Petty officer Pete Younger left, of Toronto. checks a service pistol li.ll'E by Ldg Sea. Rowan Fergus- nu Hampton. P.E.l.. a member oi the security staff on board HM- IN CARRIER lsiudenis Swupl With Workers An engineering students alternate between class room and industry is under way at Waterloo College at Waterloo. It. The aim is to connlne practical zperienea with academic train- Each student will spend his first it weeks in college and then is weeks at a lob in industry and will continue this alternating pro- cedure for six years. until cadu- Studentr will be paired so that whenoneiaat collegetheother will be at work. and each will change places with the other at the end of each period. This will keep classes at a steady rise and ovoid manpower interruption in industry. . The study-and-work program wul cover the full calendar year. except for two vacation periods - - of one week each at the end of December and the end of April. FIVE COURSES OFFERED Courses are offered in five e ,i in. branches - mechan- ical. chemical. electrical. civil and engineering physics. Students "in-plant" work will be checked by college co-ordina- tors and they must have a satis- ICS Bonaventure. Canada's new laircralt carrier. recently arriv- In in Halifax on her maiden .voyage from Belfast. Northern Ireland (National Defence Photo) i RELIGION BY VERY REV. GEORGE rim Moderator of the factory plant record to proceed AND LIFE C. PIDGEON. D.D., LL;D. United Chanel at Canada "THE FLAMING HEART. . . . AND THE OPEN HAND." "The Flaming lieart and the 0p- cu iland. Father. l owe Thee." lu an old notebook I have just (hhmi this saying-l have no rec- Hill of the author. But what a mes- s.l;c it is for our people ir. this mp:-rous country. lie were studying .a new inter- p--:-tulion of Moses character. won this turned up. But um-u ltloses began his efforts on mhali of his oppressed people. in motto was. "The flaming luarl." and the clenched list. Thu wouidnt' work. Moses lnund- to his coat. Even the op- ywu-sed rcsenied V. ' and fear- in use it. Moses' heart was ai- nuts aflamc with anger at injus- lit'0. but his methods needed chap icnlng. it took Moses to years in the quiet of a shcphe in life to lmrn the patience. the self-giving and the faith in God required in his nmsipn. There is a glowing account of il.n'ids' flaming heart and open lmnd'in his choice of a site for an altar to the Lord. cruat mistakes. and had brought ---vi-re suffering on his people. 'r:u'se sufferings moved the king in repentance: "l have done wick- iuily. but these sheep. what have llwv done?" was his plea. l'nder the inspired guidance of lime parish picnic Tuesday July limit. lluzaar and dance. Flat. River ll.-ill. July lath. Barn Dance Cliff Pctcrs. Rollo Bay. Monday. July 15. Dance Iona East School. every ilhnday night. Dance Summcrville School Wed- ucsday. Good Music. Regular dance Bonvshaw inn Tuesday night; Burns Orchestra Grand River Picnic. July 23rd. ilrals 5-9. Also games. l(cliy”I Cross Picnic Wednesday .luly 24th. ice cream social Springton school. Wednesday. July 17th. Ringo and other games Rollo any Hall tonight. (thicken supper and bauar South Tiuatico August 7th tone to Lawn,Party and en- lvrtalnmsat Lot 06 Hall. Monday. July l5th. llalce C.Y.C. Hall Cardigan. Monday. July 15 Webster's Or- thottra Cemetery meeting at Bradst- haav. Tosaday. afternoon. July ll. Plcase attend. Harp Dance. Garfield McPbee's Rrookfleld. Wednesday. Durnia Or- lLl"Ill'l. Movie "The Texans" Tlirj5I'I Hall. Tusdli. -III! R J). 5 gtifi I I'll the spirit of the man too ready C King David had made one of his or COMING EVENTS the prophet Gad. David decided to buy a threshing floor owned by Araunah the Jebusitc. When this man heard the king's request. he offered him free of cost not only the land but with it the oxen an d their yokes for the burnt offering. But David answered: "No. but I will buy it of you for a price; I will not offer burnt offerings to Lord my God which cost me noth- mg." Here are two Greathearts with the flaming heart and the open and. These examples bear a message to our people in this prosperous country. The "free will offering" lis the support of all progress in our social and religious enterpris- I From coast to coast the church of Christ is supported by the free qivings of her people. There is no compulsion: churches are built. their leaders supported. and their missions at home and abroad sus- tained by gifts prompted by love to God and man. Every original idea and new ad- vance in social service must find it sfirst support in "the free will fering." We welcome what government is doing in the direction of the wel- fare state. but tax money can be used only for causes that com- mand general pproval. The success of every original idea and creative adventure in soc- ial advancement must find its support in the generlsity of peo- ple inspired by faith and love.. SAME LORD What do you men who are mak- ing money think of your brothers in Christ who are investing their lives in Christ's cause? He is your Saviour and Lord as well as theirs. The same Lord who called you calls them to lives of sacrifice. and if your heart is open to h is heart. you cannot but ask what He wants you to do for those whom He calls to put their lives into His CBIIIC. Your gains may he very small or very large. but their size does not affect the principle. What have you that you have not receivedu And if your measure of prosper- ity is God's gift. does it not carry with it a wrresponding measure of iesponsibllityt As a matter of fact. in all benevo lent enterprises. millions come from the millions and thousands from the millionaires. The newe papers inform us that the leaders of the Community Chest campaign: are preparing for the appeal that must sooon be made. SOCIAL WORKERS There is no class in the com munity who pare worthler of c o n - fidence and support than the so cial workers in the institutions which we are asked to support. They are highly trained and com- of the people whom they serve. Their scientific approach to the problems with when theydealln no way cools the warmth of their hearts and their adaptability to conditions as they find them. Theira is the flaming hear: and the busy hand. and no hands are more skil- ful in the activities of the hour The imagination of the pm depict the urgency they are supplying. and ft: the sakenfthe workers andofthoeeforwhomtbeywork 35 E 3. 5 E D 8 3' it best. it will take "a long pull and a an is? 35' 35 Es 5 T 5 the miracles ii? ii? iii: Iiizil ll giliilgiifiliitiliiii T 5. 1, Lire!” ngliiilii-I ' it i E93131!-if , I :i3Li ttltlittlil I 3: LEI o with the succeeding college pe- 'od Pay while at work, it is stated. ill be consistent with salary ranges for the type of work done. and work assignments will ad- vance in scope as the student progresses. Students may enter at the be- ginning of any quarter-July 1. Oct. 1. Jan. l or April 1. The first classes started July 2. For the present a limit of 96 is set on the number accepted at the start of each quarter. Enrol- ment for the current quarter is 74. and indications are that the full 96 will be accepted for the next two quarters starting Sept. 1 and Jan. 1. FORESEE 2.000 This envisages acceptance of nearly 400 students a year. which would build up to a student body of nearly aoo in the second year. 1,200 in the third year. and so on up to more than 2.000 in the sixth year. Present planning of facil- ities takes care of prospective en- rolment to the end of the third year. Entrance requirements consist of adequate pdas marks in grade XII. passage of a qualifications test set by Waterloo. and recour- mendation by the student's high- achool principal or vocational counsellor. Graduates of grade XIII may complete the course in five years. No difficulty is expected in placing students in industry. .l.G. liagey. president of Waterloo Col- lege associate faculties. says: HAMPTON The County Construction Com- pany have completed their con- tract of constructing a "till" be- tween the newly erected service station here and the T.C. Hiya- way. it is observed that this. com- panys' tender for building the West River Bridge between Mea- dowbank and New Dominion has been accepted. contract to be com- pleted by Dec. 31.. a paved road therefrom to the T.C. Highway ing the compieti of the bridge contract. Relatives and friends of Mr. Douglas Ferguson. son of Mr. and Mrs. G. Victor Ferguson. are plea- sed to learn that he is recovering from injuries, sustained in a re- lcent car accident. Douglas is aa- isociated with Mr. Neil menus in the undertaking business. A very large group of you? people assembled at Hampton .Church here on June in to hear land enjoy representatives of the iAtlantic Christian Training Cent- re. from Tatamagoucha. N.S. tell of the work being carried on since its organization three years ago in training people for more effective leadership in the community, and to help people find their life's work and to find the real meaning of life. Deep ., pathy is being expres- sea to the nearest of kin of the late Mr. James E. Gorveatt. late of Nine Mile Creek. whose early death occurred recently at the P. E.l. Hospital at the age of 5:. Friends of Miss Betty Lou Mae fean. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth-Macbean of Victoria. are tal. following a motor vehicle I15 cldent near here on the T.C High- T3 the immediate relatives d Frances accor- Expect ly GIOIGE KITCHEN Canadian Press staff Writer VIASHINGTON lCPl - Canada within the next few weeks may get the long-awaited reply to its dip- ' ' protest to the United States over the Norman affair. lt is more than two months since Canada requested the United States government to give assur. ance that it will keep out of the hands of congressional committees security information about Cana- diana which it receives from Cana- dlan authorities. The request. and the protest that lccomliuned it. grew out of the case of E. Herbert Norman. Cana- dian ambassador to Egypt, who killed himself in Cairo after the U.S. Senate internal security sub- committee revived old charges that he had been a Communist REPLY SOON . Far from gathering dust in the state d artment, the Canadian note is. the language of the dip- lomat. Mxeceiving active consider- ation" and official sources indi- cate that a reply likely will be forthcoming within the next few weeks. "Active consider-lion" appar- ently means that the Canadian re quest still is being discussed by the state department with the vari- ous U.S. government security agencies. such as the FBI. the Central Intelligent: Agency and the security branches of the im- 1 U. S. Answer To Protest At Reledse Of R. C. M. P. Report that. in a capital with so many, sprawling government agencies an Washington has. there are bound? to be leaks of information. i it never has been clear where the internal security subcommit- tee obtained the information it used against Norman. During the controversy that devdoped here following the diplomat's death. both the state department and the .FBI denied that they ever had given the subcommittee informa- tion about the diplomat. MISTAKEN IDENTITY The source of the L-omniit-' tee's charges apparently was a re- port the RCMP sent the FBI in 1951 advising that one of the RCMP's secret agents had identi- fied Norman as a member of the Communist party. Six weeks later. the RCMP notified the FBI that the report was based on "mis- taken identity or unfounded ru-! mor." . it is not known whether the sec- ond corrective report ever reached the subcommittee. in its April 10 note requesting at tightening up on the handling oft Canadian security information in Washington. the Canadian govern- ment said that faiiing such as-. surance, it would reserve the rightl in future not to supply such in-L formation to any U.S. governmenti agency. 1 Reports from Ottawa now indi- cate the new Progressive Conserv- imer belief that shelters and tem-T Monday. July 15. 1957 Army Studies I The Guardian Page 3 Civil Defence NIAGARA - ON - Till! - LAKE. o... ICPt-Members of an regu-l Fewer Farmers lar army and the militia are: . learning how to step in when f.'lVLI-i Bl” laI'9Qf Faflfls in defence workers need a hand! in an emergency. l orrsws tCPl-Canldfl farm 111: course at Camp NlIlltl'l.npopu.IailDIl declined between 151 fins! of it! kind for the Clnldillliand 1956. the bureau of statistics Army. is in charge of instnictors'said Friday. but the average farm from the federal civil defence is larger than it was five years school at Arnprior. Ont. They ago. The total area under culti- teach first aid, rescue techniques. vation has virtually not changed. and the care of persons injured. The bureau. in a report in bombed buildings. ion the I956 national censusnaaid Toronto militia men taking thelgreater use of farm machinery course will continue training atlcontributed to the changes. The number of persons living on farms declined by five per cent or l66.24l, between 1951 and 1966. home during the winter. Rubble similar to that which might be found after a bomb blast has been stockpiled. Special sec- In 195i there were 2.9ll.99ti living tions of walls. which can be filled .on farms compared to 2.746.735 with rubble to simulate actual con- last year. ditions have been built. The total number of occupied Mock casualties. made up with lfarms decreased 7.7 per cent from gaping wounds and other mjuries.i62.'l.09t in 1951 to 575.015 in 1936. are part of a regular Tuesday lAs the total area under cultivaton night display by members of t.I1eidec'reased only 0i per cent. the St. Cathannes rescue squad lavt-rage size of farm increased to Development of nuclear ucap-.3022 acres in 1956 from 279.3 in ans has outmoded the army's for-119511 porary dugouis were sufficient protection against bombing. CD 1 Cool Night! planners now pin their faith in , evacuation. especially in key tar-i Thu” D335 gel areas, iit's not too late to dodge the next The uncertainty of uhere bombs I heat wave. Come to Maine. Aver- wiil fail. however. makes rcscue.8EE -IULV and August. lfmPEi'l- work of prime importance. The! W79 15 57-1 d9El'09S- loll" SIWP armyls aim is to hate trzitucd menf during 0001 "'i5,hi5- Hi"? fun 0" who can be called on to help uhcn i tiafln days. Write for FREE Va- Ecatinu Planning Kit ltlaine Va- ative government is planning toitlic)i"'9 needed. 5355 BFI:!- R. G. . cation Service Zitl Gateway Circle. would be highly beneficial follow-p P.T.0. and motor driven. New Holland No. 55 Rol- FEEDS ARMY A m 0 D 1 Soldier! permanently; modern 500-man mess hall. T h a stationed in the Army's multi-rnil- most modern equipment availab lion dollar camp at Gagetown N. l Ie is used to prepare tasty meals B.. is Pte. George Gauthier oflfor the soldiers who are served Charlottetown. Here Gauthier. aft-afeteria-style. migration department and otheri take a fresh look at the system of; cook, mashes boiled potatoes in a' National " ' large mixing machine in a bright pleasure and enjoyment and do Says Quebec Has (not hope to sell gems which wep "I8 holiday at .Lac la Roonge. He now stretches 15.000 miles. includ- was. accompanied by Resources mg 530 miles of the Pan-Amer Minister Harkncss of Calgary. government bureaus. . - - - - . Whether the American reply will :'v);::a3,gem5 Ssemmy mformmmn be satisfactory to Canada is prob- I ' lematical. The U.S. take; the view. m-mi-i-mu that it has been doing all along puny 110,593 what Canada now suggests but; Photl. Venezuela's iiigiiways flEliAili"I( ican highway. Diamond Lode than cut and polished." The members meet in the sum- mer for field trips and in the win- MONTREAL (CF)-R. G. Brit- ter to cut and polish stones- ton. president of the Montreal ""33"V9 L0f”'d- M0” 0' "'9 memo Gem and Mineral Club. says there be” 3," "I "'9 "Ede 3"3'W3Y T are diamonds to be mum in Que. ptliree- Jewelers. a stone-cutter and beep ltwo lcueiry salesmen. I umthough W W few diamonds. -Yilr. Bntton is an aircraft tech- have been discovered in the pro- "M3" vince." he admits. eologists claim rock formations in certain Pfime Minisfer I northern areas are of the type which yield these p r e c io n s ' mm. Leaves On Holiday! As an amateur prospector-gem . g - . . collector. he has been looking J02:T3:?enL(l;:gr ll:rf':"Tb;u":l3::i amund himself. So far. he's dis- l,.,my ,0, I hands, in me weal covered stones he thinks are blue and Sam he W” return .0 me sapphir... just 65 miles north of capmu Tummy. July 23. Montreal. in the Grenville. Que., Mr. Diefenbaker la" lhonb. 379- after a cabinet meeting. heading in his hobby. and six nionthslmmaliy for Calgary Wm, . wont ago he and seven other men with lsmp .t winnipeg umon on me similar inclinations formed theiwny. ' Montreal Gem and Mineral Club. He was to attend the Cslgaryi first of its kind in Quebec. Stampede today and go on tel "We collect simply for our own inorthern Saskatchewan for a flair: P. E. I. FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE NOTICE OF SEMI-ANNUAL COUNTY MEETINGS OiLcai'y Public Hall. Wednesday. July 17-8:00 p.m. Birch Court-Experimental Farm-Thursday, July 18-8:00 p.m. United Church Hall, Souris. Friday, July 19- 8.00 p.m. Discussion on Potato Tariffs, Butter Floor Price, Poultry Industry, Federation Development and- Improvement. Members are urged to attend Non-members are invited to attend and join. If you plan to continue farming-you need the Federation. Attend your County Meeting. Whuelaw. zone 2 CD coortiinator - pm-"and. Maine for Ontario. L Maine Dept. Ind. & Comm. RACEWAY PHOTO SERVICE DAILY-FINISH ROLL FILM EACH F R E E 0, 9 l?.9E'?9E!'LE5..l9: BOX NO. 40 cnAnLo'rrr:'rowN. IRE-L N0. c.o.n.': H5" X 1" NEW HOLLAND I 1. GRASSLAND FARMING I ! DEMONSTRATION AT RALPH GAY'S FARM. WINSLOE I L TUESDAY. JULY 16 AT 1:30 P.M. You are cordially invited to see New Holland's dem- onstration of their famous baler No. 68677 models. - mm abar Rakes; the new No. 46 trail-type models and I farm wagons. 6 Grafton St. East Charlottetown Phone 7369 ATTENTION , MILK PRODUCERS L SOLVE YOUR MILK COOLING . PROBLEMS Iv INSTALLING A VICTOR russo L. J. ROSSITER I 1 W..- -4- DROP IN COOLER This unit can be installed by one man in 'a matter of aeconth. It weighs only 85 pounds and Will fit easily in the trunk of a passenger car. Just Drop-In - - - Plug-ln! No installation costs. no labour costs: need not be bolted down because it operates without vib- rgffnn, also MILK COOLING CABINETS Made of gaivanbed steel and bonderized for rust- reaiatanoe. They are designed for long life. easy and handling of milk cans There is a minimum of parts. they give long care-free service. One motor werates both agitator and condenser fan to reduce electricity costs. The condensing unit is hermetically sealed and carries a five year warranty on the sealed mechanism. PALMER ELECTRIC LTD- T N uuan UJDIIIZY ll. THAI. rionil? gt" Treatrnent Plants -ea-as rams--a. .. at.- SOLD AND DISTRIIII TED ON I E. I. IV DOUGLAS BROS IISKIIT IT. Drains- 'i L . 'A' I -n-O... on..- ..n.. I A . & JOIIES