~ Escaped Communist Prisoner Becomes Bishop To Ukrainians jmade it to freedom. Perhaps \the guards took me for a Com- munist and didn't expect any- tons of pellets annually. > SHE’S AN OLD FOOTBALL FAN G. H. Erskine of manager of the” Winnipeg’ over and tossed her an auto- Mrs Winnipeg had her se ae Blue Bombers of the Western graphed football. She's an Set For Quebec day Wednesday a fan. (CP Wirephote). Grant, coach and general Football Conference came old fa P TORONTO (CP) By DON HARVEY - TORONTO (OP) — treater ota ot has a Bishop Michael Czech Communists for months until he escaped - Mount) Wright Iron Mines Co. Lid. plans | to bring its Cuebec iron . ore properties into production and build a pelletizing plant at a} total cost of about $80,000,000. The company says in a letter | (12 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Set., Jan. 28, | Manufacturers’ Ass’n Asks | |New Over-All Pension Plan OTTAWA ‘CP) — The Cana-; Ontario might dian Manufacturers’ Association| ‘‘It.is the firm position of the jhas urged a reopening association that differences} |of negotiations in an atterfipt to should not exist between and | |produce a single federally-ad-' among provinces in the type, ministered contribu tor y pen- | extent of coverage, administra- sion plan embrating all prov-|tive interpretations and applica- inces tion.’’ the association brief said The association, in a brief; The association also said the +submitted to the .joint par-|proposed benefits under —-the |liamentary committee studying/Canada plan, coupled with the the Canada Pension Plan bill,| flatvate old age security pay- | said a centrally - administered | ment, go ‘‘somewhat beyond” plan is needed to ensure econ-| what the association regards as omy of operation, ease in ad- “basic” pensions that should be | ministration and public accept- provided by government lance. The bill has received ap- WANTS PLAN REVISED | proval in principle in the House’ ‘The brief also recommended of Commons —Revising the plan so it will Although the Canada and Que-| operate to a pay-as-you-go bec plans have been dove-tailed,| basis instead ‘of being funded Quebec will administer its own and building a development contributory plan. No other! fund for the-previnces. | province has given definite no- —Exemption of persons be- tice it will set up its own plan, tween 18 and 25 years of age but Premier Robarts has said, from the plan wW® are attend- ing university er school full-) ‘The association said employ. time. The bill would have all persons enter the plan at 18 —Elimination of the exemp- tion for persons earning less than $600 a year, and entitling these persons to 2 per cent of $600~ Reviewing benefit levels no oftener than every five years instead of adjusting benefits to the cost of living index. —For persons retiring before age 65, calculating their av- erage earnings only on their working, and not their non- working, years MEETING )st Medium Artillery Association Charlottetown Branch January 24, 1965—1400 hours Royal Canadian Legion Home Charlottetown TAKE JOB SERIOUSLY ers’ contributions to the plan should be an allowable business AMERSHAM, England (CP)~ éxpense- for tax purposes Felephonists in this part of It said the plan will have an Buckinghamshire take early important effect on the entire morning calls seriously. When country and the economy and operators called newspaper man ee ree ee ee Clive, Cook at 8 a.m. and re : schemes | ceived no reply, ane of them should be delayed to & “more visited Cook's home and found appropriate time. _ —_—---._ the telephone out of-order. MIGHTY GENTLE A 10-ton elephant can manipu- | NOTICE OF CITATION . late its trunk so deftly that it; in Re Estate of Pauline Kielly can pick a flower off the ground | of Brookfiett-in—_Queens County, without crushing’ it. |Prince Edward Island, Single Woman. Deceased, Testate. NOTICE IS HEREBY. GIVEN that a Citation has been ex- tracted for the passing of the final accounts in the above Estate and for an Order for distribution and the hearing of same shall be before the pre- siding Justice in the Estates Division of the Supreme Court at the Court House in Char- lotteetown in Queens County, on Friday the Fifth day of Feb- ruary next coming, at the hour of eleven o'clock in the fore- noon DATED this 30th day of Dee- ember A.D. 1964 | | i f a ee ee a one to try to escape NAMED BISHOP three months the Bishop Rusnak says that for Communists tried to get him out of the em- bassy but his U.S. citizenship | to shareholders that production | will start in 1969 if sales con. | tracts are obtained in the United | Kingdom and Europe covering | proposed production. of 4,000,000 | Use of pellets in Europe and | the U.K. is expected to reach about 10,000,000 tons by 1969. *_..Communista. + BISHOP -RUSNAK A native of Beaverdale, Pa., Michael Rusnak first wen to ‘The-e’s |Slovakia with his parents, now dead, when he was 10. He was ordained in 1949 after studying at seminaries in Slovakia and : i ada -become distinctively -Cana- its own Canadian dian with spirk incorporating melodies that have this country.” Bishop Rusnak says about 70,- : 3 agen customs and originated in : Pocccoccocee? eae _Once hack, in the Unitedie May We Accommodate 9 e Your When you are in Halifax ¢ the modern. comfortable. centrally tocateé uF | | him left no doubt as to his ob- or-| jective: To align Indonesia's ee Fe deren 0 sn po ay a military economic We Feature— — : made @/ cluding shipping and possibly to ; will lean training for its fics at Satta] FLAVOR CRISP CHICKEN military carried nited and economic help. States. : e3 ene Suees, |_&- pelled by two messages to the! military men, includes police) @ Golden Crisp Chips. 7 fourth plenary session-of the In-| Chief Danuksumo. It also has| @ Cole Slaw women's movement | officials from industry, mining,| @ tosew and Roll ‘ from First Deputy |trade, sea communications and Honey no's wife, Hartini. = ¢ ea cannot coexist peace- g 3 | k fn l : Hf i r et Bi ii ig tt Enjoy the relaxation | SAIL NOW! to Europe... _ at bargain fares Save up to 25% on your round trip! of sea travel: Bypaee to move a-r-o-u-n-d; ROAST TURKEY With Cranberry Sauce DEEP FRIED SCOLLOPS our common. struggle and be With Tartar Sauce ready to face and take up any in 1966. CHICKEN SALAD after this, Subandrio, from |who also {s ‘foreign minister, With Apple Jelly left for Burma en route to Pe- CURB SERVICE bees, cc ccin it Bishop Rusnak, 43, was con- | Bohemia. hopes to in- “eeeces itacor to 25,000 Slovaks of the | among 60 priests rounded up Byzantine rite and as auxiliary |by the Communisis in Slovakia |@== : : bishop. tothe ‘Ukrainian diocese | ‘because we were Christians” . eee putas =" === ROYALTY OAKS Drive-In TO VISIT WEST : “Tt was part of their effort to i “Ae: -@ visitator be--has- the |-wipe- out all religion.” ST. PETERS ROAD ee eee a » oe while parishes no jurisdiction | eating noonday mea, He for instance, to | now.” make first visit to the Pral-| “‘I left the dining hall, liter- DINING ROOM _3Re—-provinces in February _or:| ally knocked down an electric Soe tees ar eae Oe fence, walked os Byzantine rite etore deci | my way to the US. embassy. ROAST LOIN OF PORK ing parishes should be| ‘“‘The guards, who had orders With Apple Sauce eae nasties ta'te Wont tant tte ple day 1 dont — adhere to the Byzantine rite, he |cape, paid no attention to me PRIME RIB ROAST OF BEEF says To this day 1 don’t know why I With Horse Radish Sauce Louae You never miss your daily paper until it isn’t there eaten eal - You seldom realize how much 2 daily newspaper means to you—or the community—until one day it isn’t there. : Surprisingly, perhaps, it’s the little things that are missed the most—the services, the incidentals. Con- sider the plight of New Yorkers caught in a city- wide newspaper strike not so long ago. They missed the news, to be sure, The editorial coniment, the women’s pages, the sports section and the comics, What else? © Well, they tiever knew what was on at the movies. They missed the daily stock market quotations and the bargain sales.at Macy’s and Gimbel’s.. People -couldn’t find apartments—or jobs—without the clas- sified ads, Concerts and recitals were postponed; plays closed prematurely. Statistics may be a heartless Way to measure the effects of such a strike. But sometimes, they’re the only way. Unless you're a florist, you might not be interested to learn that flower sales fell off some 20%, Until you realized that the absence of obituary no-' tices helped produce this loss. Then you begin to see, . what a newspaper means to a community. If the newspapers themselves lost $101 million in ‘sales and advertising revenue, should you care? Yes, because most of this money would have been paid to employees in wages and salaries, to other companies (and their employees) for newsprint, ink, film, en- gravings and other operating necessities. Several thousand news dealers went out of business. Some permanently. Department stores lost $51, million, hotels and restaurants almost $20 million, federal and state governments $11 .million, railroads $244 million. When so many busistesses suffer such severe losses, everyone suffers, If you think Canadians were remote fromi all this, think again. The New York newspaper strike cost the Canadian newsprint industry $28,700,000. A lot of men lost a lot of days’ pay. The newsprint industry _ will feel the pinch for some time to come. Yes, it’s easy to take your daily newspaper for grant- ed when it’s at your front door every day. Not so ara tment bre beeipe> y ro o*