24.... ...t, o- no u OTTAWA (C!)--The small bw- LIMIT It'll .-one:-andtbeloen eompanyhe Provlsionsefthsareseatactay 1.hismoneyf1'om,arIgdngtopiJCIlytoioIlxeMlIPIlIiaa mah- be gttected by new goveramentlagloansuptolllandrsquire mgulauonswhlchbeocnnetlec-themtoacauiroalicsaoetrom u'venextJIiI.L' . thedepartmentoftinanee.Pro- its going tovidtmsoftheaetltmltthstrmar For the borrower " interest jRe:i:fg,uilatioins Affect , Smiailii'Borrovver. On Jan. 1, (30319 uh! and F94 rtment of finance. The new regulations are tained in I of the IIIIII Loans Act of 1940 which fartin- menl approved at the last And K. R. Macgregor. who as perlntendent of insurance in administrative eye on the loan business. has put out a reminder 11 becomes effective with the new year. and s1.ooo. . addition the new act provides an losfg-term loans of less for more than N onths,orolmorethsnS500for months, the maximum rate will one per cent a month. Mayor Yoo Home From Convention Mayor nu. Yeo, Mtintague. returned on Friday from Saint John, N.B. when he at- landed the Motion Picture Ex- inmtors Association convention. lie was accompanied on the trip by ilr. Danny Murray. MOIIDKIIG lid Mr. Claude Richards of Bouris. small Trucks In Collision A common 5...... about 12:80 sunday morning at Bristol N- tween I IN! and 1964 III"-'00 mu-ks, driven by Maurice A. Kelly and James A. Slllmio how a Tnc' adie. PE-I ' a. Th accident occur vim mmzetg-not made a turnlato a side raids A59 7'" "Wk "nu" into it, mumns In both Mg: ending up in the gutter. Mr. nard McQuil1III.I WNW?!" "'9 oi the trucks was taken to a Char- lottetown hosviill "3 u m”""m to be suffering from a hrokGll.C01' in bone, while Qflglul 11”. X: th ace. ere W ijifrdeecilli eoanch teruck and all receiv- ed a severe shaken UP- EASTERN ' GUARDIAN ANNUAL 'rUItxl:Y Dhnoh Unl- ted church hall. um-an-. Wed- nesday. October 17"!- rxrnar xsxralu '11:?! h ins oreveryonc W” R:lRgall'l drug store durins "10 3"” gala, Two for the as only one cent. V dstm-day.Oct.i'I 18.19. 3S'.Hr'Em.'mu oo.. u-'nu-II Stofe, Montague. THA G IliRVlC:.T- reign". Mrs. AI. organist. The church was hes - iully decorated with colored leav- as and lovely late summer dow- OPS. PERSONALS Miss Thelma Lariat. Charlotte- Montague. Mr. Harry Miller, Issuer ef the Montague coop store under- went an operation is thI.P.l.I. Hospital on Thursday and his friends are pipaaodt to ha ha is convaiescing aatilfachdll. mnum creams . Autumn-annals tovuredlslntIa'st1ttaPrahsa diItrlctialIlIlsesthdedtsc- tendtorIt'aslleo.- TORONTO (CP)-All six mem- bers of a Toronto family died I They house and found the bodies of onard .l'riny) Burt. -45. his wife. Katherine. 44. and their four chil- dren Mary Ann. 11. Michael. I. Margaret, 1. and David. I. TWELVE Dll for the year. s. Inside. however, only smoulder- tng rubble Firemen topofthestslrs,Daviddledin bed and the bodies of an-. Burt Michael lay together in the 12 Persons Burned As Canada Marks Fire Prevention Week The base brought to 1: my "I... IOX OFFICE OPENS 7:45 tel was above the weekly average ,i Pyjama clad neighbors. stand ' sunrise as ...,., Mm E?” 713.1 klnsville near Guysborough, N.s., Thursday. No cause was deter. mined ' 'l'ha.fire'officiala' joint commit- tee Saturday issued another pair lie appeal. it said: , NORTH RIVER TODAY Tm VIOIENT is-:3 rnrrtr Enthusiasm and eagerness ing which was held in Charlotte- town on Saturday. October ma Registration commenced at 0:30 a.m. and the Training continued tin ughout the day. Mrs. Harry Cudmore. Provinc- ml Commissioner for Prince Ed- ward Island, wdcomed the Guide ers) and after a get-acquainted game and a flannelgraph demon- stration on the-Lsw and Promise. the group divided into "Blues" (Guide leadersli and "Browns" (Brownie lenders) and separate instruction was given by Mrs. Charles ldnkletter. Miss Sue Mac- Kinnon. Mrs. Ferno Rogers and Mrs. W..l. Rodd. The Patrol Sys- tem, a demonstration of knots and their uses, naturestudy. use of compass. and various Guiding games and sons took up the re- mainder of the morning for the . "Blues" while the "Browns" re- ceived instruction on the, Brownie six System. ceremonlals, and ques- tions. ' V Followln. luncheon. further reg- istrations were received and the two groups again divided for spec- ialized study. The importance of smile a "oAssY" - Isa laslle Carrol and Jobs Kerr as young lovers. Job Joins the army and is reported mining in action. Does Joba's llrl Leslie wait for him? What do WI think? A real love story. with a uasspseted climax. . CWINO WHDNIDAYI "WIIILI I'll CITY ILIIPI" THEATRE 1 Mon - Tues Adult. 30 - 46 W lac. Prov. Gov. A. Tax Time I pan. itaoumitt : I l NOW, WHERE'S NORTH Guiders' Training Course Held In Charlottetown .w learn, marked the Gultiers' Traln- M .and badge work was stressed, and rs. S.S. Carson gate a short talk on Badge work. Discussions were held on programme planning, fur-. ther ceremoniels. camp. haudi-' crafts, etc. i At 6 p.m. the Hospitality Com-i mlttee, under the chairmanship of Mrs. J.H. Shaw, provtded a most delicious dinner for the Guiders and Commissioners at Kirk Hall. Guides from the lst and 3rd Comp, pony and the Basilica Company assisted in serving. The thanks and appreciation of all present were xtended to the Hospitality Committee by Mrs. MacFarlane of Summerside. Mrs. A.G. MacMillan. Deputy Provincial Commissioner, presided at the dinner. She made reference to the much regretted illness of Mrs. Ralph Dumont who, with her committee, had made the arrange- ments for tha'i'raining. Mrs. Mac- Mlilan then introduced Mrs. Harry Cudmore, Provincial Commission- er who was the guest spealter.Mra. Cudmore first stressed the desire- bility of all leaders being warrant- ed and urged the Guiders to work towards that goal. She then went on to speak of Guiding in more general terms, giving a vivid pic- ERI R0i3EN....... RICHARD BURl0N t FREDRIC MARCH t GWRE BLOOM . Ainsann nu: Ganar ” -....cnu....seppfE.....1salsIoows t i 5i . ' MATINEE 3:30. EVENING 6:30-9- & TODAY and we. -' CAPITOL a lure of the co-operation needed be- tu een the Guiders who are in dir- ect contact with the ghls, and the Executive members of the Associa- lion who carry on the necessary behind. the-scenes work. Mrs. Cud- more spoke of the world-wide as- pecls of Girl Guide work and made those present realize anew how important and worthwhile it is. Mrs. Lynn Burnett thanked Mrs. Cudmore for her interesting and thought-provoking talk. Following dinner, the groups ga- thered at Red Cross House for Campfire and further informal dis-t cusslons. Return From Plowing Match Stanley Willis of Cornwall. Isl- and champion plowman and third place Canadian b i accom- panied hy Garth Clay of Dundas. runner-up in the Island Champion- ship and tenth place winner in the Canadian championship. arrived home from Brooklln, Ont. on Sun- day evening. On Wednesday they r' ughed in a class where Mr. Willis placed 5th. and Mr. Clay placed 8th. Also on Friday they competed in the vis- itors' class where Ir. Willis placed and and. Mr. Clay placed 9th. On their way home they visited s h . NOW COMFLETEP DUNDEE APARTMENT MOTEL IN rue HEART or me cm FIVE ostuxs Morn. ROOMS ..asneua-Isaac-aeepniouuuun-rtteauess - Refrigerators -- -sg Furnished. - ate an urban proletariat. Candias LONDON (CPJ-Seen through the eyes of a left-wing intellectual, Canada is an underdeveloped country. with a oneclnss society obtained at the price of economic domination by the United states. The description comes from I. ll. 6. (Dick) Crossman. a La- bor member of Parliament re- GGIQY returned from a Canadian tour. Referring at one point speci- lclllli to Western Canada, Cross- man writes in the New States and Nation: "Here is a colonial territo , with a white settler population alzd VH1"-I")! no natives; an underde- Velolled economy but without d- u'” "1 mdllenous class of peas- ants or a massive influx of immi- Slants to provide the cheap labor for its new industries. A race-con- acious Western democracy (Orien- tal immigration is virtually ban- ned). combined with a savage cli- mlle. is making sure that this Industrial revolution does not cre- U.3. DOMINATION "in Western Canada everybody tsansso-auioq a pug isgloqlpprul .' or aspires to be so; and this means that the machine must take the place of cheap labor . . . it also means that the industrial revolution must be financed by foreign capital, since no Canadian dreams of tightening his belt or texercisins wage restraint to pro- vide the capital . . . the price of this one-class society is economic domination by the United States." Crossma.n's article adds that provincial governments are show- ing skill in getting a "fair share of the golden eggs" without scar- ing the American geese away. in this 1-! h e. C ” ism. unwilling to frighten possible investors by talk of nationaliza- Nlagara Falls, Buffalo and some New England Towns. They were accompanied on the trip by Coach Elliott Robertson of loft-Wing British Laborite Has Poor Opinion Of Canada social- g. Two ways in which it could de- velop a distinctively socialist pol- icy, Crossman suggests, word he by demanding government plan- ning to conserve resources, direct corporations, and pouring into provincial excheq- Ilerl. Specifically. he suggests a national health service. Croumsn. 48. is a graduate of Winchester and Oxford. long one of Labor's leading intellect , he has sometimes been regarded as a possible foreign secretary. CLAIM DIVING RECORD LONDON (AP)-A world (DOD sea diving record of soo feet was claimed Saturday by the ad- miralty for a Royal Navy sailor who made the descent in Norweg- ian waters. The old record at 536 feet was set in 1948 by another British diver. IIIIICT all! ran wsnnmos ANNIVEISAIIIS nsssurarious in -9" "”"'- ww" ."3.'.... Pownall. Cx smart styling. ahapei ITANHIIVI OOUIII-IIAT INOI73 have a doable-thick panel in (st nd hack for double wear. Patented ayloa-reinforced leghands and R wide alastie waistband wu't hind, ride Q or chain. Made of durahb sibhedeouea.Il:-mbutgsatla . "FIR"- laanla hesatihlly. Shari (MG) sreisee O-If-L.......t..............Il.25. e& (9401), easuuanaarsuamvssamuauna '1”? isrnrmmrs l'-SHIRTS and DOUBLE-SEAT SHORTS In a very short time, Stanioldis T-Shirts and Donhie-Seat Shorts have won more applaust than almost any other usdorwear in Stanhelsrs history! You, too, will appreciate '-boil" 10-: mu. Hag-Sula; eomfort. and .;;iA STANHII-0'3 T-SHIRTS have the patented "ti Mnnsingwear nylon-reinforced neck. hand-won't sag, yosft pg gm of V9": too. laundered. Mldd of must eosnhed cotton. Plain Knit (674) - silos 3-M-L... interlock nos) -. S-M-L Clliitsl and curb the power of the M Family Fare Plan Can be worn as spong- eun.....mn... ... g . My ale and tsea-saws wllmvs-slioteaeu kopsnho&y-fa toB.0.A.C'sFamIyFase Pha. laadltiuwease m sow my turn TOURIST ROUND TRIP MONTREAL LONDON Iqvly oflvsr tum canon 12 ' Dal salt 25 years all) g M... II monthly payment at QM 34-rlvslln. In The Guardian. Page 3' Monday, Oct. 15, 1956 s c...e.....:si.:i s .