fr «Mr Percy Simmonds .(le_ft) prizes to the winning {Pg}: in the Central Creamiers Mi By FORBES RHUDE . cmadinn Press Business Editor fig rental method of "mer- ndmg" goods — which some M-vers think will be one of -the “developments of the business Irene in the near fuitni-e—will ap- Pmtiy soon be available for him machine!'y- _, _ Taiil Mulliken, national director ‘tithe National Retail Farm mjpment Association of the States, outlined such a pin to a recent sales conference I, Toronto of Cockshu-tt Fa-rm xquipment Ltd. . It outlined by M1‘. Mulliken th plin‘ would have a base charge of a per cent per day of the value Leqiiipment, decreasing propor- tdiately for- longer periods. Ilnder the schedule, rental of a mo machine for one day would be$70; for one week $350 and In-30 days $1,050. John J. Phillips, Cockshutt’s general manager, said his com- pany is in agreement with a plan Iltliis kind. “It could,” he added, “he of great service to farmers.” NEED MORE FOOD S. C. Barry, director of produc- lion service, department of agri- ‘floday, across the nation, six ten voters are of the opinion that he Prime Minister, John Diefenbaker, has been doing a 89?dlob as head of the Govern- ment. One in ten do not think In and disapprove his handling of.-tlie-role. Three in ten have Indefinite opinion to give. ‘ the ,election_ campaign gets ‘I0 full swing, politic-al experts average man and wo- MII; are making ‘their own as- ‘°I3_m€fltS of just what the "’4I°11_aS a whole thinks about .l_)1efenbaker and his inter- Wlahon of the Prime Minister's I9§l)0n's"lbilities. The Gallup Poll, 3 Yeglfllar “opinion-pulse” “Uh? D90ple’s reaction to the llicanadgi and, thmough its af- Us 6S. In the U.K. and ‘the T0d'3=_y’S level of approval -_D1efenibaker is consider- N‘-N l_“8’hl"-T than it was last °mb€1‘-and this holds true i°p9"1°n Who disapprove has an m°"_’35°d—as more citizens wfiatngklng _up their mind on - 93’ think. - °_53me question was put by Mmgewers to a sample of the at f W011‘? for today’s report, Névelger conducted last I: ' _ We 03:)“ alpprove, or disap- ‘thee way John Diefen- EASTERN GUARDIAN bgglgrr CONCERT at ‘cam. bridge Walll, March 12th. Cam- I’ me§gGRESSIVE .Coiiservative - 3 Wlhlql bg held in St. Char- Th ’, 0“ 33'. March 10th. qmfafgndldate. Mr. John A. Mac- . ’W111be present. BE “ ’ 1,mdSURE to hear J. A. Mac- Iivg c’a ~,1‘0EI‘essive Conserva- CrgY_T\I}d‘ ate for Kings on ymmllthat 7:40 on Tuesday_ ..§fh‘::’§AR MEETING Home ma] S31 association, Montague March 1C0 £01 Monday evening, Ipeaker E at 8 o’clock. Special ' Veryone welcome. teii,,I§'(’,‘gL1-Elk. Il0LMAN’S in- gue orator will be visiting ’ Murray River and vi- ha co ednesday, March 12th I’ on .mP1e'£e set of samples. Ifirvj mfierested in this free Please li , collect either gstlgrténe Holman s "ERsoNALs Mr. Danie.dK9nneth Ballum, accom- Ny lgllr. John White, Wood- _ .-, bother students at vine‘ lson University Sack- » Spent the weekend at WEN M“ John Ballum, Mon- all levals of the population.’ Six In Ten Approve P. IM.’s tonduct, According To P-oII lwfvmiance of Prime Miinis-ters. e former’s parents, ‘ PRESENTS PRIZES WINNING RINK TWO Curling Championship played last week at the Mon- tague Curling Club. The cham- culture, Ottawa, told the confer- ence: “If our population growth con- tinues at the recent rate, we will need to increase our food output to feed the equivalent of a new city of between 300,000 and 400,- 000 every year.” “We have 2,000,000,000 acres of land. We farm only 174,000,000 -acres of it. Alt best, not more than 50,000,000 acres could be added, and even some of our present farm land is marginal and grad- ually being withdrawn from crop- ping. “Farming is changing from a way of life to a business, with large specialty operations taking over the dominant position.” However, farming still is larg- ely a farm- family enteruprise, Mr. Barry said 80 per cent of Canadian farms are fully-owned ‘by the operators and 72 per cent carry no mortgage debt. Cockshnt-t displayed to the con- ference’its new line of tractors, designed by Raymond Loewy. The Canadian Gas Association will hold its annual meeting at the Manoir jtichelieu, near Mur- pions are from the Summerslde ston. Stan Gay, Lloyd Lawless Curling Club are: Eric John-land Wyman Miller. Farm Machinery Rental May Be Tried Here Soon ray Bay, ue., June 24-27. A retail conference described as “tailored to the needs and in- terests of merchants in the four Atlantic provinces,” will be, held in Halifax March 24-25, the Cana- dian Retal Federation an- nounces. The conference, which the fed- eration will hold in partnership with the retail section of the Hall- fax Board of Trade, will have on its agenda such topics as promo- tion of products of the Atlantic area; sales training ‘on a commu- -nity basis} financing of small I; u s i n e s s; personnel relations sales taxes; and transportation problems. ' Speakers will include G. Alan Burton, Toronto, vice - president and managing director of Robert Simpson Co. Ltd.; Howard Mann, Mon-cton, general manager of the Maritime T r a n sportation Com- mission; and Eric Gracey, To- ronto, general manager of the -Canadain I n'd u s t ri a 1 Traffic League. . ’ Kenneth A. Ross, general man- ager of the Halifax Board of Trade, is acting as conference secretary. they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earle MacDonald. ald with children, Eleanor and baker is handling his job as Prime Minister?” In November, as the table be- low shows 4 per cent _had no opinion to give. Today this pro- portion has dropped to 30 per cent, on the national stage. ‘ 1957 Today A November Approve 51%- 60% Disaiplprove 5 10 No opinion 44 30 Regionally, approval for Mr. Diefenlb-aker’s work remains at exactly the same level in. the West, and has increased by considerable margins in Ontario and Quebec. In the Maritimes approval is slightly lower, while the proportion of those who dis- approve has increased. A corn- parison between the Gallup Poll’s November report and that for today, in the four sections of the country under study, shows this pattern. Disapprove No Opinion Nov. Today Nov, Today 5% 13% 33% 26% 10 15 54 41 3 9 _ 40 25 7 7‘ 25 25 Nov. Today , Approve Maritimes . . . . . 62% 61% Quebec 36 44 Ontario . . . . .. 57 66 The West . . . . . .. 68 68 Although the question is not strictly comparable, it is interest- ing to review the Gallup Poll’s published findings on attiudes towards Mr. St. Laurent reP0Tt' ed ‘ just after the 1953 Federal election. Interviewers at that time asked the voting PU-bllc how they‘ wouid nate_Mlr. St. Laurent’s handling of h1s_J0b 35 Prime Minister. The findings: A good job . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 58% A fair job . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 20 A poor job . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10 No opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 12 In the neint report. the P011 will present the attitudes towards approval or disapproval for Mr. Diefenbaker as between the vari- ous political parties, and outline the main reasons given by 31059 Canadians who disaPP1‘0Ve th_e Prime Minister’s handl-mg of his responsibilities. LORNE VALLEY Mrs. Donald Shaw was a pas; senger to Charlottetown on Thurs- day. Mr. and M.1‘s. Malcolm Mac- Leod were overnight visitors to Montague on February 26. They were guests of their son-in-law, and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Alex MacDougall. Mr, and ‘Mrs. Walter Coates of Amherst, N.S.. Spent Ihe first weekend of March with Mrs. Coates’ father, M1‘- Ward Crane‘ Mrs. Harold Jay and Mr. Floyd Jay, Pisquid, motored to Lorne Valley on Friday. while here Allison and Mr. and Mrs. Earle MacDonald motored to Pisquid on Sunday, March 2nd. While there they visited Mr. and Mrs. George Jay and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jay. Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Mac- Leod were recent visitors to Cen- tral’ Royalty where they w e r e guests of their son and daughter- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mac- Leod. Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Mac- Leod, Uigg, ‘motored to Lorne Valley on March 2. While here they were guests of Mrs. Laura MacQueen and Messrs Ernest, Neil and Walter Shaw. Miss Anna Goodwin has re- turned to her homein Bangor, after spending some time with her grandmother, Mrs. Mae Mc- Aulay. Miss Shirley Jay of Edmonton, Alberta, was a recent visitor to Lorne Valley. She was the guest Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd MacDon- - of Mr. and Mrs. E.A. MacDon- ald. Mr. and MES. Stanley Morrison and son Glendon, Orwell Cove, motored to Lorne Valley on Mon- day to visit Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd MacDonald, and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Maclntyre. The Misses Shirley and Elaine MacDonald and Pamela, Beverly and Caron Hatton, were visitors to Montague on Saturday. Mr.‘ George, B.C., accompanied the school boy curlers to the Island. While in the province he was a visitor to Lorne Valley, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Mac- Leod. Messrs Heath MacGrath, Lloyd MacDonald, James MacNeill, James Callaghan, William Hatton and Daniel Shaw were visitors to Charlottetown on February 27th. They were among those who were present at the Rollaway to wel- come Prime M1'nister Diefenbak- er. r : Mr. and Mrs. Francis Mac- Intyre motored to Midgell on Thursday where they were guests of Mns. MacIntyre’s mother, Mrs. Homer James. Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Crane and family of Montague, were Sunday guests of Mr. —-and Mrs. Donald Shaw on March 2nd. Mr. and Mrs. Francis MacIn- tyre motored to Orwell Cove on Sunday. While there they we r e guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Morrison. Mr. and Lorne MacLeod were visitors to Montague on Sat- urday, March 1st. . AM. TIIREATENS DISCIPLINE BUDAPEST (Reuters)—Prime Minister Ferenc Muennich has threatened new measures to en- force working discipiine in the factories. Workers at the Mavac factory——one of the biggest in Bu- d-apest—-reportedly went on strike for three hours earlier this year after a dispute about new wage terms. - . STORM CLOSES SUEZ CAIRO. (AP) — Egy.pt’s worst blinding s a n d s t o rm in years caused the Suez canal, ports and airfields to close Friday. In near- zero visibility the 5,469-ton Brit- ish f r e i g h ter Shahzada went aground in the canal. Forty-three ships were ordered to ride at anchor in the canal until the weather clears. TORONTO, —A smile of joy breaks out across the face of 11- vear-old Kevin Karner of Toron- to as dot-‘.oi‘s tell him that he will not be blind. He was injured HE'S Nor BLIND J. Williams of Prince Mon_ March 10. 1958 The Guardiagnliage 5 Liberals Hold Meeting AI Georgetown The Diefenbaker government's trade policies and Farm Bill were strongly criticized at a Georgetown meeting Friday night by Mr. T. J. Kickham, Kings County Liberal candidate. The Conservative Farm Bill was “a disappointment” to the farmers in this area, Mr. Kick- ham said. » Other speakers included Senator George H. Barbour, P. R. Mc- Cormac, president of the Queens County Liberal Association and George Saville, M. L. A. The meeting, attended by up- wards of 200 persons, was chair- ed by W. R. Soloman, Mayor of Georgetown. Curling Today At Montague Curling schedule today at Mon- tague: . 7:00 P. M. East ice: J. S. DesRoches, Edith Clay, Lester Carpenter, K. Hughes, vs. Wm. MacLean, L. ‘Sinclair, C. Johnston, M. Poole. West ice: Physical Fitness — R. R. Beck, vs. F. Vuozzo. 9:00 P. M. East ice: A. A. Fraser, B. Smith, B. Koke, D. Wightman, vs. . Fraser, E. Cudmore, R. Knox. C. Gordon. West ice: Physical Fitness. MURRAY RIVER Miss Annie MacLeod, Charlotte- town, spent the past weekend at the home of her prents, Mr. and Mrs. Gavin MacLeod, Murray River. Mr. Leongrd Herring of Bella _Coola, British Columbia, is spend- ing some time at the home of his parents, Mr. nd Mrs. Louis Her- ring, Murray River. « 6 Mrs. Addie Maccannell of Wood Islands recently spent a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clif- ford Keenan, Murray River. Chesley Moore, Murray River recently spent a week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Arsenault, Georgetown. ‘ 1VIiss.Janet lVIacKay, Charlotte- town, lls spending some time in Murray River, guest of her in MacLeod. grandparents, Mr. andvMrs. Gav- \ Congratulations are_ extended to the winners of the Shur-Gain amateur concert which was held in the Murray River hall on Feb- ruary 25th. The hall was packed to see these talented young con- testants, all under the age of six- teen. Due to the storm, Mr- Eric Jessome was unable to attend Dr. Bonnell was master of cere- monies for the evening. Proceeds from the concert went to the Home and School. The many young friends of Master Andrew Clarey, Murra River, were sorry to hear that he broke his leg in two places on March -3rd. Andrea is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Clarey. The March meeting of the Mur- ray River W. I. met at the home of Mrs. Fred Brehaut on Monday March 3rd. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gallant and daughter Suzanne, have taken up residence in.the apartment of Mr. Gladstone Hickenbotham, Murray River. _c,D, JOURNALIST SENTENCED BUDAPEST (Reuters) -—- Jour- nalist Andras Sandor was sent- enced to eight years’ imprison- ment by a Budapest people's court for “initiating a movement to overthrow the peoples demo- cratic state" during the 1956 up- rising, the Communist party 21 e w s p aper Nepsza-badsag re- ported Friday. NORTHERN RIVER The Slave River, flowing 258 miles from Lake Athabaska to Great Slave Lake, was discov- ered by Samuel Hearne in 1771. in a hockey game and for a time Kevin saw again, his first ques- doctors feared he would lose his tion was sight. When heavy “When can I play bandages again?" Sister Barbara, 14, shares were removed temporarily and ‘II happiness. GGP Wirephotoi a - Mr. Roddie Martin, secretary of the ‘Montague Branch, Cana- dian Legion, is shown above pre- senting a one thousand dollar cheque on behalf of the Canadian Legion to Mr. At. MacDonald, Meeting In Ha .Conservative Candidates Almost all the 33 Conservatives from 31 Atlantic constituencies met over the week-end in Halifax N. S. to review the accomplish- ments of the Diefenbaker govern- ment, and the benefits that have accrued to the Atlantic Provinces since their first similar meeting in May, 1957, and to draw up a second set of “Atlantic Resolu- tions”~. All ‘four of the P. E. I. Con- servative candidate were pre- sent, accompanied by Geo. Rogens of Charlottetown and W. Chester S. McDonald of Summerside. Three other Cabinet Ministers were there in addition to Angus ‘ National Revenue, I-Ion. McLean, Minister of Fisheries. = CUrR|.ERS on PAYOFF skip of the Montague Legion curl- [ Optario. ing team which left Saturday to‘ represent P. E. 1., in the Domin-. l Iifax OI Hon. Geo. No_wlan, Minister of W. Brown, Minister without Portfolio, and Hon. A. J. Braooks, Minister of Veterans’ Affairs, the latter being general chairman of the meeting. Premier Stanfield of N. S. and Hon. Robt. Pichette of ,N. B. represented the Provincial governments. W. R. Shaw of P. E. I. was unable to be present, as he was attending an Agricult- ural meeting in Ottawa. The spirit of cooperative ef- fort between the Atlantic mem- bers was strongly stressed, and the members pledged themselves to continue this work together to further the interests of this Maritime region. Controlled Fluoridcition , Benefits Million ‘Canodians, - Almost one million Canadians are now drinking water with zfloride content adjusted by fluoridation. Many thousands more have, for many years, been drinking water with simi- lar fluoride content derived only from underground deposits, reports the Canadian Dental Association. ' Several communities have a.p- proved by plebescite the fluori- Y dation of their water suspplies LITTLE SANDS Mr. and Mrs. George Lee of Charlottetown, and Mrs. Mary MacNeill of the staff of the Pro- vinci Sanatorium visited friends and relatives in Little Sands on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William White were guests at their home in I Little ‘Sands over the weekend. They returned to Charlottetown on Sunday, Mr. White to the “Prince Nova” and Mrs. White to Parkdale Junior High, where she is a teacher. The Little Sands Farm Forum met, on Monday evening, at the home of Mr. Neil MacNeill, Lit- tle Sands. Mr. John Meney, Little Sands, is visiting relatives in Albany this week. Sincere sympathy goes to the relatives of Mr. Ernest Penny, Beach Point, whose death occur- red this week. Mrs. Alex Stewart, Charlotte- town, visited her mother Mrs. A. D. MacNeill, Little Sands over the weekend. Miss Mary MacLeod and Miss Marian Hume who‘ are employed in Charlottetown were guests in their homes in Little Sands over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wheeler and daughter Betty Caribou, N.S. are visiting at their homes in Little Sands, this week. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Smith of Charlottetown, motored to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Dixon, Little Sands, and were guests there on Sunday afternoon. Best wishes go out to Mr. John- ny MacPherson, Li_ttle Sands for a complete recovery soon. C.0. WATER FOR CANUCKS 'I‘«ORON-TO (GP)—A shipment of drinking water is on its way by air to Canada's hockey team in the world championships at Oslo. It is scheduled to arrive inu Norway today. Spokesmeg for a soft drink bottling firm said they heard several members of the team have suffered mild stomach upsets in Norway. WATER BIRDS Loons, the diving birds famil- iar to many Canadian lakes, are helpless on land. but do not yet have the neces- sary equipment in operation. A recent govermnenlt survey showed 66% improvement in tooth decay of children in Brant- ford, -Ontario, which has had fluoridation for 12 years. _ The Canadian ‘Dental Associa- tion, which strongly endorses the measure, has compiled a list of 28 Canadian municipali- tion by the first of this year. INCREASE FORCES Chinese Communists, have creased their naval forces along the China coast opposite For- mosa, Nationalist Chinese Rear- Admiral L. U. Hoh Tou said Fri- day. JOHN A. MacDONALD P. C. Candidate for Kings KINGS COUNTY CONSERVATIVE RADIO AND TV T.V. PROGRAM March 11th—7:40 to 7:55 March 17th—8:00 to 8:30 (Island Candidates Panel) I March 25th—7:45 to 8200. RADIO PROGRAM March 14th——7:15 To 7:30 March 21st-7215 to 7:30 March 28th——7:15 To 7:30 Pleaseclip for future reference. . Georgetown and Souris, notice. It is expected to reopen these PULPWOOD Effective immediately our yards BO-ATES (P. E. I.) LIMITED CHARLOTTETOWN at Montague, are closed until further yards about the first of May. ion Legion Curling Bonspiel being‘. feating teams from all held this week at Coppercliffe,I ties which had begun .fluorida-. "PAIPEI, Formosa (Reuters)- in- Mr. MacDonald’s team won the right to represent P. E. I. by de- Island clubs in a playdown held recent- Atom-Powered Plane Planned PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The United States Navy has disclosed that it plans to produce atomic- powered seaplanes by 1965. In an announcement of research being done at the Philadelphia naval base, the navy said Friday that a proposed fleet of nuclear seaplanes is scheduled to gointo operation in the 1964-65 period. The research has to do with the effects of radiatoin on ma-teri-als used in aircraft ronstrurtion and I Left: Mr. Martin, skip, At. Mac- Donald, mate_ Doug M3°G°W3“; second stone Peter Sinclair, and lead Athol Robertson. equipment. _ _. It was reported President Ei- senhower had decided against 31131- V hurry-up program to develop an atomic plane, in favor _of tackl- ing basic problems whlch mu“ be solved first. - BURN BOOKS ’ ** WARSAW, Poland (ReutersV— A crowd of “religious bi-gots': publicly burned "P01‘n0gI‘8PI'|'19 books ranging from the Latin poet Ovid to the French novelist Francoise Sagan in a' Rztszow market place, the trade union newspaper Glos Pracy reported Friday. "The Revolt Of Color. Jane Russell - Richard . / - ship she falls in Love. On arrival. honest work. becomol head girl. Egan arriving. back on leave following injury. has a problem. Are they for each other? COMING FRI.- Tlieatre MONTAGUE; Mon.-Tues. " March 10-11 I Time 8:30 . Adm. so-43 ' c I Mamie Stover” . Egan - Joan Leslie. Aboard J ane Russell SAT. “Fuzzey Pink Nightgown” with Keenan WM» '3‘ AN IADVE-NTUROUS ' a. wild island girl and the daring Americans—- searching for treasure buried twice a thousand years! Entertainment encéllaniiingly filmed’. amidst the sersuous splendors of Greece. Winner Of Boxoffice ment”. It BOY ONA DOLPHIN “BLUE gRIBBON AWARD” As “Best Picture Of The Month For Family Entertain- ‘ EXCITEMEINT! LOVE sronv THAT WILL I.?I’VE ‘TIL THE SEAS RUN DRY! From the depths of the Aegean to the cliffs of Molten oi-a....your senses will stir to this fabulous romance of ZOIII cmumor presents ALAN cnrron SOPHIA D -wrnn -LOREN ‘ CII‘¢lEMASCOpE‘ come 2.»; pr“ T.V’s “ED SULLIVAN RATED IT AS “THE MOVIE YOU MUST SEE” TODAY and TUESDAY ly at the Alberton Curling Club. ‘