister lltiwe seems to believe that disposal of Canadian 5 u r p l u s agriculture pro d Ll c is by methods similar to those prac- iiscd in the United States iioiilii be impractical and unwise. methods include acccptaiico of the Tlicse with short stalks and uniform ears It uniform height would be easier to harvest and would produce more. More will be known about how plants grow, the role of light and influence of high and low tempera- tures on their groivtli. Plants may then be bred to take full advantage of natural soils and climate. The farmer will have simple, easy-to-use methods of measuring fertili7.er and water needs for his crops. This will enable him to predict yields with in it c h greater accuracy and he would be able to adjust the rate of application to a cost that would be profitable under exist ing farm prices. Powerful neiv tools for chang- ing plant characteristics -- the pro- dtictton of mutatibns -- have been found. The most recent experinicnts iniohe nuclear irradiation. A more efficient use of rainfall it Lil be made. currencies of the countries to Wllltfll lvoi-pseeii are new chemicals which . l . the products are shipped and barter . would enable a farmer to spray his deals by which products are ex- 4 fields and seal inithe moisture. changed for strategic raw materials. Then, there is the give-away pro- gram. This lioivever. is on a relatively small scale and confined mainly to flood and drought stricken areas. Mr. Htiwe's opinion is that the normal business practic.e of soil- ing outright for Canadian dollars is mitch better. No doubt it is if it can be maintained: but that is by no means certain in view of the Com- petition that the American plans are presenting. and which. if President Eisenhower has his way, will become even more of a problem to Canada's export trade as time goes on. In his semi-annual report to Congress, which is required under the Agricultural Development Act, the legislation that provided for the surplus disposal program, the Presi- dent noted that since the Act be- came operative in September 1954 33 billion worth of surplus commodi- ties had been sent abroad; nearly half of it was contracted for during the. first six months of this year. Of this huge quantity. just about half was sold on the foreign currency plan. Barter deals accounted for about a half-billion dollars worth; these, however, are not permitted for business with the Soviet Union and its satellite countries. At present the law provides a ceiling of SIV2 billion for products sold for foreign currencies. The President has asked that this be doubled. lie feels that this would be advantageous to those countries which need the products but which cannot find American dollars in which to pay for them and have no great amount of strategic materials to send in exchange. At the same time he has asked that the law be further amended to allow barter deals with Soviet bloc countries. The chances are that Congress will agree to the suggested changes: for there is a growing public demand for the disposal program to be stepped up, even if the tremendous suiplus-it still stands at 558 billion worth-has to be given away. In view of all this, it is difficult to share Mr. liowc's optimistic opinion that Canada can goon indefinitely doing ”business as usual". Farming--In The Future if all the experiments now being conducted by thousands of agricul- tural scientists in Canada and the U. S. proved succcssfill, what would farming of tomorrow be like? Look- ing into a crystal ball, some scien- tists have come tip with the follow- ing answers: First, the .'ivci'agc farmer woitld know far more about his land and its capacity to produce than he knows today. Crop and livestock prodticers will be able to control both yields and quality in a. way now known only in the laboratory. The future farmer would be able to judge each improved practice in terms of what it would pay him at the end of the year. He would know to the penny the difference in returns from one variety over another, or one level of fertilization over another. All farming operations. from seed bed preparation through har- vest, will he done by machines. But there would probably be less machinery in the fields than to- day. Seed germination will be vast- ly improved so that growers could plant to ii stand with assurance there will be no need to replant. Powerful new chemlclll with I high degree of selectivity will linvs V, developed for more efficient 1. plum will be tailored ifsrm practices. For i l There are many other new de- velopments on the books for the fai'm of tomorrow. says the C. I. L. publication, ”Agricultural N e w 8". But we must realize that we cannot jump into tomorrow without having tried the proven scientific farming methods of today. The future will then take care of itself by natural progression. Summerside Carnival Many gala events are scheduled for the first big four-day Summer- side Lobster Carnival which gets under way this afternoon, with the official opening by Mr. J. Watson MacNaiight, M.P. this evening. The entertainment features will include parades and band concerts, dancing, fireworks, midway. horse racing. soap box derby, fiddling and Step dancing contest, and, on Saturday, ii Maritime Invitation Track and Field Meet at Queen Elizabeth Park. Much careful planning has gone into the program, and with favorable weather the attendance should be very large and representative. The Summerside Board of Trade is credited with having orig- inated the carnival idea but all the service clubs, and several other organizations. business firms and individual citizens of the Prince C o u n t y capital have been co- o p e r a t in g actively. It is a big undertaking, btit S u m m e r s i d e is noted for its initiative and it will have the best wishes of all otir citizens in making the celebration a success. EDITORIAL NOTES A farmer who tries to collar ll runaway pig is only wasting his time-that is, if the animal really means to stay out of reach. This was demonstrated the other day at a Pig Derby at Kcmptville. Ont. The winning runner covered 100 yards in 7.4 seconds, almost 2 seconds fast- er than the fastest human runner on record. 0 O O The House of Bishops of the Methodist Church has come tip with a new view on racial discrimination in the United States. The church leaders predict that it will gradual- ly become less in the South and more. in the North. Their argument is that discrimination depends large- ly on the size of the Negro popula- tion in any given area. At present it is growing in the Northern states and declining in the South. A marine buoy which will automatically register and transmit weather reports has been developed by the United States Bureau of Standards. The buoy can be anch- ored in waters up to 3.6tlt) feet deep. and will operate for six months tin- attended. Tcsls already carried otit show that the station has a radio- range of more than 800 miles. if moored in certain areas, it might give warning of hurricanes as they form. 0 O C Technical sclioolteachors in ice- land now receive a year's leave with pay to continue their studies, after in minimum of ten years' service. ac- cording to a law passed recently by the Government. This follows the practice already in force for pri- mnry and secondary schoolteacheiis, and instructors in teacher training and domestic science colleges. Ca mil- dates must submit an outline of the studies they intend to undertake twelve months in advance, and at the end of the sabbatical year they must present a detailed report on tlllfjorm is ii? N. g 5): 341 E i Eveavioniriiiisiooinoi PUBLIC FORUM nu column In open In the dinn- Ilnn hy rnrrrspulidonls of ., nlinnl If interest, The Guurdlnl doc! I Iecensarily rndoun the opinion If correspondents. STACKING HAY . Sir.-liay time has rolled armintl again. Time flies when we look back. i wonder if all the cxpcnsiie liay etiuipmcnt that is being dem- onstrated is jii-stifled. is it going to give us a much better quality hay"? i am very dtiulitful for l have fail- etl in sec it. i have been slacking a good part of my hay crop with a gin pole twhich I hate (lest-i'ilie(i in detail in previous ycarsl and find i get a better qiiaility hay than what 1 pit! in the barn. ti guess I am a little scared of lire in the barnt. Anti by pulling 2 rows of fence posts 3 or 4 on each side about 2 yards apart in the centre of the l stack it will keep the stark from tipping. so you can lct your cattle hclp lllPlll':ut'lVDS. There is iery little wastr ttiiily a fraction of l what it will cost to hale ill for the cattle eat from the ground as the , stack settlcs between the posts. l i don't tie tip my young stock l at all. it saves a lot of work when i you don't have to climb up it loft and iced by hand: just turn them out and lct them go to the slack. I get nearly all of the manure ar- mind the slack and in the shelter which I have for the young stock. i find it easier to stack than to put it in the barn. liont he afraid to do lllllllis the easier way. 1 ant. Sir. ctc. l”.l.l)()V I)llLXXl.il().N'l) Frccltiiiii. Pill. SPEAKING OF HAWKS Sir.- it. is no grcal comfort to a sitor to lcarn that in this most hospitable islantl as iicll as in my naltic Stale of New York. hawks are considcrcd vcrniin. in your paper this uiltiiitlayi morning was K a pliotocrapli 0' H tlcatl liulco. one y of the vanishiiig race of soariug' hawks which seldom l'ilI(i the far- nit-r's chit-ken yard. it iioultl be interesting to lcarii iihcthcr the farmer had seen this pzirliriilar htrd grab one of his cliickciis. i doubt it it is nitith more likely that, if a chicken is inissing. an- ollicr nicnilicr of lllf' hawk ianiilv scizetl it a Cniipcrs. a sharp slim or a gnsliawk. those three hcing Ilic spcctly arr-ipilcrs with short siiifl iiiiius. Usiinlly these mar- aiidcrs escape iiliile the larger, lower biitco hectinics the farmer's targcl , Perhaps the limo will come iilicn gunners will learn the (llll('l'('Iit'l' ht-twt-mi fricntl rind foe in tlic dwin- dling hawk world. A study of Dr. ' ll.lay's "llaiilcs of North Aincrica” might be iist-lul fnr in this book are lhc results 0' scientific study vrliitli prove that most liaulis arc decidcdly helpful For in.-:t:inrc. in many analyst-s of the crops of all ' species of haiiks. almost no huteo I contained remains of chickcns or I- nthcr birds. Most of thrm did con- tain molt-s. fit-id mice. other ro- dents. anti l.'l'.'lSSlllipfi('rS Surely the farmer Still not objcct to this dict As for the accipilcrs. iin bird student will deny that thcy will catch chick-cns They also kill other birds. Here we find reason for the farmer's hiitrcd of hawks. We might suggest that hc fence in his chickrns. but if he must shoot, let him kill the culprit, not the rcrl-lail or tlic red-sliniiltlcr he sees circling in the sky. As for tho accinitcrs, no bird by ('nopor's and sharp shinnrd hawks. l ttnndcr if it is so very had. The man with the gun is not averse to slaughtering cattle and other animals and eating them. Even the vegetarians have not In- vokcrl the death penalty for such killing. The hawks. lacking any moral av-nse. eat to live. One might add that they do not kill for sport either. The killing of other birds is swift. vihen donc by tho ticclpilcrs. in the case of the snug birds they zit-strny. the studios of ecologists in recent years will throw light on this matter. It iii the old. the help- less young or the lick birds which cannot escape the predators. How else will the species of Iongsters remain strong? Nature when not disturbed by l'l1lll'! improvements in in it state of balance, ecologists tell us; and while she may be "red in tooth and clsw". the nude A man need not have I par- ticularly iicll developed bump of curiosity to be fascinated by I document. any document, that is sealed in a bottle and washed up at his feet upon the beach. And this, essentially. is what the scrolls that the wandering Bedouins dis- covered in the caves beside the Dead Sea are: mysterious manu- scripts that have survived the tur- bulence of two milleniums to be cast up at last on time's receding shore. That the secrets now being urestcd from the ancient earth- en jars are capable of firing the imagination is evident enough: i witn':ss the fact that Mr. Edmund Wilson's "Scrolls from the Dead Sea" has held its place on the best-seller lists for more than 30 weeks. The discussion no doubt is in- portant. And certainly it is pleas- ant to watch. in the mind's eye. thethe lucubrations of those learn- ed men who. in the vaulted chamb- ers of museums or in the awesome silences of national libraries. peer through enormous magnifying glasses at the enigmatic symbols on those venerable scrolls. Or to join them! as. later in the day, over a cup of coffee or a glass of port in a colleague's booklincd study. they thrash out some nice points in exegesis, some difference of opinion about a ques- tionable Aramaic ablative. or some refined interpretation of the ancient text that, it correct. could shake the batllements of Christen-l doin. HIGH DRAMA This is high draina. full of emo- tional and intellectual dynamite, but II ratlicr esoteric; rather, if 0"” may so express it, egg-head. It seems unlikely that the scrolls ll-We. up till now. disturbed a .s'In2lC' layman's sleep or upset g lii.V digestion. All this has now been cltnnged. Under the penetrating scrutiny of scholars in Manchester Univer. 5'l.V lhe Ufa Sea scrolls have yield. ed up clucs pointing in vast stores of gold and silver; 200 long of ilrocioiis mclal, enough to make the caves of Monte Cristo seem 3 Plilily bank by contrast. yTrcasurc trove! That tantaliz. ml phrase! That subject on which all of us are specialists! in a cistern which is below the ramparts of the east side, in 5 place hollnwed out by the rock 600 bars of silver. , ." That doc; '1 ""'l'-.V. Across the centuries we hear the echo of the chill pm. phetic wind that warned the E3. senc scribe of his apprnaphin 1 K rllgzint We watch his nervous sty. . :i: he labors on the lllraming lltlrllltilt scroll. " , below the rcnipart of . , 5' - lie must make haste to hide the clucs within the earthen jar gm-j launch them on the tide of his. l"'ZV'.. flfe from the envious and a aricious cycs of the approach. ing foe. And so he dlfd. And so llI' left his legacy to who can find if, T (TRYPTIC f'l.UES Granted. lhe clues are crlplic and obscure; they will hm-dry daunl the millions of us who luv; stood at Sherlock Holmesls QI. bow and watched him breIk the F.VDher of the Dancing Men, um who. thanks to Dr. Watson, know '"” '"””""'3- The Musitrnve Ritual W33 "ll-"'"FP. but, with the Is. The Age Old Story "Fear than not: for I In um. "M" l" "M tnlllllytdz for l III! 0!! God: I will Ilreiigthen thee; 3:171 will help thee. her so. if farmers must wipe tin l”Wlk tiprcles off the earth. It they and others Ire doing, will they not at least destroy the It-clpiten first” Ax the best book nbtslnable for ffmtznizlng hswks and other birds in the field. I would recommend tlgottlflrr ;i:tderson'sl"A Field Guido 9. I" blshed I-lou li- ton Mifflln. W h, I i sin. Sir, MARIE in water street. Charlottetown. cit. . Io. IVELDON Gold In The Dead Sea Scrolls G. S. R. in the Winnipeg Free Press sistance of a length of fishing-rod, some elmentary trigonometry and a hint or two from the Old Master, it led us to the battered dladem that once adorned the proud, ill- fated head of Charles I. And who is there who has not stood with Edgar Allen Poe be- hind that strange recluse. Le- grange, and watched the image of the Gold Bug on the ragged parchment yield to the hi-zroglypli of Captain Kidd? The captain; manuscript was crptic too, but we dug the treasure up beside the tulip tree in the moonlight. No longer need the layman stand in deferential awe as the pundits probe the secrets of the Dead Sea scrolls. lie is eminent- lyiqualified to do I bit of probing 0ll'lllS own. he can share their thrills and disappointments. And the time may even come when the official sleuths, who are sometimes hampered by dull pr-9. cedent and depnrtmental regulI- tions, will reach I dead--end in their search, and turn in desperg. tion to the amateur detective. Then. by I process of unorthodox deduction, he will demonstrate that what has stopped them, bat. fled in their tracks is in truth I hollow rock beneath the ram. part. Buried treasure! it is no longer for the learned Intiquarlans only that the Den Sea scrolls have come to life. BAN ROCK-ROLL El. MONTE. Calif. tAPl-Rock. and-roll music "is not in keeping with best interests of the com. munit.v.." the city council decided M""d8Y nil-thl in suspending I dance 'promotcr's pcrmit. Hal Leiglcr had been promoting weekly danccs at the Amerli,-In Lesion statliiim. Police Chief Jay Sherman recommended the lus- pcnsion. The council. however. de- cided to conduct I hearing on the suspension Aug. 6. Maxims Ideals are like iilars: you will not succeed by touching them Will! your hands. 7 -:35” Woeadwm , WHERE THE LILIES FLOAT Where the lilies float on the lake flowering the reflections while clouds niake. white on fairest white, hard it ill in may if clouds he not lilies gone astray. There arc three ivhito ducks where the lilies float. whiteness of the clouds under each white throat, flontlniz like the lilies on reflected sky. moving soft as clouds passing by, -Ellzahcth Colitsworth. in the Christian Science ' ' . Me'cliccillyT I Speaking I: II N. luduen. M. I). MOM DESIGNS A DEVICE T0 AID TIIE BED-WETTER -Bed-wetting by school n g e Yolmlsters is In embarrassing pro- blem for the parents as well Is the children themselves. VIrlouI remedies have ' been tried with varying-results. . A Chicago mother recently de- Ilgned.I simple owl-shaped plas- tic liandplece which reportedly combines the natural desire of the youngster for I dry bed with his natural reflexes to wake him in time to prevent bed-wetting. SOUND SLEEPERS The theory behind the "Wake-up Owl" is that bed-wetting young- sters Ire Iound sleepers and re- main asleep despite the pressure of I full bladder. Such pressure normally would wake other chil- dren. Bed-waiters, it's said, gencraly Ire restless and move their fing- ers just before wetting. PLASTIC DEVICE By holding the fingers in I semi- rigid position. the plastic device interferes with this natural rest- less movement. The youngster in- terprets this unuaual feeling as I signal to rise quickly to answer nature's call. its use. of course. is pretty well limited to children six years of age and older, or at least those old enough to understand its pur- pose. The ”Wake-up Owl" is attached to the palm of either hand at bed- time. Harmless phD!Ph0TcaL.clIi. pigments enable it to glow for six to eight hours after a few minutes' exposure to an electric light. HELPS HIM WAKE This phosphorescence has a pur- pose. too. A child watching it glow on his hand as he drops off to sleep will concentrate on the idea that it is there to help him wake. Of course, any strenuous play or no t during the evening should be avoided. Also. the child should not drink excessive liquids before bedtime. it's a good idea to establish In unhurried bedtime routine. The child should go to bed at. the same time each evening and be given plenty of time for sufficient sleep. QUESTION AD ANSWER B.N.: Can you tell me what is the best treatment for I peptic ulcer? Answer: The best treatment is a nutrituous and well-balanced bland diet. Antacids are also of great value. Since serious complications may result, I physician should he con- sulted Is soon as symptoms of peptic ulcer appear. OUR YESTERDAY5 from The Guardian Files TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (July 18. 1931) There is a very heavy. moinr traffic now being handled between Cape Tormentine and Prince Ed- ward island. especially for the past. few days. About forty flat cars. each holding 3 motor cars, are being carried on each trip both ways. The filth annual meeting of the Prince Edward island Dental As- sociation under its new Act of in- corporation: was held in the S.0.E. hall. Charlottetown. with the president. Dr. AH. Smallwood in the chair. TEN YEARS AGO (July 18. 1946) Major A.W. Rogers. of Char- lottetown, has been appointed sec- ond in command of the 17th P.E.i. Reece Regiment. Royal Canadian Armoured Corps. A plane from Fraser Airborne Products Ltd. left here yesterday evening with 8 load of fresh straw- berries for Newark, N.J.. and will return this evening after unload- ing its cargo. Sqdn. Ldr. Clarence W. Higgins, DFC.. St. Avards, has been ap- pointed managcr of the Charlotte- town branch of the War Assesis Corporation. RESTRICT SHOOTING TORONTO tCPl - Police in Metropolitan Toronto are soon to be ordcrcd to use their guns only when human life is being endan- izered. it was announced Ttiesday. The action followed In incident Monday in which a policeman chased a 15-year-old boy in con- nection with I car theft. Two shots fired in the chase slammed into an empty car parked at the side of ii road, only minutes after its two occupants had left. TV 0WNERS-- Q You can it o w have Channel 13 Aerials . For CFCY I Shipped '1 Inywhere to ' your address. ' Calling I3 IOWLAN RADIO 8: TV in POWNAL s'r. I44 Richmond St. E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, life, Accident, Sickness And Plate Glass lnsurqnco At Lowest Rates Agent at Sumgmrsldo - D. O. STEWART, Charlottetown NOTES BY fPngo 4. The Guardian ? THE WAY . Farm boys of fifty yui-I In who wore blue jeans never thought they were modelling city Ityleg half-century ahead of tlmeI.-To- roulo Telegram After seven years the Trans- Cnnada Highway is one-seventh paved. Back in the slow old 'elght- les, of course, we built our first tra .ontinental railway in elev- en years.-Peterborough ExIm- inel- Statistics disclose that in the United States 1.000 tint can: or: opened every second. This, of I-'0!-Ifse. is the Iverage. The figure looms much higher than that It dinner time on days when thg bridge club meets.-Detroit nu Press -to by one our most cherished beliefs are toppling. Only the nth. er day two scientists "proved" that the lost continent of Atlantis nev- er existed. Many of us may hlve had an occasional doubt about At. lanlls. its loss had not been felt too keenly.-Victoria Times At Klminlslikwin, Ontario. I beaver colony has felled eighty trees in an attempt to darn the swift Kam River. Professional en- gineers say it is an impossible task, but the beavers have built 25 feet so far. and are still going. They will have to invent methods unknown to beavers in the past to be successful. however, be- cause the Kam is 180 feet wide and 41 feel deep.-The Hear-ilnnd The British habit of understIte- meni appears to be spreading to other nations. A short time ago I meler reader in Cleveland stab- bed I housewife whose meter he was reading, and was dismissed by the City for ”di,scourtesy to the public." Now we learn that in far- off Viet Nam I. notorious bandit lender, who once commanded In "army" of 10.000 outlaws, has It last been convicted. The chIrgI "associating with evil doers." - Edmonton Journal Think of the Ilrnngo mentality of the London chap who got him. self I wheel chair. misrepresented. himself II n Victoria Cross winner Ind in that capacity was greeted by the Queen at an official re. ception for these valiant men! Hu. man nature is I curious compound of the great and the incredibly petty.-Ottawa Journal Human nature is indeed llnpre. dictable. Take the case of the fel. low who has pulled from the liar. bor at Goderlch and was saved from being drowned or crushed to death between a boat and the pier He went away mad because the rescuer tore his shirt. It reminds us of Sandy MacTavish. whose son Jock was saved from drowning by I kindl, and courageous stranger, Sandy sought out the hero and said. "are ye the man who pulled my la- from the river?" The slranger modestly admitted that he was. "Wcel,” Sandy demanded, "then wliur's his cap?"-London Free Press lest. 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