OP, you did it wrong. It should have been more formal, like this article:
Daylight Saving Time begins at 2 a.m. Sunday morning
(by
Charlie Riedel/Associated Press)
This is the weekend most Canadians will gain an hour of sleep as they make the switch from Standard Time to Daylight Saving Time.
Before going to bed on Saturday night, turn your clocks and watches behind one hour.
The major Canadian exception is Saskatchewan, which remains on Standard Time year round.
For the rest of the country, Standard Time returns Nov. 6.
Due to the gained hour of sleep, drivers are more alert behind the wheel on Monday.
A 1996 study in the New England Journal of Medicine showed an eight per cent decrease in the number of motor vehicle accidents on the Monday after the spring time change.
Many home safety experts say syncing other activities to the time change, such as replacing smoke-detector batteries and refreshing home emergency kits, makes those safety tasks easy to schedule and remember.

