Ilernbers of the P.E.1. Reccel Regiment who participat- ed in the Senior and Junior qual- Bruce Rutherford: itying course during WITH P. E. I. REG'T IN CAMP fl1tI training at Camp Utopia. N.B., left to right-C a pt. S.S.M. RA. are: BACK summert l.eClair; Cpl. J. White; Sgt. Cleve- land: psgt. J. Reid: Sgt. Sander-lCpl. M. E. Wiley. Capt Rut- herford and the three sergeants Tpr. Balderson; Tpr. MacLure; are staff instructors. Canadian Press Staff Writer CAMP GAGETOWN, N.B. ICPI Thirty-four paratroopers Monday carried out without serious injury one of the most hazardous para- ehute lumps in the Canadian Arniyis peacetime history. it wasnt' planned that way The men were to jump Into I clearing but the RCAF C-119 Flying Box- car missed the dropping zone by about a mile and more than half the paratroopers -- members of Quebec's Znd Battallon's Royal 22nd Regiment-came down in I grove of dead pine trees. The branches of the dead pines were like bayonets and officers said it was fortunate no one was seriously injured. As it was one officer was bruised In the throat and one man was cut above the eye. There were other scratches and bruises. minor . 1 The man hung up by the tele-l 34 Parairoopers Escape As Drop Zone is Missed "ti.-rriblc.” There was no immed- iate explanation why the dropping zone was missed. However. a fairly stiff breeze sprang up lust before the Jump. The paratroopers came down on eltlier side of the main Saint John -Fredericton highway. in fact. three landed in the ditch only I Division. few feet from passing cars. Sev-l eral tourists got I closeup view of the jump. One paratroopers' chute and his - top of another ehute as emergency rope were snaggedlnoated down. across the telephone line beside the highway and he was suspended ,ln his harness for nearly to min- utes. Other soldiers were on the scene almost immediately. Gen. Plow was among the first and he immediately gave orders to res-i cuers to help the men down from ” the trees. GOT FREE inoos only Sunday had taken a bigl -batch of prisoners themselves af- EASTERN GUARDIAN MORE light at less cost i"rc.slon D. Maclmre. electrical contractor. Phone l4&2. Montague. Royal Canadian Regiment were- waiting for the paratroopers toi "MI ml” me" ”m5' is visiting friends and relatives in A few Jumpers escaped but were j Pmoul N-Sp rounded up soon after. The Van: Miss Mable Mat-Lean. Montague. Mrs. Char- lottetown. spent a few days in ter a lightning assault on the lst Momagueg when, she was the i guest of Mr. and Mrs. Henry .Vlon- leaped from roe. D.A. Mat-Plicrson. The paratroopers lthe aircraft at about 900 feet. One man was seen to walk across the', MI” M”-l.”"l9 G'l”5v 5l9"'33"9 lheyas convalescing satisfactorily fol- ilowing her recent operation in the DTtN(i;sEldgliJgsergt'i1s0FIor one para-"H" many friends trooper to be immediately above speedy recovery mother because there is lnsufflcl-l M,-g md Mm gm" 3...-us and EH1 llPdl'flIl I0? the Chm? lbdlielfamily. Stoneham. Mass. who are End If mlliihl 9395115 y ivacationing at the home of Mr and One sl-Lldier who was hI1nll!UP IrIlMrs. Mei-i rergiisnn. .Vlurt'a:. Riv- a tree wered imaelf 20 eel ioter. visited friends and relatives in the gr.ound but forgot his rii'le1Mont.ague on Monday. hi-h tta hed to hi h rndccomasn-F sect back ..p',.,”.i"f,," Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Powell and i "apprehensive" LETHBRIDGE Alta. i C P I Jldin Smith Stewart. 3 brigadier- general in the First World War and former member of Parlia- ltent and the Alberta legislature. It U years of age still practises dentistry here. As a dentist he was attending a dental school in winter in 1899 It Edmonton. and working for I den- . tilt in the summer for about 810 a month. Fresented with an honorary doc- i tor of laws degree by the Univer- sity of Alberta tdlis year. he can recall his early days in practice when he went from district to dis- trict. He remembers pulling a youth's tooth on a railway station platform without any anaesthetic. and a three-day stopover during which he pulled ill teeth-"working un- til three in the morning." Brig.-Gen. Stewart says he was about dental an- aesthetics for 55 years, but his ap prehensions have calmed since the introduction of new anaesthetics. LONG SERVICE Native of Brampton. 0nt.. he says he now has reached the age "when I don't ask an explanation for everything that happens." He came to Edmonton in 1896 and attended the first normal school in the area. before teaching school at Namao. He served with the original Strathcona Horse regiment in the South African War. and was dec- orated with the Queen's Medal and four bars. After that war liei "studied dentistry at Trinity Col- lege in Toronto. He was elected to the Alberta legislature in 1911. Then. holding the rank of major. he raised the Kings C u ty M morial H it i. , , , 0 n 9 wish "h2,”,,i July 23. in the Halifax lnfirmary. ,after a short illness. He was 42; fore he was Camumdh one ,9. family have rettirnedyto their home ilwldl hlmit?" 10 I nearby 1119- lporter counted 19 parachutes in in Syd"ey' N5 3”" spendmg tr” himself 0, the hm-M35 md ; the (mesh two weeks at the home of Mr. and Climb d0Wh- "HOW d0 Y0" I991-"f The army has trained some 10,-iM”' Job? B""k.e' M"'"ag"e' Th.” lowered themselves to the ground I be was asked. y -000 men as paratroopers and there new "cl;"";pa"'erd back by Miss on their emergency ropes or 1 "N0! hdd-" II? Mid with I have been five fatalities. none of K”fnL ll:-r e (oChM?nl:af"e and swung to the tree trunks. strug- ilhl'lIll- But he sat down In lhe them due to faulty equipment. All' "I H m 0 aro ewni l gled out of their harness and shln- ditch for I few minutes. Obviously t these accident, were c..,s.3d byi M... Cwnettus conntck 3 ,, d nied down. 10 Wall IOF hi! hE&l' 10 3'01) P0"ndr i faulty exit from the plane. ,gi-andson have left by car for their. PART OF ATTACK 8- Elsewhere in the exercise Mon-ihome in Platsburg. N.Y. after: The parachute luml? W35 N71 0i N0"? OI "'9 PITIIVOOPHS lhnded zday, several simulated atomic Iapending a month with his sisterp In attack by the "enemy Torch" 011 iht PlV9d l'08d- which "155 strikes were made. complete wtth.Mrs. John E. Shepherd, Cardigan. The 1st Canadian Army began through the southeast corner Olzlnoclt mushroom cloud. But theliMr. Connick, formerly of Spring training men for its three battal- . Camp Gagetown. 11 this had 1199' ” front was fairly stable as the 1st Valley. also Visited With his broth- lon mobile striking force to years pened broken legs might have re- Imvtgtoh pt-gpgt-ed to mhum . ? vj ago. The defending force Iolmd Whcounterstroke across the Nerepisf . Maj.-Gen. E. C. Plow. exorcise about the Jump nearly an hour be- 1 River in the stmthn-h part at thish tic on the mink market for anoth- tirector, described the drop as - fore the drop and member. of the (427 square mile camp. 01' year- TIMELY NOTES ON Fllll FARMING About half the jumpers got hung up in the trees. the white para- chutes clinging to the tops of the pines like puffs of smoke. The men jphone wires finally managed to. y dressed mink is to be sold in Can- mink breeders. Certainly the old . ads at auction sales has been de- law of supply and demand augilrs fern-d for decision until August. for it good demand for a smaller l A Joint meeting of the Executive supply. The high percentage oficommittee and Marketing Board sales It advanced prices during; of Canada Mink Breeders. with Mink ranchers thi ughout the Marttlmes. and in fact all through ('snada. will be interested to learn that the reports which we carried in this column regarding the smal- ler mink production in United States this season are correct. A despatch from Milwaukee. Wlsc-. states that the total mink produc- lion in the United States in l957 will be front is to 20 percent less than in III. This will make I dif- ference of between half and three- ouarters of I million less produc- tion. It is not I guessing affair. but is I survey conducted throughout the length and breadth of the Uni- ted sun. by the National Board of Fur Farm Organisations. Inc. The survey was taken of more than 70 percent of the mink ranches. and it shows that kit production per female is down at least half I kit, and the conservatively es- Ii ' 4 average -9- f ' for this year la 3.! kit per female, as compared with 3.6 per female in 1&6. . KIT LOSSES Kenneth M. Plaisted. executive secretary of the National Board of For Farmers. states the survey reveals kit louea in all geographi- ral areas. He termed the situa- tion '"l ions. and said that, to date. aumirttles have been unable to reach any conclusion about due to Infertility. abortions and death during the first 72 hours of lite. Although there has been some eoaductadto aasetulvictnre afprodacden Prcvtmtsguso seaaftbsunodofdecroasoraa froInllteIpunQ.lr.Plamd II a manner at I committa- vratelnuattbsrequutoflr. lct.srssIdsstsnas&iirsrn- -iii?" lgll iii tiititiziiii Hit ii" is . soviar SALES Soviets in our ideas of government yet we notice that where trade is concerned, such differences in tlx ories does not prevent i tion with them. Later this month. is fur men from the United States will head for Europe and are sche- duled to attend the Russian Fur Sales in Leninsrmt Thu Il- tandance is larger than last Y9"- The For Trade Journal of Can- Ida has an excellent write-up OI Percy Noble. I pioneer fox and lmink rancher who was elected in Gray-North. Ontario. to the iHouse of Commons in the recent election with the largest m-loritv ever recorded in that riding over his Liberal and CCF 0PP0l'E"l8- tone of the the mink farming was ever given. To- eauss. The losses occur. chiefly day the Noble rlnch ll II!'0dlIChIl. .5: Percy Noble's name was a fami- liar one to us almost 30 years iago. when he started fox farming ion I small scale. but he had keen " ' ” of quality, and very soon he was showing in fox ex- hibitions and winning ribbons. He saw that mink was I com- ing (ur, and is now probably one lot the largest mink ranchers In tCanada. He was one of the first 'to develop white mink. and pre- sentgd Sonja Home with wh I to mink pelts after her show at Mad- iison Square Gardens. This was I beat advertisments besides standard mink, Cameo Sap phtre. Finnish Topas. Swedish Buff. Aleutian. Blue his and other types. his-. Noble has as his assistants 5? Q I . the last large April and May Iuc-l representatives of all selling ag- l lions indicate that there will be ncies in Canada. has been set to whit! W: m”, dm" t;-hm the no carry-over into the next sell-titake place at Fort William. 0nt.. Complete - intact - with every scene, every song of tho it in; season. It's easy to be opiimls-l during the week of August 5. TO-DAY TO SAT. motion picture that ran a year on Broadway at 333.50! RODGERS 8. HAMMERSTEIN Prsssnt OKLAHOMA! CINEMA SCOPE (DIOR IV TECIIIIICOLOR Gilliilllll Mmllli - BIINITISRAHAME - SlllRlEY lillliS Gilli liEiSilN - llHlllillilE lllliilliilllll Eililli llliilll - IAMES lilllllilliil itmwittgiis-iiliiitiitit - PIECE: IAIIIIIIIQ IVITIO 20th battery, 5th Brigade, Cana- dian Field Artillery for service in .the First World War. in 19l5. pro- moted lieuteniant-colonel, he went overseas in command of the 7th Fl. K?MacDonald Died In Halifax The death of Hugh Keith .Vlac- Donald. Cornwallis Manor, Sum- mer Street. occurred Tuesday, years old. He was the son of Mrs. Vi a r - Donald Inee Bessie Aitken of Georgetown P.E.l.I. and the late Frank D. MacDonald of Sydney. i Nova Scotia. Surviving besides his mother are one brother, Clarence. of Halifax. and two sisters. Euiyn, Mrs. W, T. Beasley, Montrcal. and Doris, Mrs. L. A. O'Brien. Armdale. The funeral took place froln the Halifax Funeral Home. Quin- pool Road. Friday, at 2. pm. in-i i terment followed at Saint Johnsnf 1900 milagc. a car made from ta Slanlcy Sttsaincr patent sold out land built under the name Loco- :mnbile. Steam built by the Slliley hrothers. and ;the patent on this particular car lwas sold and built under Cemetery. er Percy II Summerslde and friends and relatives in Spring Valley. Darnley. and Seaview. I galliuitiiilis which may be used fort 'for the sircnsf 1 Venerable Cars Brigadier-Genercil Recalls . if” Early Days Of Dentistry 4 . ' Artillery Brigade. He was appointed commander of the 4th Field Brigade in I917 and the same year was promoted brigadier-general in command of the 3rd Canadian Division artil- lery. Twice wounded, he was twice mentioned in dispatches and re- ceived the DS0 and the French Croix de Guerre.. He entered the Canadian Parlia- ment in 1930 as Conservative member for Lethbridgc. and served in the federal house until 935. Nol:t::-lyi Owns Ottawa Sirens OTTAWA t('Pl --The seivn Civil defemce sorcms in Ottawa seem to he orphans At least. they becamc the topic of disputed ownership Provided by federal civil de- fence authorities and worth about 3500 each. the sirens were in- .stalled by the Ottawa hydroelec- tric commission about five years ago They're located in various areas of the city One siren in an uptown building recently went off when parking cases fell against it. The wall noti only startled shoppers. it touched off thoughts of ownership 1 "I don't know whose sirens they are I dont think thcy belong to the city." said Mayor George; Nelnis i LACK (ID SI-1Tl'P The Hydro comniissioii said it will no longer repair or service Big Business Big Government By FORBES IHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor Not "union" but "disuniori" ap- pears to hold the key to I future of manageable proportions. says l)r. Leopold Kohr in an article in the current issue of the Business Quarterly. published by the Uni- versity of Western Ontario's school of business administration. The article is entitled The Dan- ger of Siuu-Capitalism Turns Into Social . It is documented with instances from atoms to the behavior of man- kind. and-whether or not one agrees with it or with its deduc- tions-it make interesting read- tng. Critical social size Dr. Kuhr says, explains not only complex- llics of a social and political na- ture. but also many of the most- outstanding economic complexit- hrs. The "wirlelt-deplored trend to wards socialism.” seemed not due to the effective- ness of socialistic teaching. it it were. it would be ' , e- henslble that the United States. while fighting communism in all corners of the world. should under both Democratic and Republican administrations have increased ferent name. The other is a Maxwell of un- known origin and ownership In fact. recent liuusecleaning in old storerooms at Tech unearthed the fusty old relic that no one had remembered was there. The Maxwell is a mystery. for all records uuncerrtingdheoldauto the behavior of' I Tuesday, July 3), 1957 The Guardian Pay 9 ithe Great Britain. hers might gcalled the world's third most corn- isnunlaed society. NEED MOBIL BULB "When I society outgrows cert-I Iin limits,” says Dr. Knhr, "its oomplexlti multiply at such an Iccderating rate that an increase government role becomes neces- aary. ; "The reason for this lies not In the theory but in the physics of ”As business units F both liaiona assume such proportions that, far from releasing their own balancing forces, they threaten to ruin. along with their opposing for- ices. the very mechanism of the system of which they are a part. h "And this is the element forc- -ing the government of even the l freest society to assume at I given level of expansion an ever-mcreas-, '07 l"5l3ll('9- nig economic role-first as a hal-T anring third force, and ultimately- -Is a centralizing and actively so- cializing first force." l Dr. Kohr says the division need not be plied in the extreme sense of dismemberment of great pow- jers. but in the form of decentral- i lzation. 1 "Economically." he says, "this is illustrated in two ways. One is. the restoration of the practice of. the principle that business. like the medieval mano. can profit- ably be divided into a number of smaller estates without affecting the unity of ownership. SMALL UNITS PAY "The other is the renewed . . , that smaller business the sirens. A hydro official said-5991'" I0 ll”? be?" 1051- Ch31'l95 -W-aieness - the s 1 r c n s aren't commission l CWIEV "Wm" head OI TCCIVS W10 "mu are actually more capnab propcrt y Fl-dcrul said they t'lVll defence f)IIl('l3lSI supplied the sirens ioi department, who died in I952. left no information about the Maxwell. The Locomobile has been a curi- istic in -character. individually more profitable. socially always more resistant. than large cent- Ottawa and other Canadian citiesiosny 8" Tech '0' at lens! 25 year" "med enterprises" regarded as targets for any pos- hslble encniy attack Fctlt-ral Cl) makes funds avail- iable to lllllllI('lp1.ll civil dclcnce or-. -installation anti maintenance of sirens . Ottawa ilitilll' ask for any fed- eral funds, the l'IVll defence- spokcslnan soul The c a p it ai dot-sn't liavc a municipal CD; setup And mayor Neillis said . . un- 1 til such time as we do, I ranli see that we have any responsibility- Two an ink; W CAl.GARt' v('PI autumnliiie. reposc in antiquated splendor at the Provincial insti- tute of Technology and Art here. Olie is a Locomobile steam car - Two historic cars were first I dif- It was owned by a man named Jackson and became part of the estate when he died. Stan Green. Aeronautics department. is putting it into running order. It has a gas- more or less operable once a new boiler is installed. SOURIS HOSPITAL The annual mooring will be held in the lTown Hall on Monday. August 5th of 8:30. All interested invited to attend. Board of Trustees. supervisor of the g ”Even Soviet Russia has aban- doned her original idea of total centralization and is dismantling goveramentsectorofberaoo-&Isuditile&yiatlIIuy Iomytotheextentunuaexttonsld to vita Iattledh had the groups of the Soviet orbit Ind.pmlslud the uolted uvarb: he craniu- l the (laid at economic 'tton." . Dr. talao studied It the Universities tof Innsbruck. Vienna. Paris and l'l'oronto; is author of a recent ; book The Breakdown of Nations; -- g and at present is associate pro lug" ud Ewen compemwe ml lessor of economics at the Univer- jsuy of Puerto Rico. : smrxc ANIMAL l Leopards are found in all pans the tropical forests of the south. Lumber - Brick Rough. Sized and Matcliec Boards. SCANTl.l.'VG All Sizes CIIIPMAN HARD COMMON BRICK CLARK BROS. MT. STEWART toline vaporizing burner and will? TO-NIGHT The story of the making of SHOW STARTS AT DUBI g Ball or Fine I ADULTS 600 M Children under 11 years In can FREE AND WED. adoctor. . .andthetWd women whose love made him I man! srii K t: F! India. from the Himalayas to IOX OFFICE OPENS I IRM- In line with The British American Oil Company's consistent and announced policy EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY- .-3 ,,.