oS i F 2. a } a ze E % s a ¢ ~INVESTIGATE:TRAIN-BUS COLLISION. __. 2 Police Chief Jean Lapointe . vestigation inte the collision investigated also by the Cana- =~ @f Dorion, Que, CENTRE, | Friday between a freight train dian National Railway whose > eonfers with aides in an in- , and a bus, killing 19. He says: 100-car freight hit the 45-seat a =; ; we a rennet every’ bus loaded with teen-agers en poss » every one.” route te a d to celebrate : KENSI NGTON Twenty-four--persons-were in- victory in student slactions ~ jured. The’ accident is being (CP Wirephoto) Recent guests of Mrs. Grace Holmes, Kensington were her daughters, Mrs. Richard Mur- phy and family, Alma, and Mrs, Robert Petersen, Mr. Petersen and family, Summerside. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Thompson’ and family and Mrs. Grace Hol- mes, Kensington, and Mrs. Rena Burt, Malpeque were recent vis- |’ ftors to Covehead and Char- lottetown. Mrs. H. L. Howard returned on Tuesday to her home at Ken- gington after spending the past ten days with her daughter, Mrs. Owen MacGougan and Mr. Mac- Gougan, Malpeque. ~ - Mrs. Grace Holmes returned recently from a ‘three week's vacation when she visited her daughter, Jean Holmes and Miss Shirley Wright at their summer cottage at Ogonquit, Maine, her sister, Mrs. Ralph Brander, Ar- |~4 lington, Mass., and other rela- tives and friends including nep- hews and nieces at Groton, Mass, Miss Holmes, Miss Wright and Mrs. Holmes motored to. Boston |. from Maine. Mrs. Brander ac- eompanied her sister on return 3, t0 the Island to spend a short \. visit with relatives. — JUST PUBLISHED Sh bete Et a 8S be aD RaQ aE wt TRE ta CANADA'S FIRST BANK A HISTORY OF THE BANK OF MONTREAL, VOL. | BY MERRILL DENISON NU ALE DIG 2 eae det Mm Storey Electric Ltd. Ch'town 136) erince sts, RED CROSS IS MLWAYS THERE. wre YOUR is $7.50 AT ALL BOOK STORES MeCLELLAND & STEWART the Canadian Publishers Share the United Way ° 10 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Oct. 11, 1966. By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (CP)—The big pow- ers talk of arms control and dis- armament while pouring arms gions at an alarming rate, says a report issued today. . Big-power arms sales are esti- mated at more than $1,000,000,- 000 a year, says the report by the Institute for Strategic Stud- ies, and the outlook is bright for expansion, ‘ | In early post-war years only Britain and the United States, wi in-a position to grant and pg conventional arms to emerg- g countries. They were joined in ‘the 1950s by the Soviet Union and France and now a dozen countries, including Canada, are, eager to share in the competi’ tion. “Although they had sold ye a small share of the total major arms flow by 1965, Italy, Can- ada, Japan and Germany can supply a certain range of wea- pons. and training ‘in effective competition with the four major suppliers,” says the report’s au- into the world’s developing: re-‘ Big Powers Pouring Arms Into Developing Regions thors, Geoffrey Kemp of Britain and Col, John L. Sutton of the United States. SEEK MORE BUSINESS — “These nations show every sign of seeking a larger share of the arms market and often appeal to buyer-nations who pre- fer-to-stress non-alignment with the’ major powers.” The institute is,a non-govern- ment international study centre headed by Alastair Buchan, third sen of te late Lord Tweedsmuir, Canada’s gover- nor-general during 1935-40. The report presents details of the post - war international arms trade for the first ‘time. ‘ It says that since 1945 the in- dustrial powers have sold or do- nated about 4,500 jet combat planes, 5,000 tanks, 224 warships and numerous guided missiles and small arms to the develap- ing regions. The producing cabins often say these shipments merely are designed for local defence but fF Kemp’ "and Sutton=miaintain:-the cated weaponry that can ignite local and regional wars. This\ flow of armaments also can become a factor in deciding whether one country should compete with its. arms-import- ing neighbor by moving into. the nuclear production field. UN CHECK FAILS Attempting—to-control-the-flow of arms is something which the tackle but even the UN is un- erms emberg> Africa. France and to some ex- United Nations has tried to. tent Italy had ignored the em- bargo. Some of the report’s conclu- sions : British military jets dom!- nated the developing region dur- ing 1945-55 and still constitute more than one-half the military jets in south Asia and sub-Sa- haran Africa. : 2. .Late-model military jets have entered the Middle Fast and North Africa in greater® numbers than in any of the other developing areas. against south have been eedered by Australi The heaviest concentrations - tanks are in the Near East and the Indian subcontinent. 6. India, Pakistan, and South American” countries show a continuing demand for warships. Submarines are be- coming a popular, item. 7. Of the $1,000,000,000° in an- nual arms sales to these areas, the Soviet Union gets about $400,000,000 of the business; France- $200,000.00: Britain $15,000,000, and the U.S. $150,- 0,00, with the U.S. also grant- 3. India .and Pakistan have relied almost entirely on - the West for modernization of: their air forces but India now is de- veloping her own production, with Russian aid. 4. Only the Soviet Union has introduced long - range combat jet bombers in the developing able to prevent breaches of the Ready Pasted @ 300 patterns in stock op a ooh — arms include highly sophistl- ‘WALLPAPERS ‘Visit Moore & McLeod’s For SUNWORTHY— @ Immediate delivery 85c up > @ Phone for home viewing samples book—894-6541. Moore & McLeod ltd. world. American F-111A jets ing an additional $300,000,000. Australia“ FOR ALL : YOUR iNSURANCE NEEDS PHONE 894-6567 HYNDMAN & CO. Limited © ‘Established 1872 CHARLOTTETOWN also at Summerside — _ “The Old Reliable” Fire, Life, Marine, Auto and Guarantee Bonds of all kinds, PICK CANDIDATE. ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) — At Janta Democrats have picked Archie L. 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