:23! A race. fl-court”; . A THE GUARDIAN Authorised on second urns mu -'0'! Omso no at. man Tho llhnd uunrdhn rubulhlu Us . (.'lIUlll.A'l'l0N total City zone ..... ..................................... 8.16? Retail Trading zone 3-”; all ourm ...- -........ I3- rgur Nu hid .. ......-........................................-.. I330! Editor on-I blrmngln; Director, J. is durnotl Auoclnlc Editor. lfrlnl Wlllmr. "Tho Strongest Memory is Wicket WWII the Weakest Ink" UHAIILOTTETOWN szrrunnnv, M-A-RCII 24, 1951 Festival ,0! Ilene Easter Day proclaims the triumph of life. The first Easter scene is itself the best commentary on the majestic message announced from the angel's lips: "He is not here. He is risen." The miracle of the Resurrection is the cornerstone of the Christian faith. Our spirits are stirred by the renewal of the hope of mankind, just as nature is stirred by the fevlving strength of the sun. And while the anniversary is of universal significance, it is also, like all Christian festivals, intensely personal in its meaning. It must be felt and exper- ienced individually. Easter is traditionally the time for new apparel,-which, for so many people, gives a lift of spirit and a renewal of self esteem. For the children, it is an occasion of many pleasant customs. There is a spirit of goodwill and happiness in the atmosphere, carrying the foretaste of spring. Easter is also a time of music. In the churches, choxisters will sing some of the loveliest music ever written, touching chords in responsive hearts and enhancing the meaning of the scriptural text and the words of the preacher. Devout praise and thanksgiving will be the order of the day. The whole Christian world will rejoice in the fact that Christ is risen! A lllortlly cause Among the worthicst institutions in the Province is the Charlottetown Hospital. which had its busiest season last year, with 122 additional beds in the new Pavilion being occupied practically all the time. Reconstruction of the old wing, now almost completed, will give larger service areas to the laboratories, pharmacy, and 'central supply rooms on the second floor. Three large operating rooms and recovery rooms. with other auxiliary services on the third floor, are also about ready for use. On the first floor the X-ray rooms have been enlarged and the equipment renewed. A completely new deep X-ray therapy ma- chine has been in service for the past nine months; a new cystoscopic room is conveniently located adjacent to the X-ray department. The value of services of this kind to the community need scarcely be emphas- ized. It is important, however, to remem- ber that the Hospital depends upon public support, and one of the means of ex- pressing practical appreciation of the work accomplished and under way is by patron- r izing the entertainments put on from time to time in aid of the institution. The East- or Monday play, "The Charming Intruder," which is being presented by the St. Char- les Auxiliary Society, is a case in point. The afternoon and evening performances will be given by a talented local cast, un- der the veteran direction of Mr. J. Austin Tralnor, C.D.A., who is rounding out fifty years in various lines of show business. There will be specialties between the acts, making a well-balanced programme of en- tertainmcnt. It is hoped that, as in other years, the attendance will be large at both pcrfornranccs. - Land Titles This Province has no provision for the registry of title of land as distinct from the registry of deeds with the consequence that prospective purchasers must invest- igate titlc back to the original Crown - grant, which involves a long and expensive search, -or take the risk of making no search or a partial one which may result in loss of the investment or unexpected trouble and expense in correcting flaws in the title. . A step is being made at the present . session, with the introduction of ' "The Quietlng Titles Act" to eventually remedy the situation. Title or ownership may be registered wider the Act to the yery great advantage of both the owner and prospect- , 0-lvc purchaser or lender. Tire cost of orig- .. l,nIlgl!zlhl:l'otlon will be. of course, fairly lrlghd The court must be fully satisfied u. r .- r EDIIURIAL NUI E3 ' The earliest it is possible for Easter to fall is March 22, only three days earlier than this'year.g l With the number of eager hunters we have to the square mile there seems little danger in bringing deer into this Province, except perhaps to the deer. . . 0 O U The 101st Oxford-Cambridge boat race is today. For some hours more than four miles of the Thames changes from a main thoroughfare of traffic to a race-course. "The fishing industry must learn to merchandise its productrwith the efficiency of the meat industry" is the sound advice of Fisheries Minister Mayhew, at the same time tossing a well-deserved bouquet to breeders, railwaymen, packers and meat handlers. O The welcome amendment to the Bail- able Proceedings Act does away with the civil arrest of debtors without a Judgels order, at least so far as residents of the Province are concerned. Leather tanning continues to be one of the few industries in which the small- scale operator can With an almost unlimited market just now and for a long time to come it looks like an attractive opening for local enterprise. successfully compete. C O The Provincial authorities may have had some difficulty even after selecting the oak and saplings from the Provincial crest as the distinguishing mark for the new highway route markers. fact they could not have been in error. An Order in Council of 1769 authorizes an oak and shrub while the design registered with the Royal College of Heralds in 1905 provides for the oak and three saplings. As a matter of We have been told recently that it was all a mistake to consider potatoes fatten- ing-they are no such thing as nutrition- ists now declare. comes the announcement that milk is not fattening-this on the authority of the head of the economics service of the Ontario Department of Agriculture. be surprising to be told next that clams are not indigestible but highly nutritive. On top of this discovery It would not William Morris, English poet, decorator, and socialist, was born this date 1834. He had a deep enthusiasm for mediaeval arch- itecture and entered an architect's office but turned to painting under the influence of Rossetti. He gave up painting for the handicrafts and founded a firm of house- hold decorators, all the time turning out much imaginative and romantic poetry. He attempted to restore the forgotten typo- graphic arts of the 15th century by means of the Kelmscott Press. was his great Chaucer volume illustrated by Burne-Jonesy A notable product Canadian and U. S. A. police are join- ing forces in the interests of defence against Communists, and no doubt other malefact- ors. U. S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, de- clares the F. B. I. has a special agent per- manently assigned to the R. C. M. P. head- quarters at Ottawa, and the R. C. M. P. has its representative at the F. B. I. in Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Washington. By this method both forces hope to cover effectively crime investiga- tions in both countries. I Congratulations 'to the Hon. Dr. W. J. P. MacMillan, O.B.E., dean of the Legis- lature, who today celebrates his seventietlr birthday anniversary. With the exception of one four-year period, Dr. MacMillan.has represented Charlottetown continuously in the House since 1923, and in that time has served as the Provlnce's first Minister of Health and Education, as Premier, and as leader of the Opposition. A high com- pliment to his public career was paid dur- ing the present session by Premier Jones, who expressed the hope that Dr. MacMll- lan would continue to occupy his seat for years to come. His friends, who are legion in both parties, will heartily indorse the sentiment on this occasion. Q C ' Fundy National Park in New Bruns- wick, which was opened last year, drew 62,844 visitors in the last six months of 1950, according to the Government Travel Bureau. "One of New Brunswlclrs weak- nesses from the tourist standpolnt,'.' says the Saint John Telegraph-Journal, -"has been a'laclr of things calculated to keep chum lTl-lE ouaaplalv, ..crrARr.o1'r.rm3wN i no olirio Vlcrll 1 PUBLIC FORUM Thin column is open to lbo dimension by correspondent: of quecllons of interest. The Gulrdian does not necessar- ily c the opinion of correspondentk. EASTER MORNING Sirrwe see some wonderful firings in the Scriptures, such as. man made in God's l1'nagc,imnn's fall, the Messiah promised, God in human flesh. dvwe-ll.in-g among us. The conflict between good and cvil, coming to its highest al- titude on Ca-lvnry's cross. but the victorious Christ conquering death for us is the wonder of wonders. We see the stone rolled away. the empty grave, the angel in wlme. Mary Magdalene saw two angels. She loved more and saw more. We should see the door open for us, to the Sopirlt. world. No death, just 9. t. sit-ion. Man is im- mortal. I wish to.llve on and on, a small part of the "so great a cloud of wl-tn-esses", who watch how the church militant carries the borvcfr. The early Christians cric- brated Easter every week. Every "first day of the week". or Lord's day, was a reminder of the risen living Christ-to them I matter of supreme importance. They met for prayer, fclllowshtp and break- ing of bread. To get enllhussd over this, we would need to give material things ll. second placc.- And as Jesus said. deny self, take up our cross daily and follow Him. The fLrst step is to be a follower, next I dccllple or learner, than a servant and after that a friend. We are then carrying our cross, whether taken up in a voluntary way, or simply bearing patiently what is laid upon us. Both lend to victory, and faith to believe l-lis words-wlrem I am there shall my servant be. I am. Sir, clc.. J. A. MacKENZlE Kensington, P.E.l. PRINCE EDWARD BATTERY Sir, - There has been uncertainty as to the exact date of the enn- atruction of Prince Edward Battery. now lmown cs Fort Edward in Victoria Park. The original Battery wu prob- ably constructed between 1794 and 1196 on direction of Edward Duke of Kent. then Commander-in-Chief ln America, along with other de- fence works for the protection of the part, but It the foot of what is now Grant George street, on or immediately cut of the site of the building now owned by the Assoc- iated Shippers. In on effort to arrive at the exact dcto of the construction of the not- tery on in present site, I wrote Professor 110. Survey, Archivist at Halifax. and ho advised me in Feb- ruary of lost your that as nearly u he could find out. Prince lul- l831 shows. it then mounted six guns, as it does today. The Battery was reconstructed in 1882 on the sunken-bar-betto plan, which wu then the most improv- ed system of earth-works. The work was done by Mr. Robert Pal- merkgrnder the supervision of Major Irving on plans approved by ot- tnwa. some years ago repairs were made to the Battery and it. has since been kept in very good con- dition. . However, thc' magazine needs rc- pnlrs at the precentutime. Slight repairs are necessary to the stone work. The upper walls and roof, both of wood. lire in poor condition. The wooden roof should be removed, and a flat roof placed in position, like that of the magazine in Vlctorln Barracks. A wooden roof on n pow- der magazine seems out of place. We have few enough historic sites here. Let us preserve the few we have. This magazine should be re- pnlred and 9. flat roof placed on it as it originally had. I am, Sir, etc., , '1'. E. MscNU'lT Charlottetown. THE EASTER. MESSAGE Sir.-Christ is risen! is the Easter Mesage, the story of eternal tri- umph of life over death. the pro- mise and pied-;;s olf man's im- mortaliilty. Corruption could not devour I-liml He said "I am He that was dead. and behold I am alive fore-vermore and have me keys of death and hades". 'l7nc Saviour lives no more to dicl "Christ died"; this is an lndis. pu-table fact directly menatloned some 'one hundred Ind seventy- frve tune: in the New Testament. and being an historical fact as well as a Biblical one it cannot be contradicted. Christ died for our sins. Ho: conquers-.6 death and rose again the third day. The empty tomb declarm that the sin- ncr's debt has been paid. True believers know that Christ arose and that they on risen with Hun. We know Him as the liv- in; and intercedlng Christ. Ha purchased us with His own blood. Every sin of those who accept Him as Saviour has been fully paid on Calvary. "Colvary covers it all". We are not bought with silver or sold. our salvation is 1 free gift. There have been many false Christ-B. Is God told us there would be, bu-t,onaly One come back from the grave and revealed Him- self to His followers. 'Rre dicciplcs of Buddrc, Mobcmmcd, Joseph Smith, Mary Baker Eddy. have never seen their leodctc since the day they were laid in the grove. But the dloclplu of the Lord sow Him and talked with Him am: He had risen from the dead. To- day we may know by tii work that He does in lrrunon beer-to that He over lives, and the! He will come back again Just In in cold lie would. The rcuurcction of Christ from the dead curlliu and noun: life and immortality for us: is it not DGOTWEGOEOOW St)&: i) Old C harloltelown (And 9. r. l.)' BOYHOOD DAYS AT - ORWI-ILL "The farm "was not large. a hun- dred acres. and there was much waste land. The stream and rat vine. and n road that followed it, A brook that fell in clumps of H895. all occupied space; but the remainder was very good, men and easily worked. The farm also was a world in miniature. There were upcn it horses, cattle, sheep, D185. geese, hens, ducks, wag. ons, slelghs, and the proper Km. plement of tools and implements. The cart was made by an elder of the church. Fifty-four years after. Wards. as appeared from the Mac- ter's bcoks. I sent for this lame man to survey the cart, as I Jug. Pectod it required some Jcpalra. He admitted that the vehicle hid not lasted as long as it should, and he feared he must have put bad stuff in lt.' He was willing to make the replacement: ,fr-cc of charge. as he wished to'”mnlntcin his reputation for sound work, f'Small as it was. ml. ram. .,,., the scene of all human industry. Wool was shorn, carded. Spun, and woven into cloth. Cattle were kill- ed. The hides were tanned by one neighbour, made into shoes by another. or into homes by n third. Tire geese were caught and lightly plucked, so that the fenth. era might not fall and be wasted. Bread was made from flour. water, and salt-these three elements alone. It was not polluted with fat nor fermented with yeast. It W35 made HEM by persistent kneading under the strong hand: of A woman. "Three mills save to that young world an air of force and activity. In the springtime. when I dun burst and the water flowed away, in boy could walk upon the foun- dation: of thb world as if he were Lucifer himself. 'l'hc ma the lower mills ground grain of all kinda-wheat. out-s. bu-icy. and buckwheat. The middle mill. which was exactly opposllc to the gate, sowed timber with upright now: set in conga. The ' ' A -Any -olctlu who pick: up I V In lrltcb-biker courts oblrn. . lnlur! Ind death. It dcu nct , mutter Itblt , ulnrinnlly, in- clined hitch-hikers are only a minority of all those who ltlrurnb ride! by tho rcrmlde. No driver can tell whether be in picking up one of the minority or one of the majority. Admittedly, the chance of gcttlnmone of the litter id" I'1'ccta'. but in it worth the gamble when the driven life may be at stake? - Kingston Whig- Standard. They have found a place, in the Hall of lime of the P--” t mrlldingc, for the painting by the artist Hobbemf which has been pruentcd to Canada by the clov- ernment oUThc Netherlands. It was the wish of the Dutch oov. ernnrcnt that the painting should find I home in the '6--" t Bulldlnls. but for n time there was doubt that this could be bi-ought about -- so much of the wall space accessible to the public is token up with huge paintings in heavy and ornate frames of be- whlskcrcd worthles from our parl- lomentary past, ex-speakers and ex-ministcrl. The Hobbcmn has been accommodated. but the broader "on remains. The Journal has sunectcd that there should be I clearance from the Buildings of paintings which are ---gm-. ii an .ii'il16ll hll II! no,” .12-IVE zcul up than 1, 1- Plrtloulc, 1- when . meal: is glttlnipto Allow 5;; manna. of Fame IOIIII other " Ippro ,1 our place one or two woiks of mi Notional Gwen. gum; cvcry glo often wouu lmnq- , popular and cultural nclc. Ar 9,: the old portrolla, or meat of them, they should be taken out of their francs and given into the cuggod, of the Archives for lhrlgo - 0-' handed over to duccndum wmi my duirc to have them. -. oua. x ml .':urnal. . srccuns ' Al when He appoints to ' l so thou forth- me" M” It matters not If south or north. Bleak waste or sunny plot ' N0! think, 11 hlply He thou seek K be late i He doe: tthec wrong. To sill or gate L93" 35011 by hand. and long: It may be at to spy thee Ho 1,. I neither lzood art nor of any spec- ial historical interest .Thc sugges- tion was well received and we re- pcct it. If that were done there would be room for the occasional "guest" painting from the Nation- grnss. kelp, dulse, fit for bedding cattle; fine my from the marsh, which made fodder and might be used to fill a mnttreaa. A man who looked back upon u long life and the farm he created would confess that 'musel-mud' was the foundation of his fortune. If the nutritive qusllty of this fertilizer was less than is cuppcsed., the disciplinary value of dredging it from the sea was precious. In the ccbuorlu were beds of decayed shell fish, ten feet thick. when the ice formed. huge 'dlxgcrs' were set up. operated by horses. A hole was cut in the ice; 3 long bum armed at the end with u trip-fork W33 10"” by I rude pawl and rack into the face of the bed. The load was lifted by n capstan, and came to the surface. white shells Ind block mud dripping with up water. The tr-cuurc was hauled on slelzhc for inland and pllced on piles upon the snowy fields to be spread in the springtime. For twenty years this shelf would dis- solve slowly and supply. the son with lime. Lniduity in hauling 'mud' was I sign of success, I rite: Ind it was often put upon land which but no need or could not be improved." -llrcm "rho master's Wife," by the into Sir Andrew Macphnll, mounting Upon A tower. -r or in thy counting Thou hut mlstden the now, But if He comes rlol, thou go gillltkvesper chtlmc. e e thou hen hll k H: hnltlllrl been witshntheenoril the t e. neither do 1 -'r. E. Brown i v.- Tlra Age-lllll Story ii a For we know that If our earthly house of this tabernacle were dis- Iolvod. we have at building of our on house not land: with lmrds cternnl in the heovcnl. H. J. A. BROWN. R.Cp. Orthopedic CIIIBOPODIST Now Located in the NEW CURRIE BLDG; isccond Floor Cor. Kent & Queen Sta. Two Entrance: 106 Kent 179 Queen Telephone 140 COMP prnsurumcrs V sranvrcr: p LETE Phnnrs 53 cujfgg - 1 i lied - I II t 181 QUEEN ST. AGENTS THROUGHOUT THE PROVINCE !;4I PROFESSION AL CARDS 7 Die W." R0 CUIOH Oh not yet. been imported. mill from the earliest times was can the timber from which many ships were built in shlpynrdc that extended down to deep wnug, A boy would no the chip launched. Indtncyeu-ortwo now: would come that rho won. cut away on the shores of South America with 3 loss of all hands: In caller don, the founder of the Ounotd Line was bottom uwnr to nnlcolrn ucquccn who save, blah pain to his otronctb and - industry, The ,sturnpI of the pine trio: which than two nwycro out and on yet to In men in plain that without the uulmc-u am” lion d Christ from the doll! NO crcryot in our Ilnlf someone hggf cold. cnrlcrt ,deOtl'l it Il&lcicnt foltlll. doflcknt to. none. Ind oulclcntfort-iron by only who bolicvo. 3;! Christina - rclrncr or-nduu OIIAIIJOTTITOYIN I01 Prince-IL fborrc Ill: now had i m "M M For-mot I Is A. LL I. NONI! 10 IJOAN Oborlouctown. P.l.I. Jouplr It. Macmillan. lAllll'l'II':'a)Bl..l(ll'Il0I, Ito VI Quota Jtrul PIIONI! HI may to an oclllctlch moll J. oluii o. o. - one IT I rlluflcole. ' A John P.- Nicholson. I.I..I. l curusnn. sorrci-ron., , , - cu. rui Print at. crmn Pbonozoll Goods! 1. Hmlml” crncortr A. moon. on. an ' no lolldlcn , bland - ltnncdlonllcolctaonncrcolllll . .r. A.-onitnrnncns -- .",l ; n':'n”i'7:m''.'.l... llolhr . In ' ' l -to - , --annoys-m N I 1123 Kent Street ."'"'l.l.J0. -we,-- 4''"”” is or rr. petitioner-fiititle before registering his , M M once there travellers wltnus for a while. They have M Mole. oilllmondcr of the . ulna, wt vs no toa- ' - ' nllowlngm clear tended to speed through our Province to ,..,,.,,, ,.,.,, ,,'?"',,,”,,',,”,i,',:':f,; &?.4'7f..,',i;.",',.cf','-".1: '.,,...,,,' ”"" "3 Nova sootlarrnd Prince Edward Island. nd- mm. lldigrlt should cwur gf;0.'-'IfiI;1... New! 30 ml; W mlrlng our sen.-rm-y on route but pausing only briefly, Fundy National Park will -nslourano-rthern,to rcnrlrin longer in New the majority wiroicomc to ilorrovltldavlllryumlonuula-nlayll dl'd',fl!l'I." But the major at- courugawlllr still be the Garden