3.-.-. URBAN J. MacI..EI.LAN Urban Joseph MacLellan. arts, was born at Indian River on Aug- us! 1. 1934. and after receiving his early education there. entered st. Dunstans in the fall of 1950. lie became Sec.-Treas., of the Dramatic Society and membe oi w.U.S.C.. during 1953-54; vice- prcsident of the Students' Union and assistant business manager of Red and White the following year; and then president of the Dramatic Society. He participat- ed in all intramural sports. He plans to work for the Hud- LEO D. 0'QUlNN FERNAND A. POULIN S. D. U. GRADUATING CLASS Leo Daniel 0'Quinn. science, was born in Milville, Nfld., March 6. 1935. He attended St. Beck's School. St. Ann's School and St. Bonaventure's College b e to r e coming to P.E.I., in 1953 as a sophomore at S.D.U. He has taken an active part in all intramural competition as well as being a member of the M.I.D.L., for two years. His ser- vice in the U.N.T.D.. qualified him for a commission in the R. C. N. (R). He plans to be a meterological sun's Bay Company in Winnipeg. officer in Government service Fernand Albert Poulin was born January 25. 1935, at Valley Junction. Quebec and received his early education there. He went on to St. Jean Eudes in Quebec City and St. George's Semlnay in St. Georges. In 1955 he came to St. Dunstan's and in his rel- atively brief stay has distinguish- ed himself in both curricular and extra-curricular activities. Freddy plans to come back to St. Dunstan's again next year to take up engineering. Air Defence Command I Operations Described By DAVE MclNTOSH Second World War, the squadron Canadian Press Staff Writer carried out more than 300 bomb- OTTAWA (CP)-At 35,000 feet. lng operations from the RCAF's the plane seemed to be in a No. 6 group in England. "0""m- 33 if it had been all Marshall, from Peterborough. sdriftin space and forgotten eons cm” and Toronto, .5 35) om . Il!0- 0 tour on Spitfires in Italy with the Under cloud. the earth was in- City of Windsor Squadron during visible. All around the haze. Above the Second World War. Anderson. were bright Venus, orange Betel- his navigator. is 27. a native of gauge, the belt of Orion, the dipper Ottawa, sun of an airman and a and the bear. graduate of Royal Military Col- lnside the plane. it was quietllege. The headsets. face masks end;They may be in the air three rrssll helmets shut out the high-o times during the day and night, pitched wail of the CF-l00 inter-. checking on unidentified planes- teptor'a two jet engines. Over the) the squadron has to follow up two inter-communication sys em. the pilot and navigator could ear each other's breathing through the oxy- gen tubes. Al.l.l:B'l' FOR BOGEY But the plane was not forgotten. "Credo 29." barked the voice from ground control radar, hun- dreds of miles away. "Starboard 33,”. . Fighter pilot Flt. Lt. Al Marshall cranked the CF-100 into a tight turn "Steady on 380, control. ”Bogey 25 at I) right." said ground control. in the rear seat. navigator F0. llugh Anderson peered” into the radar scope inches in front of his face. He knew the bogey. an un- ldi-dified plane, would appear on his radar scale 30 degrees to the right and 25 miles away. Soon he picked out the tell-tale blip on the green screen. Marshall was peering into the haze ahead. Anderson manipulated the radar antenna with a control at his right hand. not taking his eyes from the scope. "Lock-on," he reported quietly to Marshall. LOCIKED ON TARGET He was telling the pilot that his radar now was locked onto the target automatically. A small dot inside a circle ap- peared on Marshall's scope. All he had to do now was guide the plane so that the dot stayed in the middle of the closing circle. He did not have to look for the other plane. lie knew it was there. ..The CF-100 was closing in on the bogey at a 00-degree angle, known ll lead collision course. with about four seconds left. the interceptor's rockets were fired automatically by radar-or would have been if this had not been another practice Interception. The dot on Marshall's scope and- ilenly disappeared. to be replaced by I cross. This was the signal to break off. Marshall veered away quickly. The CF-100 passed just behind an American B-47 bomber of Strategic Air Command. Day and night, year in. year out. this exercise is practised until ihc routine is honed down to the last acggrate split second. Droved friendly. But some day they might be enemy bombers. Ida's nine CF-100 squadrons are ready. alert. BASED AT UPLANDS Marshall and Anderson fonn one crew in 428 (Ghost) Squadron. bllod at Uplands field a few miles from downtown Ottawa. " he told ground far. all the bogey: havej the I or three a week-but mostly train- ing. training, seeking perfection. The key to the entire operation is radar-radar on the ground and radar in the plane. Anderson is not so much a navigator as a radar operator. His chief job is the lock- on. There is little worry about navi- gation because the Cf-100 is under the constant control of ground ra- dar in the Pinetree chain. Orders on courses. speeds-wide open is l"bust-'er"-heights and target dis- tances come from the ground by VHF very high frequency radio voice transmission. EFFICIENT AIRCREWS High. so high they are out of sight ahd sound of earthlings. the aircrews work quietly. efficiently with Pinetree. watching. waiting. ceaselessly. restlessly. With the American bombers. they work far above commercial air routes but. when returning to base, have to follow the regular air routes and are under control of the civilian tower. Trans-Canada Air Lines also uses Uplands and every conceivable safety precau- tion is taken. Over Ottawa. the CF- l00s cannot fly below 5,000 feet. Security forbids giving exact figures, but the CF-100 can fly fast and high and reach height quickly. Squadron 428 hopes to ob- tain soon new Mark V CF-100s which can climb even higher. On some interceptions. such as with the B473. the closing speed may reach more than 1.000 miles an hour. At such speeds. there is normally time for only one pass at the bogey. So the first pass Burke Electric Authorised M Dealer Electrical Wiring Repairing and Supplies Oil Heating Household A pliauooa Tele on DIAL 4021 156 Great Geo. Sf. l i l i l 1 S VILLAGE OF A special uni 3...? l 9' "I. amsoivo . ., - .4 'quality "value TAYLORS JEWELLEBS LTD meeting of the ratepayers of the Vil- lage of S will be held ednesd , M W EV. Cbymmissioner to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of C0lll'll'3'i0'l9l' Patton G. Hillier. (Sections 17 and 23 V.S.A.) ' - Signed: Ilia Ouininhsioners of the Village of Splint P05 ” R Ansnmonr. has to be perfect. In the closing ” of a prac- tice interception, the aircrew in each plane have to swivel their heads quickly to follow thc.other plane. The B-47s. practice "bandits" for interceptors all over Canada and the United States, burn plenty of lights to prevent any possible collision. When Marshall and Anderson approached it this night, the B-47 shone a spotlight at the CF-100. A'l' CLOSE RANGE Marshall pulled behind and just below the bomber. its swept-back wings and let engines were sil- t ” J against the northern lights. Marshal said that one time. dur- ing a dawn interception of a B-47. the bomber crews waved the CF- l00 in close so they could take snapshots of it. "The American tourist." Mar- shall said with a grin. Tho.-re is obviously a camaraderie b t the bomber and fighter crews. The U.S. Air Foycn rates the RCAF squadrons high on their efficiency and capabilities. ..Later. on the ground. 1'-.1 Lcu Rozcn. 25, of Assiniboia. Sas.r.. a navigator, said the B-47 crews must get "twitchy" with Canadian and American fighters inte:ceptliig 2'i- Noni. n. MacMILl.AN 1 Noel Hubert MacMillan. science, was born at Charlottetown, Dec- ember 22. 1932. He attended Model School. Queen Square School and Prince of Wales Col- lege. obtaining his junior matri- culation. In the fall of 1952 Noel came to St. Dunstan's and this year receives the degree of Bachelor of Science. VETOS PRESS BILLS PROVIDENCE. RI. (AP)-Gov. Dennis J. Roberts Wednesday ve- toed two bills which had been at- tacked nationally as restricting freedom of the press, since being passed 10 days ago. One of the bills would have made slander or libel a criminal offence in Rhode Island, with penalties up to years in prison and 85,000 in fines. The other would have pro- hibited news pictures, televising or radio broadcasting of court sessions. them day and night. There were it 347 bombers over Caniuzn this night. being in- tercepted constantly as they passed from me squadrons range into another's. Flt. Lt. Kyle Thompson of Ottawa made five interceptions. CLEAN CLUHIES WEAR. LONGER For Your ,Dry Cleaning Needs RITE-WAY cnnannns Dial 7337 Records-Music 1 Everything musical, Pianos to Harmonicas. Sheet Music Hit Parade to Classics. Records, all speeds, best known makes. Radios, Record Players to suit your needs. P. E. Island's Oldest Music House. MILLER sRoriiERs LIMITED Established 1868 Dial 3535 s.ra.. Fonds": Poultry” and Dairy Supplies FRESH SUPPLY SEEDS- Maritlme Grown No. 1 "Lain: entlan" Turnip Seed; ”Moa3ie a Prince white Mangel Seed: Ren- uie's" Mangel Seed, - and ALL KINDS OF FIELD SEEDS. FEEDS- a A full line of "Purina" Feeds; "CHICK STARTER": "Chlqk Grower"; "Pig Starter"; "Pig Grower": Cattle and Calf Feeds; Oilcake. Bran. Shorts, etc. POULTRY EQUlPMEN'I'- Oil and Coal Broader Stoves; Purina Chick Feeders: Wateraa-I (all sizes); Chek-R-Tabs; five-inch Stove Pipe. BABY CHICK etc. DAIRY SUPPLIES- All sizes Milk and Cream Cans; Strainers: Dairy Buckets; Filter Disks; Cattle Salt in Blocks and Bags. DILLON & SI'ILl.E'l"l' 70 QUEEN STREET - DIAL 883 Girl Guides Looking Ahead Prince Edward Island guides and guiders are looking forward with even more than usual eager- ncas to the Girl Guide Camps which are scheduled to be held in July. The Girl Guides Association is very strict in regard to Guide Camps being conducted only by thoroughly qualified personnel. In connection with the two camps being planned, a trained com-I guide membership. A quota of 400 is set for United ers and staff. niandant from Halifax will be in Chlfie 0' "10 Iifii. and for the era are Australia. Belgium. Braz- second. a commandant is comingiil, Denmark, Egypt, France. from Quebec. Also, a group oflGi-eat Britain, Greece. Haiti. India suldes fram the Magdalen 18-(Ireland, The Netherlands, New land! will I39 501111118 local Zllideslzealand, Norway, Pakistan, The at the second camp. ii-Ehllippines, South Africa, Finland, Guide Camps are always POP-tsweden, Switzerland. Germany, ular. and are looked upon as the Iceland, Costa Rica. Japan, Mex highlight of the Gulde's year. to.icu, panama, Columbia, Italyv which the other activities leadlimxemboui-g, Liechtenstein, Bu,-. up. Bill Hill. YEBP. P8l'ilCl-lilIl' lll-ima. Ceylon. Lebanon, Israel, Unit- terest is being shown, for greeted states, stress is laid on camping in the Hospitality for all these foreign list of qualifications necessary for i those who may be fortunate enough to be able to attend the Centenary World Camp planned for August. 1957, and the guides will want to make as much progress as pos- sible during the local camps this summer. The first world Girl Guide camp ever to be held is scheduled to open at the Girl Guide Camp. Doe Lake, Sprucedale. Ontario in Aug- ust. l957. Girl Guides of 35 count- ries are to be invited to come to Canada for this 12-day Centenaryl World Camp. United States, will be provided by the Canadian Girl Guides Associa- tion.oThis includes camp fees for a twelveday camp; all camping equipment; subsidy for transport- and a visit of one week in a private home with facilities for siglit-sce- FIE. To accommodate 1.500 girls at a camp which formerly held about I300, means that much clearing, ari- ditional new buildings and more water and I-Iydro are needed. Therefore to carry out this pm- countries fail to meet their quotas” the number of Canadian Guldesi may be increased. Canadian guid-l es. rangers and cadets, aged 15 to 18 years as of March 1, 1957, are this province during the month of eligible on is pro ratio basis of ation; a trip into Algonquin Park-. HAMPTON. H'35Plia1. is now convalescing. Mr. George Farrow. son of Mr. and Mrs. William Farrow, has 1., illl;ll9li to ius home'here, follow- "'1 WVVWGS Riven in connection States with an equal quota fromuitli the CN. liailway in the Pro. foreign countries. The remaining 300 will be made up of guide lead- lvince of New Brunswick. Favorable reports have been re. Countries invited to send camp- Wived ('0m'9Flllllg the condition of plilr. A.E. Best and Mr. Clifford Sherren, patients in the P151 Hospital following operatlnos 'p.;;'. formed and medical treatment re- ceived at this institution. The residential property of Mr Ward Myers changed hands on in i ' Skilled anti experienced in all llllasvs of camp life, with ability 10 Drcpare three meals a day io-r 310 people; able to pitch. strike and care for a tent: must be adaptable; must be interested in and have you un(I9i'sian(llI'lg of people; ,ilizii' Wlill her own country and its glscograpliy, history and industries; lbc able to teach songs, dam--.-5 and Halncs. Above all she must be able .l'f -llllL'l'l)ii9I .llle Canadian Girl .(-uities Association to the guides oi other roiiiitries. .C.-ihilli SITE A lliis camp site near Sprur-exialc ls, localcd on Due Lake, liiuskoka ilislru-I. approximately 20 miles lnorth of Huntsville. The lake is T C W C Friends in Hampton and South 0 jllielville are pleased to learn that lAIllLa Toole, Four year old dough. ,tcr of Mr. and Mrs. Ellison Toole who recently underwent an appen- dix Ulleration at the Charlottetown May 2. the purchasers being Mr Stanchel. Mrs. to th Mr. Ian Mac Quarrie, student Mr. and Mrs. John MacQuarrie. has been spending the weekend at his home here. Ian's friends are pleased to learn that he is recover- ing from (what an x'ray revealed) a fractured ankle bone, sustained during activities on the University Campus. Trout fishermen are reporting poor catches in the streams where trout regularly abound, due to in- clement weather conditions. Friends of Miss Earla MacKen- zie will be pleased to learn that she has entered upon her duties at the Government Un-employ- ment office at Toronto. The Mac- and Mrs. Marshall Konderson. of Koridersan was formerly Miss I-Ialliwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Halliwell. previous to her marriage. both she and her husband are receiving 1 ' is ' v at Dalhousie University, son of Thursday, May 1o,19ss The Guardian. rages Kenzia family recently moved to Toronto b-om their former home at Long Creek. and are well known in this community. Using the Order of service for "Family Day" at the Services of Public Worship in the Churches tin i this pastoral Charge on May 6. many were present to hear and enjoy the inspiring mess- age taken from the words: "Train up a Child in the way he (or she? should go; when they grow older they shall not depart therefrom: all uniting with the choir hi sing- ing the Childi-ens' hymns suitably adapted to this special Service. Daily transportation to markets of potatoes and turnips continues. the bags becoming lighter as the prie increases. Weekend visitors here. included: Mr. Glen MacFadyea, twin bro- thers. Everett and Curtis, Mr. Donald Glover, Misses Barbara Dunsford, Marjorie Ferguson. Au- drey Thompson. Sadie MacPher- son. is now on. This year over 80 I P. E. I. RURAL BEAUTIFICATION CONTEST The Eleventh Annual Rural Beautification Contest for 1950 offered for Farm Home Improvement, for Small Folding 1m. prizes to a value of 83300.00 are In announcing the event. today. Mrs. W. Rankine Nesbitt, Chief Commission for Girl Guides in Canada. said a steering Committee has been set up in preparation for the world camp, August 8-19. 1957, celebrating the 100th anniversary of the birth of the founder, Lord Baden Powell. QUOTA (05 Capacity enrollment is set at 1,500, with Canada's quota limited for the present to 405. If other gramme. the Centenary World Camp committee will raise 5127.- 000 through public subscription payable to the Canadian Girl Guides Association. QUALIFICATIONS All Canadian campers. who must be recommended by their Capt- ains and Commisslom-i's, will be chosen for their special qualiiicat- ions. Significant honour wil he .attached to such recommendations lwhich require that a candidate he: ooiwr Miss ouR WEEKEND . . . . FOOTWEAR SPECIALS THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY BALLERINAS Black Suede and Leather. 2.98 and 3.98 Black Patent Sling Back. 3.98 The new Fawn shade in leather Bath, Ballerina and Sling Backs. 2.98 and 3.98 PUMPS Womenls Pink Spike Heel Pumps SNEAKERS Black Uppers. White Trim. Youths' Sizes 11-13 1.69 Boys' Sizes 1 - 5 I.89. 2.69. 3.49 NYLONS Menls Sizes 6 - 10 I.98. 3.95 to 5.50 Full Fashioned 51, 60, 66 Gauge 4.93 , Pair 79: SPRING PARK in Spring Park Com- 9th at 750 pm. for MEN'S WORK BOOTS In Crepe, Panco. Leather and Cork Soles 4.98 to 8.98 ' Hf!- K AGNEW - SHOE STORES LTD. . SURPASS whennyou s with ilnsfanf I shirts -Feel so much more COMPOIITABLE... lg, larch them i z X J It's so quick and easy, tool water and your starch is a fine wax to speed your i THIV STAV SMAHTIR STARCH ED ! heavy, exactly the way you want it. There's even blue in Glide to add whiteness, and znwlilllll-' LAUNDRY STARCH Glide is a guaranteed product of Java): Company limited. f LONG!!! You simply add Glide to ready. light, medium or l'0II. iciulit miles long with rocky shoresi .and pineclad islands on land orig-. irially granted by the Crown to all pioneer settler in 1885. It was ac- quired by the Girl Guides in ltl-lili provement, Farm Buildings, Outstanding Homes, Flower Gar- dens. There are prizes also for Community Improvement, V11. lage Improvement and for One-room Rural Schools. after they had held one camp on the site and decided to purtliase it. In 1953 the Girl Guides made on additional purchase A P.i-asmi Island, a nearby property which was a favorite overnight camp-uiit with nearly a mile of waterfront. YOU'LL FIND CANT BE spot. The camp covers 350 acres; FOR THAT SUPER MOTHER'S DAY TREAT For full details write - , THE RURAL BEAUTIFICATION SOCIETY. l CliARM)TfETOWN. I All entries must be received by the end of this week. ouR SPECIALS ' BEAT! at YOUNG TENDER SIRLOIN or T-BONE STEAK, lb. ' CHOICE STEER SIRLOIN or T-BONE ROAST, .Ib.' TENDER MEATY RUMP ROAST, FRESHLY GROUND HAMBURG, lb. GRADE "A" (5 Months Old) 6-7 Lbs. CAPONS, lb. Breakfast Sliced Bacon, lb. 45c Young Tender Beef Liver 35: For Mother! Poi Of Gold CHOCOLATES SL25 Tasty Pak 20 Oz. PEAS.2tiiis 29: Welchls 24 Oz. GRAPE JUICE KRAFT DINNER. 2 pkgs. 29; Silver Seal MOLASSES. quart . . . . . 33: No. l Creamery BUTTER. 2 lbs. . . . . . Save-All 100 Feet WAX PAPER Bright's Choice aocaoc PEACHES. 2 fins . . . . . . . (Tlark's Ovenorock PORK 2. BEANS. 2 iqrs . . . 49: New Improved Bath Size LIFEBUOY SOAP. 2 cakes 27: Libby's Fancy 48 Oz. TOMATO JUICE. fin . . . . . 37: PIERi'iE'S HOW ABOUT A NICE STEAK THIS WEEKEND? . 59: 55: lb. 55c I I O O O I I I O O 0 I O O O D. & 1'. 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