t .~..~.cr.r.>aa.-: a.a<no:=o:-is‘:-.:iiz izzaii-utcezaurrt I 975'?)-d’\.’r"i"‘7 ‘"9 . ._..-nu-u....._.-u-..»....—i.:nm--as--tar..n»«p\ .-._..._....4i «L 4 a I ITI-IE GUARDIAN “Coven Prince Edward Island Like the Dew‘ Published every week-day morning I: 136 Prince Street. Charlottetown, P. E. l.. by Th: Thomson Company Limited. Editor and Hunger, Ian A. Iurnctt Auoclatc Editor, Fl-Ink Wllhet. Biancli offices at Summerxide. Montague and Alberlon. Authorized as Second Cllu Mail by he Post Office Department. Ottawa. By Carrier: Charlottetown. Summerside 813.00 per Iiinum. Elsewhere in P. E. I. 89.00. Other :‘rov- inces and U. S. A. $12.00 per annum. “The Itrongestgmemory I: weaken than the weakest ink.” Power of The classic: While statcsnien of many lands are <i=:1rching feverishly for some political formula that might bridge the ever widen- ing gulf between the ideological divisions of mankind, it is interesting and refresh- ing to note that Dr. Gilbert Murray. one of the great scholars of the world, is recom- mending study of the classics as “the one center round which the gentler and nobler influence of the world can gather and stand fast." Dr. Murray is 88 vears old; he has spent his entire adult life in pliil- tisophltral study of the movements which liavc fashioned civilizations and brought bolll order and disorder into the workings of the nations. His studies have taken him track of the outward appearances of political and social institutions to the essential his- torlc drives which have created them and brought them into conflict one with an- othcr. No one knows better than Dr. Murray the nature of the link which connects the thought of ancient and mediaeval philoso- phr~rs to the pragmatism of 20th centu1'y practices and custonis: no one is more con- -rious of the futility of short cuts to :‘r‘OnOnilC and political well-being. A civil- ization impcrillcd by the threat of uncon- irnllcri and uninhibited maleriali.~'m, which i: at the root of the Communist apparatus.- ll.’«l< need of many aids. including the mili- tary ones. if its survival is to be assrred: hut ciiiefly. perhaps. it needs an awareness of the pcrmancnt things of life as against tlir traiisitory cxpedients which arise from time to time. This is where the classics come in. They are. in Dr. Murray's words. "ihr great upholders of the permanent against the fashionable: of high standards against the general easy level." They might even teach us a more Christian approach to the bitter war set- tlemcnt problems confronting world states- mcn today. The following passage. written many years ago by Dr. Murray, relates to the ancient Greek custom of marking vic- tories by a trophy and nothing more: “A trophy was a plain wooden cross with a suit of (‘apiured armour on it. And by Greek la\v it must never be repaired by the conqueror nor yet pulled down by the conquervrl. It must simply be allowed to fall to pieces and disappear as the memory of the old strife disappeared. The reason is given in several passages. ‘It is the law’. says .\'icolaus in Diodorus. ‘to set up tro- phins not of stone but of ordinary pieces of wood. It is well tq preserve for ever the good will we feel towards our friends, but to let our hatred to our opponents die.‘ Plutarch discusses the reason why trophies alone of all offerings to the gods are never rcpaired. ‘It would be invidious and malig- nant that we men should ourselves repair and renew the monuments of hatred to- wards our enemies when time is making them dim'." .\'ot, a bad moral. one would think. for the Geneva Conference delegates to ponder under the shadow of the hydrogen bomb. liew lilil ‘la Science Leukemia is one of the diseases which thus far have resisted all the efforts made by scientists to bring them under control. However. research into this (II;-vastating scourge of the blood is going on all the time and there have been hopeful signs in recent months that the much sought cure is in sight. The new aid to research is the com- mon bat which may in time reach the status ~n laboratory usefulness which hitherto has mrn reserved for the mouse. According o.\‘anderbilt University scientists, who are -rcditcd with bringing the bat irito prom- notice. the little creature's wing membrane s so thin and delicate that the white cells ran actually be seen as they go about their work in the blood stream. This. it is hoped, will provide much needed Information on the metabolic system of human beings, since in that respect men and bats are very much alike. The main concentration will be on 5 specific ingredient. the nature of which is now unknown, in the hat's blood that al- lows it to hibernate without food of any kind for seven or eight months of the year: this means, too, that it can be kept under refrigeration for that period of time with- out requiring :-~,v sort of care. Apart from their contribution to science, bIt.s have emerged from the preliminary Jtudles with enhanced reputation: as con- cerning their ways of living. Contrary to pplilnd thing: often and about them. they unable to bite hthnin brings. for -the are too small for any such pastime. They do not transmit any disease to any other form of life, and they are clean and sani- tary in their personal habits. It may be true. after all, that no living thing, however humble, is “useless or low" in the great scheme of creation and in the structure of the good and abundant life. _Al|-Gillatc mu The Montreal Gazette cites reports from Texas. to the effect that attempts to breed “hot-climate" cattle have been successful. By crossing the English shorthorii with the Brahama bull of India, Texas breeders say they have developed a new species, the Santa Gertrudis. which develops healthily in both hot and humid and hot and dry climates. Development of the new breed can be important for more areas than the drought- ridden L‘. S. Southwest. The fact that the Santa Gertrudis are also reputed to fight their own battles against insects and para- sites could make them an important factor in many other parts of the world. They could. for instance. be of enormous value in various sections of Africa, where stock-breeding has been difficult both be- cause of climate and deadly insects, such as the tsetse fly. The introduction of home- produced meat into the native diet could have considerable effect on the health standards of the central States. ' EDITORIAL NOTES The monsoon has started in north Indo- China. offering the prospect that Com- munist supply trucks will be unable to con- tinue rolling in from the North. There does not seem to be any report on the success or otherwise of French attempts to create rainfall artificially. O 0 I New long-range navigation aids which could span the world’s longest air routes- including the Atlantic—are being develop- ed by a British company. Technical details have been put forward to the International Civil Aviation Organization in Montreal which is representative of some 63 differ- ent member states. The Regimental Band of the Irish Guards will travel to Canada this summer to play at the Canadian National Exhibi- tion ln Toronto. This will be the band's first trip to Canada since 1934. Directed by Captain C. H. Jaeger, the band consists of 60 musicians. Colonel of the Irish Guards is Field Marshal Lord Alexander of Tunis. The bulletin of the Toronto public schoolmasters' association advocates that men teachers should be permitted to wear turtle neck sweaters to classes in winter and a T-shirt in the summer. That would certainly be one way of eliminating some of the "white collar jobs" which critics of youth claim are proving too attractive. O I O Placing juvenile delinquents in foster homes has often proved effective in chang- ing their habits and attitudes. Now On- tario is exploring the possibility of re- habilitating older prisoners by placing them in private homes. It seems strange that not so long ago "advanced" thinkers were beginning to regard the‘ home and family as obsolete. "To be a member of the rising genera- tion in Canada today is to be in a most enviable position, I assure you." So spoke Chairman P. W. Litchfield of the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company recently. When young he went to Ohio in response to the call of "the West". Today. were he mak- ing the choice he would point towards Canada because this country offers bound- less opportunity. I 0 Q The mutiny on board H. M. S. Bounty occurred this date 1789. Under Capt. Wil- liam Bligh she had been sent out to intro- duce the bread-fruit plant into the West Indies from Tahiti. After a 6-months’ stay at Tahiti. however, many of the‘crew were unwilling to leave. They cast Bligh and some others adrift to sail over 1,000 miles in an open boat to Timor. Bligh eventual- ly attained the rank of vice-admiral. Most of the mutineers were punished or mur- dered but one John Adams survived to head the,little colony they founded on Pitcairn Island. ’ A stained glass window commemorating some 55.000 members of Bomber Command aircrew killed in the Second World War — among them 1,233 Canadians - will be cicdicated in the All-men's Chapel of Lin- coln Cathedral on May 8th, the 9th anni- versary of V-E Day. The main theme of the window will depict the Archangel Mich- ael :laying the Dragon. The window will be unveiled by Air Marshal Sir George H. Mills, Air Officer Commanding-in-Cliiéf. Bomber Command. The R. C. A. 1-‘. will be represented by Air Commodore Martin Coa- l-'-".°-_ Q Cheerful Giver Old Charlottetown and P. I. 1. NOTICE TO TENANTRY From I notice by W. Douse. laud agent, addressed to the tcnantry or the Selkirk estates. Nov. 14, 1837. "The trustees and executors of the late Earl of Selkirk, proprietor of lands in this Colony, have ever shown themselves desirous of giv- ing good encouragement to an lndunrlou: Tenantry, and have instructed me to receive from you, in payment of Rents, merchant- able agricultural produce. for which the highest prices will be allowed, it delivered immediately. To you that In in arrears of Rent, and unable to pay in cash or produce. I favourable opportunity is also af- forded, to make payment in labour, on advantageous terms. "The mode of payment, liberal rents, and long term of your leases will. I trust, be A sufficient hint. to you that. are unwilling to pay thirty shillings instead of ii pound, to make immediate remittances. You may rest assured ihat. :aCh of you will be called on for pay- ment of your Rents. forthwith, and that, for the future. they must. be paid :: they become due; if not. the law will be resorted to, And rigorously enforced, for re- covery. without any distinction of pcnom. The utmost leniency will be exerciud toward industrious :et.t.lers. and even those desirous of quitting their farms; any ten- ant, therefore. wishing to give up his lease and premises in proper order, during the present winter, mall have a receipt in full of All demands. on payment of one year’: rent; or, if he can make ule of his farm ‘to better advantage, and the purchaser be approved of. he will be accepted as a tenant. and be held liable for the amount. due. _ “That. the Tenantry may not de- ceive thcmaelvu with the idea of Lord Selkirk‘: property being es- cheated. I will merely observe to you, that the conditions of the Grants have been fully complied with. :5 required by the Govern- ment . . . I shall appeal to your good sense. to avoid being deluded by artful individuals. who may be endeavouring to deceive you, and to refuse compliance with the terms of your agreement: or leases. I can only assure you, it is my most. earnest. desire to treat with you fairly. npenly and candidly. and to continue that. good feeling. so desirable for the peace. happiness and interest of yourselves." I The Age Old Story I Jun: Imwcrod them. I told you. and ye believed not: the work: that I do in my father’: nune, they bear witneu nf mp . . . My Father. which [IVC them me. i: [renter than nil: and no man In ‘N0 M llluck them out of my Father’: hand. I and my I-‘lthgf no one. Behaving Like Russians totiawn Journal» Russian artists touring Canada performed in Toronto's Massey Hall lut night but without incom- paniment from Toronto‘: musi- clanl. Said Waltenlillurdnck, pres]. dent of the Toronto Musicians As- socllilonz "We have : trade agreement with Massey Hall under which local musician: will appear for vis- iting Irtluc but on thl: occulon we are ignoring it. Our constitution prohibit: us from having anything to do with any Communist-oh |:nizat.lon." Sounds Ruuian In us. and pretty :llly. For we have never heard that there is such : thing u Com- munlu music. and it occurs to in that If these Runlnn artists He in Canada lenlly. admitted by our immigration authorities. they are In much entitled to courtesy a: visiting artists from any nu-ier country. ‘ Ilulic. drama. the ballet. sculp- ture. plintlng — all are intemI- tionll. the expreulon of I com- mon culture Ind civilization. Any nimlclui not imdei-standing that and behaving nccordfn3ly_ , iuircly ‘ vq-\ u¢elo9rlv.hIw'u.r.vuw. ,‘ .. .~.A. -- ~ " doesn't understand his profession. Dickson Hartwell in Radar speed control has swept. acmn: the country. catching tens of thousand: of i:notori:t.: with their i.h.i-ottlu floorboai-ded. and mi: left them paying I 310 or $50 fine, somr.-what. benumbed after their first personal encounter with this bewildering product of the electronic site. The radar speed control device is. indeed. nothing to argue with. It talks back with ll piece of graph paper on which your exact. speed is calibrated in very cuuvincinl red ink. so convincing. in fact, that of the first 56.000 motor- ists arrested on this type of evidence. almost. exactly 99.44% either pleaded or were proved guilty. To the ‘police, these convic- tion figurea :i-e : godsend. The old saw that certainty of conviction is the greatest. deterrent. to crime works. for traffic violators. too. since excessive speed is the most important factor in fatal trai- flc accldent:—4.ll% of All high- way deaths are caused by illegal cpeed. according to in- surance stnti:t.lcs—t.he radar dc- vlce'1 advocates, expect. it. to aave many lives. . The complete unit. can be pack- ed into a cue somewhat. taller and thicker than in portable type- writer and weighing less than 40 pounds. . The transmitter can be put on the fender of I police cu- parkcd along the highway. When the switch is on it. will clock the speed of every car that come; along up to 100 miles an hour. If two come along together it. picks the fastest. The exact. speed registers on A dial ln:idc the police car. How it. work: i: somewhat incomprchcnslve and it. may be a gross ovcrclmplification to say that it draws its power from the nutomoblle battery and sends out. I constant. stream of microwaves to an effective distance of about 175 feet. When in car moves into this stream the microwaves bounce back to the instrument, some- thing like the way an echo is produced, and the length of time it. tnku them to bounce back indicates the rate of speed of the automobile. If I permanent record is desired I separate unit. records the speed on ii graph paper on which the exact. time and place of the check is also recorded. If the apecd is excessive the cop can give chase :nd make the arrest. himself. More com- monly. though. he has I pal staked out. about.‘ I. mile down the road. He notes the make of car and the license number and gives hi: buddy the infor- mation over the radio tele- phone. and radar claims another victim. O The psychological effect of radar lpeed check is nothing short. of amazing. Capt. R:lph C. Buckley. hand of the nut: division ’ of the Connecticut. State Police. which has tested and used the device for seven yeIr:. re- port: that merely the knowledge that they were in I ndnr zone llowed people down \ During the tint. :lx month: after I radu speed check w:: introduced into Gary. Ind.. lnst year there were only six traffic death: compares‘. to 28 during I umiiu period in‘im ma 2: in 1051. In it: fli-It year of uu in the nmll town of Deal. N. Y. than were no tufflc acciacnt. duth: and the number of accident: was cut by 14%. Ohio police reported : cut in accident: of 50% after the device was adopted in ll cltlel. Tnko Akron. Ohio. for ex- ample. Ohio, incidentally. ha: in man radar speed detector: than any other :t.Ite. More than lo-cilia and towns. in addition to the state police. now Radar Speed Control The Elk: Magazine It. wu the lowest. fatality toll for th:t city in 25 years. . . . This question of radar evi- dence uandlng up in court. i: sometixnes still subject to ques- tion. But most. offenders :ren't. anxious to test. it. Of in speed- er: picked up in one month by the radar unit in columbu:. Ohio, 126 pleaded guilty right: off. But aomc states have laws which make the use of radar illegal. The question of, whether the use of radar i: an ethical prac- tlce in one which has been hotly debated. with the pi-ondnr: usual- ly winning by pointing out that the speedometer and the stop watch are also mechanical aids to police and that some state police in the west even use small alr- plancs to spot speedeta, relay- in: the information by radlophonc to colleagues on the highway patrol. The public has begun to ac- cept radar as reliable and here ‘/fie f’ 7oe&’l'Gm¢z YOUNG LAMBS The spring is coming by a many gnu; The tray: nre_up, the hedges broken down That. fenced the haystack. and the remnant. chines Like some old antique weathered brown. And where suns peep, in every shel- tcrcd pliicc. The little early buttcrcupc unfold A glittering star or two — till many fngment trace . The ndges of the bllckthorn clumps in gold. And then a little lamb bolta up behind The hill. and wage hi: tail to meet the yoc; And then another. sheltered from the wind. Lies all his length as dead —— and lets me 30 Close by. and never stirs. but bask- l 118 9-9. with lag stretched out as though he could not rise. —Iohn Olnre (1703-1364.) _voun ALIIMA KRAFT ALUMINUM AWNING IIEALER u:c it regularly. - Akron Benn min: radar 'ln November. mo. During that you Akron had in traffic Math: and thc noviou: year than war: 80. But during the first full year of radar lion Akron cut its traffic fctalltlec to it and be- came. tnffic wilt. the cunt. city ‘ciiarinun nos. Dbl 0557 1 ii ID. Il'ihO Valid-MOW. 5 Pgge 4 4___Thc NOTES BY Few of III ever atoll 11"‘ “Ink 'oI:k to the quaint. modest bath- ing suit: and Income taxes we once considered so outrageous.‘-— Hanni- ton Spectator. A boarding house. is I place where folk: pay 1004 d9““'5 ‘mi often get poor quarters in return- —Sudbury Star. 1. .. English boxlnl m-tch- two fighters knocked each other out. thus proving that. if one wait: long enough. life will finally imi- tate I movle comcd)'- " 5'-l’a“°" Beacon-I-lcrald. 11,". 1. . couple ‘in Eu! Sher- brooke whose longevity FE¢°l'd 93" be matched by few. Mr. and Mrs- Denault celebrated their diamond wedding anniversary year! 519°9- Mrs. Denault is 104; he!‘ h“5b'"d- 103, He was still :n active worker in 1)]; woods nt. 99. -— Sherbrooke Record. Thu», 5"; pock-mlrhed IIICGC pavements in all parts of Ottawa. bug some of the streets in d West End are Dflfuculafly Z3 _ those where sewers were put OW!‘ last year. notably-_Th°Y ‘I55’-'“f° some special attention. —— Cl-N3 Journal. 11,. snu-my night huh I: new suspect. The announced possibility that polio ml)’ ihi'lV9 °“ .d°‘“h; ness is an undermminz Piece 0 news. although it may brmfi 5°)’ to small boys. In this aE9.hI°1k .1-3 getting used to makinl _1 95? mental ad.lU3lm9I'”5- The "am Is to presume that thlnl! mil’ “if” out differently. The only security i: I lean of Insecurity. — The Printed Word. Bhyrockctlnl coffee pricey "9 m.kj_u‘ history repeat itself in that. when : commodity become: scarce ma nu too high in price con- :umer: Ind processors become in- clined to try :ubst.lt.ut:s. Usually the substitute: remain on the market, as in the case of marl!‘ fine, — Kitchener-Waterloo Rec- ord. Cuudn has the third moct inv- ourable ratio ' of inhabitants to physicians amonx ‘he “3“°“5, °l the world. reports the statistical year book of the United Ixatmns. Canada has 900 persons for every doctor in 1950. This is an increase ti-am mo, when.the proportion was 1.000 to one. The countries with the best ratios were Switzer- land and me United States. In 1950 they Illd 700 and 750 X79110“! per doctor. respectivelifi M, “*9 bottom of the list. was Ethiopll with l.'$0.000 inhabitants for every physician. an indication of the broad differences between the highly developed and underde- veloped countries in the field of health care. —- Windsor Star. only :elflIhnc:I or tlIou(hlle:s- ness can be the explanation why people throw objects fX‘0ln>Yl‘l0Vll"l§ vehicles. The other day a little girl was hit and seriously lniured when .11 empty whisky bottle wvu thrown from : moving car. In such I use the chance of find- ing the guilty person and bringing him to justice i: slight. This anti- social behavior I: increasing. as highway verse: in the country testify. some of the secondary highways, particularly «those near cities. are often littered with empty whisky and beer bottles flung from passing cars. This is particularly noticeable after I weekend. Hamilton Spectator. It was late lut Summer that Port Arthur district people heard for the first time that there might be panther; in this territory. Re- port came from 1 point about 100 mile: weshon the Trans-Canada of In animal answering the gen- eral description being seen by I timber man whose powers of ob- servation and description appear- ed of high rIting. Shortly after- wards there was another report from east of the city. along the Nlplgon Highway. But nothing since. although officials of the wild life division in the Department of Lands and Forest have been well- ing wit.h some eagerness. —— Port the-ii __“'°."!'_°'1I_‘Y- N"?! 73’ 12:: s THE WAY‘ A nclentlnt tell: In 111;; the earth lzemblcs we can it partly on the moon. He enily doesn't lL'l0\V about kin:-sized trucks. Spectator. wt... blaiii. 3 Dllir. lhou H3 mil l.Ol’l Ever since man [lined the M or of speech. it seems, 13.; " moncst remark has been. '- are not what they were i';. on young days." This forms the bu: den of one of the earliest rec.,.dm' Egyptian wisdom books, and £3“ successive generation on rea;-hi" and passing maturity has shaker. ‘ rcgrctful head and said much ‘h. same thing. — Halifax Chmmu: llumperlcu trailers and truth have been accepted as a mus: 1. too long. Hundreds of drivers hivr been killed when involved 1,, H‘. accident with I truck. The modem low clung passenger car will di-iv. right in under the high mm“ with the result that the top 5; “I car is sheared off Ind sometimes the driver's head goes mu, ,5, There are more than emu“ highway hazards without ha.-in them built in at the source on "N vehicles. — Waterloo, 0nt_, chmn. icle. -1! Brazilian: started right M... to plant more trees. there M'()u_]d be more coffee about five yea" from now. To the American house, wife, whose coffee purchases drop. ped 12 percent last month, 2}," seems a painfully slow w,;.. “I adjust prices. As 1': true of {non persunal_problems today. neon}! want. action from the White Housg And the White House doesn't seem to have any influencI with tr“, However. Republicans need not bp- pcrturbed at Mr. Eisenhower‘: lack of control over coffee production. Democrats tried it in 1950. '11,“, committee finally passed the prpb. lcm along to the justice depart- ment. The coffee tree dldn‘t. pay any nttention to the justice depart. merit. either. — Detroit News, —slr:—'I‘bc other day my um and I were watching I lone seal in a pool at the Bronx Zoo. A soil- tary sea gull atood It the ad‘. of the pool. Soon the sell emerged from the water and threw a fish to the gull, which ate the fish and flew :w:y. I have known only nng similar example of Inimnl ggn. erosity. when I wu a :mall boy 1 had . dog which would dig it}. I choice bone and give it to . particular canine friend nf rm when he came to play. The Mar- Neil of Barra. East Orange. N J, -— Letter to New York Times. —R:t.lier typical of new products shaping up in designer’: office is a razor to be int.-duced nationally late this year or in early 1955. In- stead of using individunlx blades, this razor is loaded with I 40-inch reel of thin steel. whose length. wise edge is sharpened. The real work: very much like a roll -of film in a camera. Each time th- part of the shaving edge in us) gets dull you twist in key attached to the razor. and thin exposes a new edge. winding the old edge on to n used-blade real. The razor it being field-tested at A retail price of 35, which includes two 31.2.5 reels. Each 40-inch reel II equival- ant to 32 conventional single-edn razor blades. the designers any ~ Wall Street Joumnl. REFRIGERATION Houuhold, Ii:o man: man .. walk-in coolers. dairy cI:cI. etc. We nervlco and I’O])flIl‘ any make of electrical rc- frlgeration equipment. WIRING OONTRAOTORS Contact us for any wlrliiz Job from Innhllln: 3 Iwitcli to wiring your home. Moton. 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HONOION, N over a Billion of Iiistvranrfi COVEPRQO. BRANCH. 1)’ confidential. ‘