N.B. YACHT The "Glorida" foot yacht owned Parons Construction Company of Moncton is pictured above being launched at Alberton a fifty-five by the OVERH-AUILED AT Industries following a com- plete overhaul and refit. The Glorida. commanded by Cap- tain James Murphy of Anti- gonish will leave Alberton on q ALBERTO ‘4 ' suspected Wednesday for Shediac. NB. Two other pleasure cruiser! were stored and refitted dur- ing the winter at the Alber- ton boat plant. {The Guardian. Charlottetown, l Terrorists Cosh Settlement Promised Servicemen Forced To Quit By BEN WARD OTTAW A tCPi—A casli set- tlement will be paid to service- men with more than five years of service who are forcibly rc- tired by the defence depart- ment's new program to inte- grate the navy. army and air force. Maximum will be 10 months' . ay—up to $15,000 for senior . All payments are sub ject to income tax. Associate Defence Minist announced the bonus in the Commons. saying it is designed to Iii re- lieve the hardship of prema- turely - retired servicemen in reverting to civilian employ- ment and (Bi compensate them in part for the pay and pension benefits they would have ceived by serving until normal‘ retirement age. It will apply immediatelv to the 500 officers being retired by the RCAF this summer as sur- plus to air crew requirements.‘ Integration plans call for eliminating 10.000 armed ser-. vices personnel in the next twol years, thus reducing the total. force to 112.000. It will be done‘ y combining man'y of the "housekeeping" activities now carried on separately by the three services. Most of the 10.000 men in- volved in the reduction will qualify for the new bonus.i Others won't because of normal‘ retirements. Those with under five years': service aren't included becauseE they have no present pension} rizlits anyway \lso thcv it"vef not been out of civilian life l'rii: eiioiiflh to make the transttion' difficult TWO PART TABLE \lr. Cardin presented a corn- plicatctl table under which ‘14» nuses \\'ill be determined. It has CI" :6 . " . . the bonus increases in line with years of service. Al serviceman with five years gets a payment equal to two months i of pay and allowances This rises to a ceiling of 13‘: yearsi or more when the payment is’ 10 months of pay and allow- ances. Second. the bonus is reduced: depending on how close to nor-’ mal pensioned retirement agel the serviccman happens to be... A man who is five years ori more away from retirement age Eels the full rate. One who has four years to go faces a reduc- tion of his bonus by 1": months of pay and allowances. t l l i I In addition to the special ho” nus, those forced to retire early will receive the usual retire- ment bonus of up to four months pay~ plus the pension benefits they already have ac-‘ cumulatcd. The usual bonus is a month‘s pay for every five years of service One defence source said there likely will be strong complaints about the tax angle. Under; present income tax regulations“ the bonuses will count as tax.. able income in e sin"'° year.. ONE-THIRD BONUS TAX In the case of an RCAF squad- ron leader who now gets $8.760 a year the bonus could be 57.300. This would jump him from the 26-per-cent income tax bracket to the 40 - r - cent racket for one year. It Would take about one-third of his bo- nus to pay the extra tax The defence department listed three examples of how the bo- nus will work out for service- men w o ave 15‘: years or‘ more of service and are five or; more years away from normali retirment age: l An RCAF sergeant. army; sergeant and petty officer sec- class now draw $426 in monthly pay and allowances. 0n forcible retirement would get a $4.260 special bo- .— :l" (h '< nus. This is on top of the reg- ular retirement benefit of three onths' pay 131.278) and a pension of $1 life. An army major. RCAF squadron leader and naval lieu- tenant - commander now get $730 in monthly pay and allow- ances. On forcible retirement they would get a $7.300 bonus . in addition to the normal $2.190 ay benefit $2l9. 3. A major - general. rear- admiral and air vice-marshal draw $1.554 a month. On forci- ble retirement they would get $15540 plus the normal $4.662 and a monthly pension of 3466. Income tax will reduce the lump . sum payment consider- ably. 5 Czechs Defect From Air Flight OTTAWA (CPI—Five Czecho- slovakians. four men and a woman. have defer-ted to the west at Gander. mid. the 'm- migration department has nounced. The five left a Britannia liner enrouie to Frame for He- vana and asked Canadian im- migration officials for political asylum. They stepped off the aircraft after it landed for re- fuelling. and a pension of air- with r For Home Rodecorating or any good reason $50.0— NIAGARA FINANCE 240 Branches fro 1293 Queen St. Charlottetown Summerside 5 Summer St Always there eady cash... 0 to $5.00029. COMPANY LIMITED m Coast to Coast tar-“.52 436-2148 27.80 a month for‘ at". 894-5524 \ Charge-d MONTREAL tCPt — Eight suspected members of the ter- ‘rorist L‘Armee de Liberation du Quebec have been charged twitth 48 offences dealing with armory raids in Montreal and iShawinigan and. tihree holdiips. i Judge Marcel Gatboury set preliminary hearings for May .Ican Gagnon. 26. and Robert ud n 20. both of Montreal. were charged with conspiracy l l ‘ and the robbery of arms from bustiiEss i ‘. and the AI changes in the ('8l'I'_\‘lIl£! on of Drug Firm Celebrates ‘llli‘mlilll the \ears. 1 fer. The business is conduc Mon May 1], 1964_ 11 ' service to the public be retired.‘ \ s ,ll"!il'ia ed by Hillard 'I‘oombs in 1961. M THE SAME While there have been many _ pharmaceutical business down 1 the aim lilfl iobjec-t of Johnson and Johnson has remained the same. service and satisfaction to the custom- .ed by Mr. Tonmbs on the ori2i~ Includes David Campbell, grad-i uale pharmacist, Mrs. Eva Mc- Millan and Ralph Farrell. MISCO'UCHrE l Mrs. Percy MacKinnon, Ivlis‘ couctie is a patien in Prince County Hospital suffering from a knee injury. Mrs. Frank Arsenauit. Mis- couche is recovering in Prince lucky door prize. Mrs hn Poirier: lottery of a box chocalates was won by a Abbie Gautiet of the fliarlutietown Mr, and Mrs, DH. Callan' Mrs. George Venn. che and \irs [. first, Mr. Philabert Arsenault; consolation Mr. Moxime Peters; C. of Mrs. Miss iris Gallant on ttie staff ing at the home of her parents \liS"')l.l- William Coan’v. .. . . . A . nal Site. corner of Prince and Count." Hospital an" ""der' Summers“? “Prf' WWI" Vis‘" Johnson find-tJo;)r:;onhnl3liter:. {WW-ix" P‘““U",““"5 3d“ ‘1: Kent Streets. going a major operation ors to O'Leary to Vistt their todah mi" 2 I} H {Che ' b'm’F (fir Eecfig' '0'; a: a 1% Today. as in the past. the firm Mr. D. . Gallant. Miscouche mother Mrs. \iargcret Shields lary mythe "smess 19“ ar' oyi .‘n‘l "q!" a" : seeks to merit its paironage is confined to hospital for who is a patient in n‘Leary loggeslg‘hllshed in 1884 by [)r Ri- rzcilrda oI‘giyeE-erigt‘lgn: [is 3 also fwd SUPPW- .and is enj‘wing “" Imminent: . . communi” Hmpnal‘ h d .l hnson who first Ivar. , tincreasmg clientele in its cen- Prize Winners at the fii‘emens —“~ - s ' ' "~“ 0 3r 0 ‘ Shm‘nr trally located premises where card party held on Tuesday INCOME DOUBLES ried on a dispensary in the par- ] (h. 1 me the blmnesg hm E. Lea Bryanton became pro- the business first started in the night were: Ladies' first. Mrs. Canada's income from tour. 0"" ‘5 (‘10 tea on me gam‘e prietor of the business in 1941 late 1880's Alton Arsenault: consolation. ism has doubled in the last 10 mnfogogvgf a generati’m“ ‘ and after 20 years oi ccmpeent The present staff of the firm Mrs. Albina DesRoches' men's veers inf'l‘O'rtSiY‘." to Sm" 000 000 Dr. Johnson educated his two “Hue.“000-00on0+0Heoeoeeoceo—5csoeu00H Wfiooecommm sons. Richard M. and Arthur S. in the pharmaceutical profes- sion in Philadelphia and they combined to expand the busin- --AAAAAAA ess enjoying the goodwill and confidence of the people. CONTINUED GROWTH Robert E. Colwill took over the business in 1917 and on his death a rather, Fred E. (lil- will succeeded in 1932. The bus- tlness continued t grow an prosper and the name Johnson and Job n son was a familiar one. not only in the city. but throughout the province. It is interesting to recall that. "Johnson and Johnson Baking Powder" was peddled all over the Island by horse and wagon. It was a popular product and its label and attached recipe was a common sight on many a kit- chen shelf. The originl equip- a. A-AA--AA- vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv. ...OUR MOST ment used it its manufacture ‘5 ,Sli.“ 5W9“ "W8"! l“ the us. How much is lost? Water experts tiel bu"1d’"g' falls on the land escapes our municipal Another more gruesome relic is the shot-pierced skull of a murdered Woman. per- sons and date connected with this early crime are. recorded. One of the display windows wash ---A-A‘AAA-A-AA- WATER WASTED RESOURCE Waste. is the big throat to our water resources. The very abundance of water around us is proof of how this precious resource is wasted. For most of the water we is water we are not using. Flooded rivers thick with topsoil are evid once the water we need is getting away from i that between 90 and 95% of the water that water systems. Only 10% or less is put to use—far too little to support our expanding economy. And this waste is tremendously expensive. Floods cost an estimated billion dollars in direct damage every year. We pay in lives lost, homes destroyed, roads and bridges away. . he soil washed from farmlands means higher food prices — and it is ‘0.000040060000006eeeeeeeooeeeuocuooeeoooooeoenecoooooeoeooooeoooooooo .. , today contains some of the apt» costl to urin the silt-laden water for family use. .Les Fulsmerfm Mmdt'RO‘lal tliecary implements used in the b y p ' _ . $10? :3” A ‘3‘“, FEET” 9 19th century. Included are a J Water shortage-another direct result of waste-is costly too. Because we squander our fixvmifie mythméd mm P” Wu"- tablet "Wild: Parke y water. a quarter of a nation is left with inadequate or poor quality supplies. Taxes rise conspiracv and the armed rob. 1 Paris nategs’aagéei'gjtqk‘2ncggj .I as cities must drill deeper wells or pipe water in from distant sources. Insurance rates . bery March 23 of a caisse popu- . glance “Taggers. m j: climb when there. is insufficient water for fire protection. People suffer economic loss 318"" “1 Mnntrt’a‘ Whit“ "Film i m‘sinn flask mortar and pestle. 1: when factories must close or curtail operation because water is not available to need- i ilgé‘Zimfdndmb‘ggl‘: gfnaspgoac-‘i ! The firm has completed over . ed quantities. .' 3'5 s > . .Bank of Canada branch I" J These are some of the costs that skyrocket our nobonal water bill. And the tragedy li°mr°alliiiiiilfl.35;_ PURITY DA|RY j: is not that our water supply is short- but we waste most of it. I MAKE PROFIT .., l The aggrega‘e “9‘ PM" .°‘ "P'lrems Prefer" l‘: Printed In the interest of son and Water Conservation by . :2; .rsiiéi‘ti‘itshm Sgpapvifil Purity Products “,5 1‘: A. Pick.” M m. i ‘t ' " D'a! 4- - . 'dividendsincreasincatotalfl7 317 Ken: I 4:‘A-.A-.---x-........-......A..-i-i-A.A-.-A-.A---AAA-A-A-AAA-AAAA-AAAAAAAAAeA-AAA‘AAAAAA per cent. Proprietor Illusion Heels 12 styles 5.98 to 10.95 Spike Heels 5 Styles 5.98 to 10.95 Mesh Pumps 2 Styles 7.98 to 13.98 4-9521 WRIGH my You’ll want to meet our lovely whites! Wrights’ has brought you a galaxy of styles to flatter your foot - to flatter your wardrobe. .98 .98 Jet Heels 5 Styles . . t - 5 to 7 Queen St. T SHOE C8. 4-9521 mariachi», . .. ..) avid Campbell Pharmacist Ralph Farrell o I Delivery ' 1884 to 1964 Jim are not given to spectacular believe that n e e d s — We merchandising — we customers know their and we are grateful when they favor us with their patronage. ’l'o deserve that patronage we try to be completely accommodating by making your every need a matter for our personal attention. Remem- ber “we do not take customers for granted. we consider it an honor to serve you." Our pharmacist Is on the job with everything it takes . . . specialized training plus I talent for serving He swiftly and accurately. works together with your doctor you to safeguard your good health! Max Factor. Miss t'lalrol & Tee.- niqne consultation service willingly pleasant extended by our always Mrs. Macmillan. ,«iz‘nf Dept. Cosmetic Delivery service second to none at no extra charge by our ever cheer- ful "Ralph" Our New Delivery Car Store Hours Monday to Friday 9:30 am. to ii pm. pm. ...I"“- ..EONR‘ Sat. 8:30 am. to 12:30 .. FREE‘ Gifts to the first 25 custom- er. each day during this sale. Phone! orders included. \ Phone 4-4133 or 4-6025 I r, a; JOHN 5cm 10% OFF Al Johann a Johnson Produ Phone Orders Included \_ Phone 4-4133 or 4-6025 \\ ‘\ PRIZES Worthwhile Draw Prizes Daily Phone Orders Included Phone 4-4133 or 4-6025 / We Have Wilkinson Blades / SALE STARTS TODAY and CONTINUES 'TILL SATURDAY MAY 15TH Interesting display of authentic opothecory Implements 80 Years in Business Toda l g