“giptcr with two homing tor- .i ,iocs‘ takes off from fantail 3“ f Dcslroycr Hazclwood in a '" demonstration of the "._ . 1’, :{avy‘s latest antisubmarine E in the following Associated Press xccpiion. rv, on gives a blow-hy-blow. quota- - packed account of how was in Baghdad during the III-hour Ililllli' which sent Ab‘ cl liliiim Knsscm down to defeat and tIt‘liIIl. fly ill-ix EFTYVOULOS Marriages IN MEMORIAM I I who. pas 1951i. v The Guardian, Charlottetown. Mon. Feb. 18. 1988. Ill ' cel Nolet was not mad at any- 1 plant at Kapuskasing, _ one, but his cup of trouble best a been running over. Settler Has Troubles In Bush Strike Area By JOHN LeBLANC :under government permit for, MATTICE, Ont. (CP) —— Mar-:the big Spruce,Falls newsgrintt ' an itl Lnets him about $1,000. Marcel Is 37. the father of i has been cut off by a strike of seven children and the foster- I union bUShWOI‘kers emPIOyEd by father of two more. He scrapes ' Spruce Falls power and Paper a living from 150 acres of land Company. The picture bright- which he is clearing as he, cried when union and companyl ed ~ grows forage for his dairy herd. ; negotiators In Tisronto reach a settlement that ended the strike over the weekend. . ROUBLES LOOM I lBut there are still other trou- es The pink-and-white two - storey ome he built himself brightens a bleak stretch of Trans-Canada Highway outside this hamlet 130 miles northwest of ‘ in. In normal times, he keeps Oiie of his adopted sons hast ahead of the bailiffs with a win- had to be taken IWGY for m ' ' ter cash cro pulpwood. ical treatment. And his brother, 1 Luc—his cutting partner andi next-lot neighbor — as .well est Like other settlers, he cuts and Iliauls out 100 cords a season he other adopted son, Noel now, his wood marketl HAT A DIFFERENCE'A DAM MAKES These “before” and "after" pictures of a stream at Orwell shows what a difference a dam makes and the effects of the govennment's rogram. a trickle of water is all that is in evidence while after the dam was built (rightt a good to Kassem and slapped him across the face. several times," the major said. The major took Kassem and Mahdawl to the radio station to see Aref. Twelve officers formed a court martial there and Aref, presiding. asked: “Who made the 1958 revolu-l tion—you or me?" Brochu, are in ja‘ charged with l non-capital murder. 1 Nolet is of some 800‘ farmer-settlers along a loo—mile ribbon of bushland east andi west of here who became en-I meshed in a dispute between; ithe Lumber and Sawmill Work-I ers Union (CLC) and a group oft paper companies including the Spruce Falls firm. DRONE SUB-KILLER ‘ A (Il'nllf‘ antisubmarine heli- , low BY BLOW ACCOUNT Kassem Pleadecl For Life After Capture By'Rebels . .' Revolutions anywhere are .“PIensc. you are my brother, ' . cctcd and confused: nt in Iraq last week was no let me go to Vienna," pleaded oriespomicut from Cyprus B A G ii I‘ A 1). Iraq (AP irths, Deaths rut-DONALD n In loving mom- TL“) of our door husband and n. ,, mum, A. MacDonald~tanks and armed personnel car- “, away Fobmaw 18 ricrs opened their attack on ‘ '.K r e mama,“ we have from day defence ministry compound "You," Kassem said. . "Why did u say you made the revolution and that I was a traitor?" KASSEM ADMITS CRIME "No—I m a traitor," Kas- sem answered. “But please, you are my brother. Please let me go out of Baghdad. let me go to ' nna." “Why did you .shoot 160 of our brother officers who made the revolution wit “It was not I that shot theml —it was the court martial," Kas- I s weapon. The pilotless craft is flown remotely radio from the ship and guid- ed to the target by the team- work of Sonar and Radar. The Dash (for Drone Antisubmar- Inc Helicopter) gives the dies- troyer a long ran e punch, permitting the ship to lie out of range of the enemy sub’s torpedoes or gunfire. (U. S. Navy Photo via AP Wirephoto) S m robot b em said. ; Aref asked Kassem to repeati what he had said into a tape re-, cor er. _ ' “If I do that you will kill me," Kassem said. FOUND GUILTY " sem and Mahdawi guilty. “They were taken and shot." said the major. The major said he did not wit- lness the killing, but that one of- ary forces crashed through into‘ficer .Shot Kassem With a su the building where Kassemsmachme sun. Another report. liVed at 11 am. Saturday. Theylhowever. said Kassem and-Mall- first caught two genei-ais—Saduidawi were executed by Six of- Mcdhafi, dopiin governor gen.€ficcrs of the court ' ref. ‘eral. and {\ludir Harakat, com-1 PhOlOgraPhS 0‘ KaSSCmS n was the final bid for lifeimander or operations. ibsidy seem to sow he w, by the former Iraqi leader be-l Tanks then rolled through thelkllled "1 3 f3" SIZGd 1‘00!“- {Mg 'forc he was executed after be-lmain gate and nlanll’y dI‘OVCIenmll-lll for at 1935‘ ‘0“? Chairs IDS su'ept Out of power in the‘past Kasscm‘s apartment to method. wrth enough space for the ‘ W). 8-9 revolution. ‘police building. They found Kas-tbOdlCS to.spravs{1 on_ the floor. The last hours of Kassem'slsem's chief bodyguard. Gen. Perhaps his Public office- not far .life——and of his regime—weretWasfi Tahir, dead. He was shot from his private quarters. 'disclosed today by an army ma-Iin the stomach with a machine Rgporters were Shown K85- ljor who asked that his namesun. was private quarters today by I please let me out of Baghdad. Abdel Karim Kasscm to revolu-l 'tion leader Col. Abdel Salami 'be withheld because of the new K8559"! emerged fI‘Om the revomtifmary “hears who 910' Iregimc's banon personal pub-Irwins of. the military police .tured tum as aluxuryhl'oYi‘ing top. llicity. He also gave a blow-by'. headquarters to surrender at They displayed the .t 10 1y 081‘- .‘brnw account of the 30.1mm hat. 2 ram. Saturday. peted office'and liVing quarters ltic for power in which 15 revolu-l "H9 “'35 Carrying 8 tranSlS- {UTnIShEd With luxurlPI-ls Pieces itionarics and 75 of Kassem's de- tor radio under one arm and Imported from Scandmavra and h a The court martial found Kass sfiipped small room, six feet by six feet, ‘ S but ev Three union strikers died when a mob of about 400, bowl-l ing over police, rushed a pilei of 500 cords of logs at the ad- . jacent railway siding of Reesor: early Monday. Nineteen settlers were charged with non-capital murder after the fatal burst of gunfire and 237 strikers have been charged with rioting. : Before that. some settlers had been pushed around. Wood awaiting rail shipment to the1 mill had been dumped. Trucks had been unloaded. SHIP TO MILL . Mill shipments of settlers' pulpwood have stopped, Nolet said in an interview at the Mat- tice co-op, of which he is one of 125 members. Customarily. d the other settlers 110,000 cords a year to the mill, with the union employ- 000. into 3 cos cutting another ‘ The settlers. biggest fem. was iturned to classes Monday after 'that the strike would not end before the frozen winter roads‘ linto the bush lapsed back into impassable muskeg. The logs would there until freezeup next winter. : “We would get paid If we could just haul the wood out of the bush, to be delivered later. eryone is scared of the strikers Marcel explained. ‘I ask the guys at the union to let us put our wood on our own farms, not to go out to the mill, but they wouldn't let us." . The cab company returned the On the left a tiny stream and ordon Robertson wa s' i EAST BALTIC I hostess to the Kingsboro W.l. Miss Jean Bruce, student at‘, emb the h PWC spent the weekend with;n e” a r mm on Feb' her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wes- Mr. and Mn, “new Bmce' ley Bruce. Bothwefl- ;Mt. Mellick visited with Mr. and Male quartet. Robert R o s e. . Mrs. Ralph Robertson during the Wilbur Jarvis. Kenneth Mat-Cree past week. gor and Harold Hunter, accom- Mrs. Upton Seaman. O‘Leary panied by organist, Mrs. Clintonis ill in hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart, visited at the home of‘Seaman are widely known in Mrs. Joshua MacDon‘ the eastern districts, as Mr. aid, Kingsboro, Sunday evening, Seaman was station agent at El- when a social time was held with, mira for several years, and Mrs. .singing and fellowship. Mr $1,000 BILL USED IN ERROR NEW ORLEANS (AP) Cab driver Eugene 'Bishoff, 32, delivered a passenger for a $1.80 fare. The man handed him two bits and said: “Kee the change." The cabbie stuffed the money in his pocket and drove away. sized fishing pond was form- rSeaman formerly belonged to d Priiest Pon . MEETS PARENTS MONTREAL (CP) —— A little Hungarian girl who had known her family only through photo. graphs was reunited with then Monday at Montreal Interna- tional Airport in suburban Dor- val. Mr. and Mrs. Sandor Abel met their daughter Ildeko, 8, for the first time since they were forced to leave her—then only cight-months-old —- what they fled Hungary. atcr he discovered one was a $1,000 bill. “I knew it had to be a mistake," he said. He notified his office and tried to find the o e A man called the cab com- pany. identified himself as Stanley Greer of Chicago and said he had lost a $1,000 bill CLEAR WOMEN'S SNO money to him. Bishoff said Greer gave him a $50 reward and invited him and his family—his wife and four children—to go for a cruise aboard his‘ yacht. STOP GAS LEAKS TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (APP-,1 All city and county pupils re- ;workei‘s repaired gas leaks Y ound in th r e 9 elementary Ischools and a junior high school. ' 11 public schools in the county} were closed last week when the j thir explosion in five weeks ‘ ripped this western Indiana 1. city. Sixteen persons have been i killed and 75 injured in the blasts. i every keeping with POSTPONE TOURS MONTREAL iCPt — An ex-' change visit between Russian- and Canadian railroaders. Space Hot Plate ls Given Test LOS ANGELES (AP) four - inch - square “hot plate," launched into space aboard a secret satellite, was disclosed here as a major step toward scheduled to start today. has been postponed indefinitely, the E CNR announced, because of the ‘ illness of B. P. Beschev. Soviet minister of railway transport, who was to lead a six-man Rus- sian group on a tour of railway installations in Canada. A simi- ‘ lar tour in Russia by a five- man CNR group also has been postponed. i strap an tachment Irenders were slain. lwavrng the other. saying: ‘I Italy. There were racks I s is his story: want to speak to my brother, highly polished leather shoes. l Rebel lAbdcl Salam.‘ REBEL BITTER for c e 3 With heavy “And he called himself a simg repeating: ‘I want to speak to ple son of the people," said one] my brother.‘ ,officer bitterly. I “I could not tell if he was‘ Meanwhile. in another inter- 9 am. Friday Feb 8 The cor: afraid, but he looked mad, as View IOday. assem's IOTEIEU “He kept waving his arm and assem's headquarters in the finding a replacement for solar cells vulnerable to radiation. The United States Air Force refused to give the date of the Pacific missile range launching able felt were received from the con- verter for four days. It wouldr not say whether the device was ' designed to operate longer. or to identify the vehicle. SPECIAL Here is the buy you've been wait. ing for! Higher priced Sno Boots ayailable at a much lower price pair dai'd's. Sizes 4 to 10 are here in this selection . for best choice! . . . brushed nylon low boot with handy side and back outsole on heel. black and green. ANCE BOOT top quality in our exacting stan- . . so, come early d large buckle st- . 'l‘lieliningis heavy rayon, and there is a remov- insnle. Ribbed foam Colors are l0 (lav ” . . . h _ I ~ . alwa s. minister Hashem Jawad said _e It said the deV'lce called a 7 A , oral-m nfllme can take away. Pmmd ‘5 a rectangle 9‘ b‘."“' covit'r HEAD PLEADED had tried to quit the late dlc- memo . electric converter, is Roéoflmfiacggilglgs REG- 8-98 If m m “M hmm' you're Always wigs besme the Tlgm River Col. Fadl Abass Malidawi. tator's government but had his designed to be as efficient as I I‘ p q .t. I H Incar. ‘ E mosque attached to it. head of Kasscm.s People.s me threatened when he did so. solar cells in converting sun. nves mom Kecurl les J“ U "i‘lid' Sm missed and Veryl T ED 600 Court. came out with Kassem He was interviewed in the court- light Into electricity for space- ALEX "SON 4, “mr' . ' I A PllChEd battle against 500 shouting: ‘Please don‘t kill me, yard of Camp Rashld Military craft instruments ut is more In G “ Mg‘naserm I 4.858: ‘ND i» missed- and bunglyzdefmdem continued through the I haven't done anything. I am Prison where he is being held resistant to damage in the belt "a Cl?!“ l i” v a hy- Vi 2.1:. cd by Wife and family. ‘day and night until revolution- your brother} with other leading figures of the of radiatiion surroundgg fall? ar 0 e own -' - “A ri ate soldier ste ed up fallen regime. The ar force as sgn s. jflTiCES NOTICES P V W I t IF YOU ARE NOW TAKING A lAXATlVE ONCE, TWICE or THREE TIMES A WEEK ‘ .. . THEN YOU SHOULD "IV R TODAY! i the Laxative Tablet with the l GENTLE DIFFERENCE i Take gentle-acting M . . . ’ ‘ Remedy! There is no letdown, nol uncomfortable after-feeling. R is an all-vegetable laxative. For over 70 years, N! has been giving folks pleasant. effective relief ovemighti . I STORE Help: you fool bonari . . . and look better!" new arrivals in fashion I a I) r i c s ‘ for spring! . . . designed for sewing the fashions you'll love to wear . . . our very finest Spring '63 selection . . . choose yours today from Holman’s truly wonderful variety of fabrics in a truly beautiful assortment of colors and styles. NOTICE RE CITY HALL Due to interior alterations to City ‘ Building, all offices in the building will be closed on Saturday February Ibth and Monday February I8+h — re- opening on Tuesday at 9:00 am. JOHN J. BUTLER. City Comptroller. R C O W S We require a large number of cows—all m'ades~\Veek of February 18th. 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