ROYAL COUPLE IN LOS ANGELES Princess Margaret (center) and Lord Snowdon (right) mect dignitaries in the recept- fon line at Los Angeles Inter- natienal Airport Sunday as Greek Parthenon Suffering they arrived from San Fran- cisco. British Consul-General PGF. Dalton ‘left fore- ground) makes introductions. In background are California NEW YORK (‘CP)—A set of %-year-old mentally - retarded twins at the New York Psychi- atric Institute are baffling the experts by giving correct ‘The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Nov. 8, 1965. 15 Mentally-Retarded Twins Are Baffling Psychiatrists | swers to almost impossible ques | tions ‘and incorrect ones to those that could be answered by ,any school boy. Dr. William Horwitz, assistant ing considered by the Greek government, is to enclose the parthenon temple in a glass or plastic case. CLEANED BY FILTERS The case should be glitter- proof, smear-proof and easily washable. Air circulating through the case would be fil- tered and traces of humidity and industrial pollution would be removed by filters. | Gov, Edmund G. Brown eft)’ | and Los Angeles Mavor Sam- | wel Yorty (center) { (AP Wirephote) chipping away the -Parthenon temple's flooring. REMEDIES PROPOSED Several measures have been proposed, such as: Follow the example of the Louvre in Paris, which admits only persons in low heels or sandals, or close the Parthenon temple-—but not the acropolis— to visitors. German archeologist Dr. | Ernst Langlotz of Bonn Univer- sity says the Parthenon is suf- fering from another, more se- rious, ailment—-sea breezes. He From Pollution, HighHeels 2 i=-"s= = | the Parthenon that face the sea By PHILIP DOPOULOS |non temple ie affected by the engineers found. are the jet three miles away have been ATRENS ‘AP) —The Parthe- growing industrialization around using Athens airport, badly corroded. non, symbold of Greece's glor- ‘the Greek capital, - eight miles away. Though it {s| He proposed several meas- tous histcry, is sick. Cause—air <A high degree of air pollu jjjege! to fly near the acropolis, jures to the Greek government pollution, airliners” and wom- tion is causing corrosion of the visitors to the famous rock to preserve the 46 outer col- |i en's high heels jhoney colored marble (rom eigim they can feel slight vi- umns’ from eventually crum- | Archecloficts carefully exam- | which ancient Greeks com brations from passing jet ait bling ining the 2,500year-old monu- \Structed the Parthenon to the mM A short-term measure would ments on the. acropolis above Slory. of the goddess Athena aaee be to spray the marble with a Athens discovered the white! Another danger, a private The private study also discov: snecial chemical. The Yong. teran pre-e’ marble of the Parthe- ‘study of Athens architects and ered women's high heels are | approach, Goods and Service... Where to find them in Charlottetown and Distri ure will which is seriously be- |many before them. BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY The government has not taken any action, presumably because of lack of money. But a popular Greek magazine has proposed that a worldwide appeal be made for funds. Some officials feel that the United Nations should appeal to member na- | tions to contribute. If the government does take action, it will be the first real protection the Parthenon has ever received. The monuments of the acro- polis have withstood sieges in ancient times. Barricades were erected on the acropolis during the Greek war for independence in 1821. British paratroopers set up a battery of guns in the Par- thenon's thick columns at the time of a Communist uprising in 1944, ° The greatest shock the Par- thenon ever received was in | 1687 |Venetian guns on a nearby hill ignited a Turkish powder maga- zine beneath its wooden roof. |The structure survived, though when shells fired from n a somewhat battered state. Regardless of thetr dire claims, the archeologists, scien- tists ‘and architects still hesitate to estimate just when the struc- fall: It--has- fooled ict director of the institute, asked the twins for the date of the first Wednesday in July, 1901, | and they replied correctly, al- ;most instantly: r | ‘That was on the third.” The doctor then asked: “If a box of candy costs % cents and I gave you a dollar, how much change would I get?” The pale-blue eyes of the. iden- | tical twins blinked almost in| unison behind thick spectacles as they concentrated for several seconds. GIVE WRONG ANSWER “Fifty cents,” said George, the quicker of the twins. His | brother, Charles, echoed the | same answer. | Dr. Horwitz then went briskly along to other questions. ; When told a date on which a person died a few hundred years ago, and asked how old that per- son would be if alive today, they can respond correctly at once. Or when asked how they know that Feb. 15, 2002, will be on a Friday, or that April 21, 1968, | Will be a Suunday, as it had been in 1963, 1957 and 1964, they say lsimply they do not know. } Experts are confounded. The | jtwins intellectual achievements | |go far beyond trick memory of | +2 ace Cort's picture showing thomas watching helplessly as his home burns. McRee rescu- ed Lamar Thomas Jr., shown WARM HEARTS Al Frant. McRee, left, a Madi- son, GA., furniture salesman, turns over to Lamar Thomas some of the checks that have tribution of money and house- hold items have come from white persons. ‘This showed calendars. They seem to possess | been sent to the Negro farmer some complex mathematical |” following nation-wide publicat- ability, yet they cannot do the| ion of AP photographer Hor- 'NoAppreciable Slowdown Is Seen In Construction simplest multiplication or divis- ton. For many years psychiatrists have known of the idiot savant, a mentally-retarded person with some extraordinary mental gift. |But George and Charles are the jonly known twins who are idiot savants. They have an_intelli- ‘gence quotient of 70—100 being }considered average- New Effort In Education Paying Off | EDMONTON (CP) \ing. Indian and Eskimo children interested in school is the most SEPTIC TANK SERVICE | AIR CONDITIONING TRANSFER |\CLEANING SERVI DRIVE-IN McCLARY: , EASY J. J. FOLEY dant ‘Septic Tank Pumping) AIR CONDITIONING UNITS TRANSFER Indepen ent: Septic tank and. field tile | EAT OFTEN RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL 63 Richmond St : . : | installations and repairs. | ae CALL US HOR FURTHER “Phone #2914 Cleaning Services THOMSON iL : ‘R RULHART “Tops in Efficient. imi West Royalty Dia 1 i. 38 <— Nanos 894-432 “Courteous Service.” Limited | A & WwW Drive In | ccnp cima p—el An ween Lanne. Wan jo MALPEQUE ROAD ITY: i : _ seal COAL & WOOD ose BEROTY PARLORS cu ae ar janit. it’s the only lace you SHERWGOD BEAUTY |" “*rwic® [> poet buy 2 Camby” LARTER’S ’ Chicken” DRUG SUNDRIES SALON | Teleohone 2-2747. A. PICKARD & Co. : c | (Hal Larter, Prop.) ELLIS SHOPPING CENTRE R Robison BI H d Look for the Bright Complete line of Speciale every Tuesday & 12 Alexander Drive | ve ar Orange Building” Drug Sundries Wednesday on cold waves, Charlottetown | : : | “Patent Medicines Spa Se By Ser 8h ee ee Coal j FUE Sandwiches and Collee Bar 2 REAL ESTATE | -L OILS Phone 892-2532 SERVICES | . ; : FREE DELIVERY BUYING SELLING nenninc | Complete line .of | WOOD'S FUELS 45 ELM AVE PHONE 43268 _ soft coals, coke J. W. MacKENZIE and smithing coal. | | IF YOU WANT | GOOD Texaco Stove and Furnace O# Free Oi] Burner Service 15 Woodlawn Ave. y Dial 893-3336 Ch'town Albert L. Thomas White Rose Dealer Stove and fuel oil. motor oil, greases, batteries. Grafton St. East. Ch'town Phone 4-5610 ; SELLING oo“ | PLUMBING }-HEATING| 9 Ho ames | COM ee delivery and | Call { 269 Queen Street mechanical loading. WANTED NELSON GOOD Charlottetown | 88 Lower Water St. ALE BOTTLES 1? Hawthorne Ave, ceoey | OME CERES. Dial 4-5541 ae ORGE PEAKE PHONE | oe GE AUTOMOTIVE | 4-8595 | Necchi Sewing LIMITED . | Sentra | REAL ESTATE =| MUFFLER CENTRE | Sales & Service . INSURANCE , : Sys Beer Bottle Exchange: repairs to all makes of sew- | 92 QUEEN STREET | ee mee | Drop your beer bottles ai i far whee cleaners = PHONE 2.2448 | Free— Installation MAURICE. BLOCK At OK TIRE STORE We also make button holes, co LTD os a baad Ago amg | St Peters Road Dial 992-2360 6 ® | 135 Ken ct Kent Street. Chitown, 4-8272 S'side 6-5949 | S. Ww. WILLIS 200 ae i¢Montacue O'Leary | REALTOR - CCNSULTANT wae j 838-2761 M3 Real-Estate, Rendenial,.|__ TIRE SERVICE ACCOUNTING SERVICES | A aa ca 3. | & Tire Sales ‘ BUILDING WRECKING | “""'"insurance = @ Complete Farm Tire | R. E. WRIGHT ANYWHERE ON P.E.I1. 165 Queen St. Service Large or small jobs, esti- '@ Whee} Alignment mates. given. Call 4-3084 be- twen 12-1 or after 6. O.K. TIRE STORE : JAMES CLARK St. Peters Rd Ch'town 189 Elm Ave. Ch'town | : | | Advice and assistance in all DIAL 894-7242 phases of accounting and bookkeeping Tax returns | 71 Up. Prince St. 4-9628 | ~~ Merchandise Texaco Furnace Oil Texaco Fuel Chief Heat: ing Oil and Stove Oil. “Where To Call” Ch’town Petroleum Products Ltd. 203 Great George St. Ch’town 894-7311 After hours cal! 894-6436 Dial 894-4912 FOR ‘Ignition & Carburetor Custom R re 90 Kent (St: © Chitown , Don't, get caught ‘Anti-Freeze the OPTICIANS | Specialized Service Uoholstering ROCK BOTTOM — Se a Gao your ce EXPERT CRAFTSMEN'ST ANLEY MOL Batt and MacRae eee REAL ESTATE LTD. | 7 | : Where Friends and Sales Summerside Auto | Interiors Are Made Electric 166 Prince St. Ch'town DEALING EXCLUSIVELY ch'town 46537 Phone 4-5195 | IN REAL ESTATE RECORDS | 78 Gt. George St. | “Near Travel Bureau” | RECORDS | Phone 2-1611 Charlottetown. P.E:1. REGENT. HOTEL © For Your Listening Pleasure. | | OVernight and permanent MILLER BROS. LTD, SEETC TANS SERVICE Complete line of fabrics 2.45 per gal Ltd. Laurentide Permanent Type ~ Saw Mill Supolies - Hydraulic Hoses Made Up Lounsbury Industrial Ltd. 44 Belmont Street 4 S'side 6-2161 — 4 guests. Reasonable Rates 58 Great Georce St Ch'town Phone 4-6426 ISLAN D' OPTICAL LTD. We will make up your glasses when you bring in your doctor's ovtical prescription (regular or sunglasses ) @ Supply new frames for broken or old style frames. @ Replace broken lenses @ We straighten and adjus glasses at no charge P.O. Box 472 or 117 Kent St Ch'town Phone 2-1673 Dial 4-8054 147 Gt. George St. Dial 43535 SEPTIC TANK AND : | FIELD TILE INSTALLATION pepe a FOR LATE "| RESTAURANTS | @ TRENCHING | BULBS | @ BACK HOEING ESQUIRE COFFEE SHOP) @ septic tanks cLEANED | Doug Mayne Barber NOTICES Plants for planters Imported Jams Jellies and Reasonable Rates Ferns and potted mums, ete. | other confections. @ FREE ESTIMATES | Telephone roufts or appoint Other plants in season. Fresh clams end scallops also | | ment . Monday, Tg@esday, Wed- sii RDENS——-|0n our menus i ; _,FOY’S SEPTIC TANK | nesday 9 am.-6 SEE PAGE 3 a McGill Ave., Ext. Ch’town 174 Queen St. SERVICE | wed tee ae spin : Open 8 am. to 5:30 p.m, Tryon Ph Crapaud 42-4 \- ee > tageene®..6 = =| ae _ Mount she has heen undergoing ‘tests.’ idifficult job facing teachers in the North, says the principal of the school in Aklavik, N.W.T. | R. H. Anderson, 34 years old land a former RCMP constable, lis in charge of 160 children in Grades 1 to 8. About 120 of the pupils are Indian or Eskimo. To check some of the student apathy, Mr. Anderson has intro- iduced a ‘terminal program” in cis school for students 12 years and over. Two afternoons a week he brings in fishermen, boat builders and the give practical instfuction. “We are trying to equip stu- dents with some knowledge of the occupations they will pursue when they leave school," jsaid. | Although it is too early to as- sess the fruits of the project begun a year ago student in- terest has enough for Mr. Anderson to hope the program can be ex- tended to three afternoons next year. - Unlike Alberta. where laws In- sist that a child attend school until he is at least 16. the North- | west Territories has no such law One- reason for this, Mr. An derson thinks, is that. sheer —ur- vival in the North is difficult and: a family needs the help of its children as soon as they ap- proach maturity. Sophie Tucker's Condition Good NEW YORK (AP) — Singer Sophie Tucker reported Saturday in good condition at Sinai Hospital, where was A hospital spokesman said the 77-year-old singer probably would remain in the hospital an- other week. The spokesman refused to disclose the nature of the tests, but Miss Tucker's manager, Charles Abruza, has said she is suffering from an intestinal in- | flammation t « \ eS the — Keep- dustrial here being held by his mother. One child died in the fire. Thomas said mot of the con- us that white folles don't hate Negroes,"’ Thomas said. (AP Wirephoto) By KEN SMITH ‘of new nultiple dwellings . . jcloser te a) lopg-detayed settle- Canadian Press Business Editor across Canada," it says. ‘‘Sin- ment, The government's mi .\gleunit rather than multiple | Premier Smallwood of New- mer suggestion that pressure on housing, was still the dominant |foundiand said the $1,000,000,000 iCanada’s construction industry |figure of residential construe- ibe eased doesn’t seem to have |tion in the majority of Canadian in much appreciable |citiés, MARKE resulted slowdown. Is fact, the tatest survey by jshows the total dollar value of |Canadian construction in the first 10 months of this year al- D SHIFT | Project “looks brighter than it jever did before,” while in New [York Consolidated Edison, the lbig U.S. uttlity expected to be “Since then, however, there/a major customer for Churchill le dwellings and this has Southam Building Guide |has been a marked shift in/Falls power, said negotiations housing demand toward goo 80 | jare proceeding harmoniousiy. The mdden hoor in trading ome noticeable in theion the Vancovver Steck Ex lready has surpassed the record ‘smaller metropolitan areas.” It notes the trend will prob-.onto brokerage houses te seek j@stablished in all of 1964. $4,586 804,000, | The total so far this year is ably continu the guide says, |prepared fot lchange pushed at least six Tot e, quoting a study west coast seats. Others are te- the Economic ported interested im buying e@ up $1,001,223,000 from the simi- Council of Canada predicting place on the Vancouver Bz- lar 1964 period, chiefly because |that of a continued strong perform- | 000,000 or more. apartments will account change. for 41 per cent of residential; The excitement, which pushed a i ontracts costi $i- building by 1970 compared with the VSE’s datly volume tast 00.000 oF - '96 per cent in 1963. Actually,|week well above similar totale There were 92 of these con \the bank says, the increase may |at the much larger Toronto and ‘tracts awarded in October ‘across Canada worth $283,100,- 000, raising the total in this |scene that on-again, off-again, category so far this year to jup-again, dowr-again plan to de- trappers, ¢5 938,000,000 compared with velop the resources of Labra- like tO ‘g7 618,600,000 in the’ similar 1964 dor’s Churchill Falls appeared of the Northwest Territories. period. It was this category, the gov- ernment apparently was aiming | at last August when it an- nounced it was deferring some federal construction proj- ects and asked business to con- sider doing the same. It expressed fears the would result in higher eosts, BUILDING. CLIMBED The Southam survey shows more construction activity in all five major categories and in four of the five geographical re- gions. Only the Maritimes showed a total decline.’ The totals by category and re- gion. with 1964 figures in brack- ets; are: Residential $1,243,348,000 ($1,- 174,193,000): business _ $667,177- 000 ($557.028000): institutional $829,124,000 ($620,714,000): —in- $656,340,000 ($456,257,- 000): engineering $1,190,814,000 ($777,987,000). : Maritimes $184.112.000 ($239,- 635,000); Quebec $1,138,933,000 ($916,714,000): Ontario $1,830,- 277,000 ($1,486,258,000); Prairies | |$788,167,000 ($632,428,000):; Brit- ish Columbia $645,313,000 ($310,- 545,000). ae An indication that major con tracts may even increase in im- portance is contained in the monthly review of the Bank of Nova Scotia. ° Examining the role of apart- ment building in the construc- tion industry, the bank decides it has begun to play a domin- ant hand in total residential building. ~ “In the mid-50s, Montreal and Toronto accounted for the bulk “Om mig pRB som . res- been impressive |. : ’ ure on the industry's fact Ne ree Saieha ‘tk the Sadeeel be. much greater than that. iMontreal exchanges, was Elsewhere onthe bustness iteuched off by speculation is | volving eome eompanies with holdings im the Pine Point erea Committee On Corrections Starting Work This Week OTTAWA (CP) — A commit- tee which will eventually make government on reform of the system starts jits preliminary research work in the Atlantic provinces this week. The Canadian Committee on Corrections: appointed by former justice minister Guy Favreau in May, 1964, has broad terms of reference, cov- ering nearly every aspect — of Canada’s treatment of offend- ers; from the time of arrest..to final release. Chairman of the committee Is Mr. Justice Roger Ouimet of the Superior Court of the prov- ince -of Quebec. Others... mem bers are former deputy com mis¥ioner of the RCMP, J. R Lemieux, Mrs. Dorothy Me- arton of Winnipeg, G. Arthur Martin of Toronto and W. T Me- Garth of Ottawa. Mr.-McGrath, who is also the committee's. secretary, said in an interview Saturday the mem bers will not hold public hear ings in the initial stages of the inquiry. WHA, DO INTERVIEWS “We'll he interviewing of- ficials of penal _ instituatioris, welfare workers: a great var.- ety of people working in the corrections as well as touring the correctional institutions.” eves | The committee plans te con- jfine its first research work te privae interviews because |members feel they have to out- ‘whole Canadian correctional ‘line the size of the reform prob- Im before holding public hear- ings. ““Tt i¢ very hard to estimate |how long it will take use to carry out this inquiry. Two ‘years is a Hkely guess, but we really don't know.”’ ' Under its terms of reference, the committee is to study and make recommendations about needed reforms dealing with ar- rest, summonsing, bail, repre- sentation in court, conviction, probation: sentencing, training, medical and psychiairie atter- tron, release, parole, pardon. post relese ‘simervision guidance and rehabilitation. The committee will begin in- terviewing officiala n the At- lante provinces- .on Tuesday. Its schedule follows: ton, Nov. 9-13; Halifax, Nov 14: St. John’s, Nfld.. Nov, 14-13 Sackville, Nov....19-20;.. Char- lottetawn, Nov. 21-25 LACKED PLUMBING The White House did no’ have a fitted bathtub until 1891. NEEDS A BRUSH-UP — The statue in Washington's Lincoln Memorial has to be washed every time the weather takes a warmer turn as the imarble transpires grime. x JERVIS BAY SURVIVORS MEET AGAIN | These three survivors of the | Jervis Bay met Friday at {Saint_John._N.B., for the first defending a convoy from the German supercruiser A-miral Scheer. Royal Navy Command- | timecsince the armed merchant ' cruiser sank % years ago in England ‘left’, Everett Mor- ‘the 190 men lost er R.A. Butler of Sevenoaks, ~ ee row, Guelph, Ont. (centre) and Robert Squires. Saint John, at- tended—memeral servicesfor. They stand _in front of a monument t the Jervis Bay dead. Survivors of —the sinking numbered 66... (CP Wirephote) and ~ Frederic-