l I - g A 2 . 7 , A Risks ln Automation Si-"'"'"" -bl” - ' . , ' i - p 1' .13 When automation made its first FOI' cl'llldfOI'I V appearance on the industrial scene. 3, am... N, ;..g..... nu). - . g mm-how-wovol 'Ian-s-Iain-iuuai.7K both industrialists and labour leaders rm mm with the kids. but let me repent tried to belittle the effect it would is to hm”, -A. A...-iu. um, . have on employment. True, machines :uLAt';f3”,o:”'w:f;... T”'" l' " J 5 . nu nigh ..,oc,,r:,:: would take the place of men in nl- with summer vacation fun: I- g, . .45.”, ,, 3 u. .1 5. yhere. however. some ltudies are mos, ..,.,,..,. field. But there still "W "” ...”'...”', '.Jli".'5c.wlll -in-"' ,.,,"""".,,, " '- ”- "'"""r "”"""' "' ”' "'”'" ”' "It would be need of men to run the can set I suitable 105- V ' I. """"l”""'o""' '"'”""l h. N h run the machines. an - The Iananted. nlell. nueou ;-3 . Q. .3" 34..., H d L mac -tnes it cl 1 V f It th t . Vl'vl',:lll-e alttzlnbmt M work mum ad. uncontrolled in lending "ha g. mm a, mp: J; I. and' m genem' I llas 9. . ' .l' not have much to do with health. u:”' N. "2. 'd'. IIVC. 00 II! hit I caster a irAcI::"-"4 'nmsv.':un:”u7 1:51 thbugll the Second industrial revolu. t is . vilt-al i;ro(t;llent;1' 3 r:i:;i.o: .wm'ol-ta L". In it-3.; .. l:1.Iwl;?;el in. zl 9:. i - - M". would bmlg ablm certain m" It:r"weltlh.j:vhi:hoIyhIve siw's'ys been M ma hoklrvl-I lIIt- ft... and never I ship. Juslvall: 2 t Just Atlantic Claims noymg dislocations In the employ- concerned. - mm at is name. aasniiy we never could under. ' w . . ' t f .mu1a just as the first one I do not expect your teenager It show: up eareleuaeu. cIl!ouI- wand why reamed can carry 9 mm: in the current issue of me" m ' to begin a life-long career with his neu. petty anus: and ItiI(i- Nmmmu can-y cam... summer job; but he might just nus.-Vancouver Province - Tdograsn 1 did, everything would be adjusted in due course and industry and labour could look fonvard to a bright era as well try to find something he A HOLSTEIN BREEDERS any old 30 Annual meeting of the P. E. Island Superior t the Atlantic Advocate, Professor W. I). Let him find I Job by himself. Holstein Bull Club will be held in Room 66 of Prince . S. Mac-Nutt, formerly of Charlotte- il town, deals trenchantly with the '. results of the Atlantic Premiers' Of 9lfl('l9ll('.l' alld ('0"te"tme"tt EL 5. Conference held last month in Hali- flPiPllC.V- b9('3u5” almost every w0rk' L fax. The conference decided, among illg mil" W””ld be an expert: com -' . other things, to investigate more tentment. liecnuso ill"? Wouldl” '39 work to do anyway. Those It will greatly help to give him I sense of responsibility- Do not try to substitute work I- round the home for I regular job. Generally this sort of responsi- bility just does not work out. if you can afford to pay your it closely the claims of the Atlantic much , d Id be ! plmlnvps '0 Compensation for the who had nmhmg to 0 W0" tfiimclzsrsiigiu lldugnizheoliliiirnctitireall of Wales College on Tuesday. June 18 at 10:30 am. lowance. i ' paid very high wages for doing it. It was a rosy picture, certainly. That it uas a little too rosy is indi- cated in 3 report from Geneva, wheie the International Labor Or- ganization has been holding its an- nual meeting. It says that not only does automation threaten to throw millions of unskilled persons out of work: it seems likely to kill the in- dustrial life of the smaller countries which will not be in a position to afford ”electronic brains" in abund- Mf ' Following at 11 am. the annual meeting of the P. 1 E. Island Branch of the Holstein Friesian Assnri.-i. tion will be held in the same room. Holstein breeders are asked to attend this meeting. CECIL STEWART. Secretary. loss of their interest in western and northern lands. 'I:hese are claims, . i . says the writer. which pass the i understanding of all those who have forgotten their liistory. Too many of our politicians have fallen into that category. Professor MacNutt goes on -.' 5 to enlighten them: Briefly the position is that much of the forest and mineral wealth of the central and western provinces is derived from what was once the PURE MEANNES8 Making him mow the lawn. wash the car. or clean the base- ment to collect what in reality is an allowance. may seem like pure meanness to the youngster. He knows that you are creating In ariifical obstacle to the money that is available to him, and he is apt to resent it. By earnlnil money. I youngstei should soon learn the value of it. If he spends it on shoddy merchan- dise. or too much of it on pleasures. he will quickly learn the folly of his ways. When he needs other things. there just will not be e- nough money left. A-v--..L.g EVENT Thus. I job helps I teenager to learn quite I bit about the adult life he someday will have to as- some. QUESTION AND ANSWER G.U.: What causes gallstones? Answer: The exact cause is not known, but infection of the gall- bladder, overweight and lack of exercise are factors which may lead to this condition. The Age Old Story public domain of Canada. A series i U . . . . A . or varttggng ogolft ””l1””..f3il'.”.i3' END or AN ANNUAL sanction y ariamen ' - 5 litieal pressure. allocated vast terri- . tories to particular provinces. Mowat fought his battle for New Ontario. and Quebec demanded that she match Ontario. acre for acre. In- habitants of prlVllCg9d l-lll0Vl"('95 benefited enormously from what was ant-e. The theory here is that the wealthier countries will be able to produce so much more and in a much shorter time than is the case at present that the weaker competi- tors especially Asiatic and African countries which are only just be- ginning to build up industries, Will be forced back to primitive living ANNUAL MEETING Of Charlottetown Strawberry Growers OTTAWA REPORT Peace Resiorecl To Haiti By Patrick Nicholson Count of liarinalade. another the Count of Lemonade. They design- ed and wore gorgeous and elabor- PUBLIC FORUM flan column in open In the discon- den by corrupondenu of .. " of mutant. The Guardian done not neoco- urily Indorle the opinion I! earn. IIIIIIIL Association or Cross Roads School. Mon- day. June 11 of I p.nI. After six months of civil war l and general strikes, 42 year old pro. vislonal president Daniel Flgnole TIIE DUAL CONSTITUENCY OF QUEENS once common to all our citizens. , I . . , 'ch has brought peace once more to Its robes. Life was a perpetual Alberta. whose funded debt has been conditions. In other words. the ri our most milgmal "Hem mm. , masquemdpv Wm M simpmny Sir.MAn lmym 0! me W" l cm ,0 vmuanv nothing and whose will become richer and the P00? bo1r.,li-- Fri-lltli bl, , and the pleiaisureu whIc'h"chlldren in Queen, iiiaii-.1... um um. i. Let us therefore follow after the l E . , A . . . ' 1' of auto- ' 5 t' "W5 "9F"l "Vii" ll" . W019 .10 ” ressm: lltl - , things which make for peace. and l”””'” W i?” C-””.””.”.'?J.”.i ””".'il ""32: '32i3"2lli1?.'.T3.. it is ;:.l::;:"'..i':i"'2;.a::..' 1 .3": iii: .11; ?..””:::i:'”Sl?...'”l::” ”....'"i.'.."”'"'"' '" "W "'"' ' ' - a . . - . . - . i i .- - - ' - . "Gm "ch 0'1 rot”! leS' 15 p ma mn II! It 8 flvourlle large! for many lush. The estates and the farms candidates. For example: Mnc- thought, will be for the highly- industrialized nations to look after the needs of the others permancntl.V- The prospect probably isnt as gloomy as it sounds at the moment. Nevertheless. it is clear that auto- mation is not an unmixed blessing, even though it may make leisure the rule rather than the exception in industrial life. Perhaps bvthen almost everybody will be gem"! 3 pension from "the Government . But Lean. P.C. 11.447; Macquarrie. P.C. 10.552. Giving MacLeIn I lead over his running mate of I95. Matheson. L. 9.475; M.iilIr. L. 9.218. Lead for Matheson 157. Contrast this with the other dual constituency of Halifax with Il- most four times the total votes. Mt-Cleave. P.C. 39.793; Morris. P.C. 39.746. A difference of only 47 votes. Balcom L. 36.258; Dickey L. 36.001. A spread of only 257 votes. This in obviously unfair to both Progressive Conservative and Lib- oral candidates as the votes each receive is not I true indication of the worth of the individual can- have never given I very ample re- turn. When I visited llaiti a few years ago. there was the most startling contrast between the luxurious life of the rich and the squalor of the huge majority of the population who are very poor. Yet rich and poor alike are bles- sed by the benevolent climate and the intense beauty of their land. Recently hints hate come that their subsoil. like ours. possesses great mineral wealth. and Canad- ian mining engineers have been interested in developing that wealth. CULTURE AND i'(l()D00 of our winter holiidaymakers. - Bordering the northern edge of the Caribbean. it lies between Cuba and Peurto Rica. Haiti comprises the western one- third of the island of Hispantola. discovered by Christopher Colum- bus in 1492 and shortly after the scene of the first European settle- ment in the New World. The cast- ern portlon of the island is the re- public of Dominica. Haiti has an area of about 10.- 000 square miles or half the size of Nova Scotia; it has I popula- tion of 3.500.000. Haiti and Domin- in together, with their joint pop- ulation lnrger than Ontario's. A L the most gimenniz example In the 't six central and western PF0Vl”V95 governments have been able to offer services impossible for the Atlantic ll Provinces to emulate. Toronto is the ; capital of an emPll'9 Of Sold fleldst base metals and timber lands whose t resources were once at the disposal of Ottawa. Ungava and the iron of l Auousnus cove IOYB-Age 12-11. July 1.11. Ionrd 014. Registration 32. Rev. L. Graves. Tryon. GIRLS-Ago 11-11. July 16!. Ioard tie. Registration 31. Mrs. Robert Cnrruthers. Kenslngton. YOUNG PEOPLE-ll and ever. July 11-14. Board 05. Registrar: llonaar Coffin. tel lunton It., Ch'town JUNIORS-Ago I-ll. July I to Aug. C. Board I14. l lleg'n and insurance 33. Rev. E. A. lotto, Vllnsloe. l SPONSORED IY Till MARITIME RELIGIOUI GOIYS SEA 1 stand on the guarding rocks And watch the sea; Struggling and pressing inwards. Strong and Free. Labrador have fallen to Quebec. Still 1 lg; today the partitions may not hate 'vt'. ended for British Columbia covets The green waves curling. dashing, Like horses at play; Running up to stubborn boulders the wealth of the Yukon. Prior to the election of 1911 Quebec and Ontario forced both P0- litical parties to yield to their de- mands. The last great P8l'titl0" 0f northern lands took place in 1912- there is something about that, too, which is not exactly Nl55l”'l"3' EDITORIAL NOTES A statistical report shows that 270 millions persons now speak the This number. of would fit snugly into Lake Superior. Orlgnally settled by the Span- iards. Haltl was later taken over by the French. They cslablishtd sugar and coffee plantations. Thus came the need for cheap labu.r. for the Spaniards had extermin- ated the original lndian inhabi- tants. Haiti became an intermed- Halti is the only independent na- tion in the New World which is french-speaking. a legacy from the days of slavery before the willie masters were driven out. A legacy from their continent of ethnic lif- lgln is Voodoo. the rcligio-mngic- al cull which gives them one of the worlds most shattering folk- lores. or mysterious witch-tio':o:u didntes as Federal representatives. in about five years nnother re- vision of electoral constituencies will take place. Let us hope that the party in power at that time will insist on I division of Queens into two constituencies. Let me suggest North Queens and South Queens. Turning quickly at bay. The white salt spume flying. Strikes my face. The roaring of the great In Fills the place. I think of His immensity Who made all things; EDUCATION COUNCIL - 1 - - ' At- ' 1 a e. late stopping place for the ebony- - Like minority Itockholders the English angu g , , I ht . . ch hued African race. on its pathetic lik d th fveng ance. of "Som- I am. Sir. etc.. .l lantlc PrOVlTl(-'93 received "0 compen COUTSB. includes persons in 11:, road from Ghana to Harlem. bieet-"'o:r lsivllng-deazi. J. J. MUSTARD Iii: g;n:e::,d 511,330." wner ykie . s8tl0n- Y9! the question of compen- widely separated areas as Nils After more than three centuries Their mysticism, was evidenc- Charlottetown. pw 'H -v - of recorded hlslo this new world lv their tr alment of I .m oral m. - Doucettt. 9- l nation was raised Sllelkllll di"""3 shire New Ellglmd lmd the Deep settlement ll.ldd?l'I.lV acquired s 3? the us lliarine Corps lnp the -' Low-r Rollo 3-! d Exten- i ' ither two of these RN83 lasting historical farm. The slaves between-war lyears whennm their - the P555339 of the Boun My South In mu revolted against their French mnst- infant-colonialism the States 'oc- Hunting CTOW5 (The Printed Word) Those who like hunting. but with- cupicd" Haiti. in command of the occupation guard of the Haitian island of La Conave was Corporal would a Visitor from the other feces. ers. In pitched battles and in lucr- illa war waged in the mountainous tropical paradise. Haitians be- giop Acts. the Prime Minister, Sir Robert Borden. declared that the From the Guardian Flies claims of the Atlantic Provinces had not escaped the attention of the gov- ernment. They were claims based upon the heritage of all Canadians received from the Parliament of the Mother Country, upon the fact that for many years we were heavily taxed for the administration and opening up of the lands and for the pacification of the Indians. Before 1914 the Government of Canada gave away over one billion of dollars to private railway corporations whose activities made the lands in- finitely more valuable. "An estimate of the amount of compensation for the loss of our share in the revenues of northern lands." says Professor MacNutt, "would keep a host of lawyers and Itatlcians employed for years. We might ask for I mortgage on Tor- onto or for the Yukon with In Arctic island to boot. But it would be infinitely more practical. Illllt 33 nlze his "mother tongue". 0 O 9 Australian scientists are l0Um9Y' ing into desert countrif t0 "Y 3'": find out how a tribe of Indians can live and flourish in an area Where it never rains. Some think that the Indians live on I Veiemble whlch supplies all the necessary WW9? 'f"d which is unkown to the outside world. It will be interestinz "3 599 the outcome of the research- . O O A Canadian resident wants to live in Siberia "where everything is shared and nobody does without." The poor fellow is, of course, en- titled to his views; but someone should have a heart to heart talk with him before he makes the irre- vocable step. Almoat any Hungarian refugee could set him straight. O O 0 It is almost too much to expect that the influenza epidemic which is sweeping across the Far East will leave this part of the world alone. British and United States author- lties are taking every precautionary measure. It is to be hoped that the ii is .5 .- stiiii ' came the first people to defeat the great Napoleon. Then began the series of "em- pires" and civil wars and ooupe d'etnt which have marked the past 150 years and even this year in Haiti. ILACK MAJESTY Henri Christophe was the most Ipectaculer of the coloured em- perors of the newly-liberated cotta- try. He built the Citadel. at (tap Haitlen. and nearby the palace of Sans Soucl. the two most fabulous and imaginative edifices ever erec- ted in the New world. He created an Iristocracy. His daughters were Princesses. his friends and his general: were created Dukes and Marquise: with fairy-book titles. One of his friends became the Fauslin Wirkns. son of Pollsli im- migrant coal-mlners in Pennsyl- vania. The last "emperor" of Hai- tl was Emperor Faustin the First The coincidence of name ted to the corporal being crowned. as I rcinvnrnatcd emperor. Subsequent discovery by an unimaginative MI- rine Officer led to the world's on- ly "ii.-athcrnerk-emperor" being sacked. lie told me fascinating stories of black magic. cock-fights and life with a black empress. Today llaiti once again has peace with a democratic president. who lives in the Back Man's "White llouse," larger and whiter than President l-Iiscnhout-r's. with only dreams of past masquerades to lighten the soaring misery of to- day's poicrty. Eden's Return Mnnt-healer As the vast white wall of the Empress of Britain glided tam ards the Pl'lll('!'I Landing Stage at Liverpool I still Ind unobtrusive figure-as near to I private lrn- veller II I man who began the you ll Prime Minister could ever be-gated out from I high deck. ehln in bond, reflectively over Uverpool. Sir Anthony Eden was aisiiis of active political work was ever. The old legends were be-the cbnrluer, the ever- Islnoenlie giodlobave leeewitnt ltw nlnnwhohnd finished Guardian urgent view! about other people's deeds they stayed unuitcred. He was not even plaiinlng to write his memoirs, though he gathered that others were busy writing about him. He was going to Wiltshlre with his wife to rest. do some gardening. and be left alone. lie sat in I chair wiht I sum- mery Lady Eden at his side. If- fable and apparently serene. only his hands iestleu as the fingers clasped Ind uncluped. The contrast between hls,de-I pnrture in mid-January. when he sailed for his convalescence in New zealand. and his horneeointag today was marked. He left London in I bltkig wind and under the the pre- furloua cloud of Sun; mlerslilp and the seat be had bell for thirty years had inst IVE? nanshnmed. Now be returned in this dusting white snip. warmed not only by sunslilaebetbytbecordialvriabes Ildinblnedtribuloa i look foolish. l low off as the car pnoaee I woods been cut off. leaving him naked. bow- .eveIlrorn out the tragic conclusion of killing something. find one of the very best spans for June is to get out Ittor Cmwo. Standard equipment is I crow call. I shotgun. maybe I moor car. ad two or three fel- lows who have absolutely nothing else to do but let crows make them The technique in to drop one fei- where there is I crow. The car proceeds innocently pa M the woods. The fellow who has been dropped off hides behind I bush. among the mosquitoes. gutting his knees wet. He takes out the crow cell and calls. According to Roger Tory Peter- sonis definitive work. "A Field Guide to the Birds." the crow, or Coruvx Brncliyrhynchos. gives out with I loud "caw" or "cIh" which is "easily imitated by voice." The inference is that. with the crow call to help him. the hunter will have no trouble in imitating the crow and in luring him near. This may be true of real hunters but real hunters seldom spend much time on crows. The kinds of fellows who will wander around a countryside on I Series after- noon with I store-boughtenicrvw call are usually cheerfully unsuc- eeuful It III anything. strength. But-"There II. nothinl to complain about In that. I am very lucky to be alive." lie best chance of avoiding I recor- lvenwhenn tletbe eeuldnotexpecttebe been nulatotskepnrtlnaeavitgltlea tawerefer who niigbtbesefterIIgfninIIIeotn- tbld I I or drink vn rertimn.'i'neseeIseswerelum individunhlllletveilej vlfallfax. Chartered Accountants. TWENTY-FIVE YEAI8 AGO (June 14. 1982) Arrangements have been made with the firm of Donald S. Hart. for an external audit of the city - financial affairs. it was nnouncczl last night by Councillor Kennedy chairman of the finance commit- teee. The audit will investigate I- mong other things the city": bond transactions. civic finances. for 1911. and the sinking fund. Work in connection with the ex- cnvation of the cellar on the Prince of Wales College grounds began yesterday morning. Major D. A. Mncbonnld. who has the contract. expects to complete the work in three weeks. using two or three shifts daily so as to finish the work I! rapidly ns possible. TEN YEARS AGO (Jane N. 1017) Approximately 800 Air Cadets from Mnritimes Air Cadet Squad- rons will take summer training It the Summeraide R.C.A.F. station this summer. The first course will commence on July 5th and will last two weeks. There will be four courses given during the summer and will be the only type of train- Ing given It the station this sum- naer. Prior to leaving Fredericton. N. I., to reside in Charlottetown. Mr. and In. R. C. Parent were teI- '