=! T Ghe Gwardian | Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew _ W. J.” Hancox, Publisher Wallace ae : « Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Published every week “day moaning (excepf Sur day and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers lid. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague Alberton, and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomsen Newspapers Advertising Services: Torento 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; ‘Montreal 640. Cathar Street Uni- versity 6-5947; Western Office 1030 Welt Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037: + 8 Member Canadian Dally Newspaper Publishers Association and The ‘Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for. repub- cation of all news dispatches in this paper eredited to it or to the Associated Press er Reuters and also the loca’ news published herein. All right ot republication of special disoatches heres. In also reserved. Subscription rate: -Not. over 40c per week. by “carrier. $12.00 ‘a year by mail on.rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier: $15.00 9 year off Island end U.K. $20.00° par peat in U.S.. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealth. Nat cver*7s single copy. - Member Audit. Bureau of Circulation. PAGE 4 —Neéed-fFor Action Another non- -confi sulted, as expected, in Liberal government being sustained in the House of Commons last night. But if the government imagines that this. was-an indorsation of its policy of impeding development through onetary restrictions and denying “puler ‘and would-be homé-owners — ortgage funds, it must indeed be out of touch with’ prevailing public 4 opinion. The country does not want another federal. general election at - this time, but it.does expect action on Liberal economic pledges made in the - November election; and this, in sub- stance, was what the Conservative motion called for. The need for such . action, is imperative, especially in these Atlantic” provinces, ~which~ are being. strangled by being. treated as if they were on the crest of a “boom”. which had to be curtailed. Our, economic problems were totally ignored in the Sharp. budget, _ as evidenced by the called- for in- terference in the schedule of our causeway project, the Island phase of which was to have been started early this spring. The tightening up of mortgage loans for home-building 1s*” another case in point. These policies, incidentally, are making nonsense of ‘local Liberal promises in in the current election campaign—all involving the expenditure of more money, mostly. from Ottawa. Money which we will get only if we continue to press our just. claims. there, not through wish-. ful thinking’ or. sycophaytic truckling to whatever oe we may re . celle Take’ the 'ARDA program, tor ex- ~—ample- One would imagine; from. _ eral criticism, that the holdup in developing our Island activities under | this progam was due to Tory inca- pacity to take advantage: of it’ all these years, when in fact it is only now—after much Opposition criticism in and out of Parliament—being shaped to meet. our farmers’ require- ments. It is true that the groundwork — for.a more comprehensive attack on: the problem was laid in a new five- year federal-provincial agreement which went into effect a year ago. But the essential financing of a new, more flexible approach had to wait: until last week, When a bill was: in- troduced in the Commons to set up a $50 million federal fund to take-care- of special situations, such as basic im- provements in the educational system | of impoverished rural areas, develop- ing transportation systems, bringing | about ~adjustments in—the--use of from-Lib-—|- noe + é ed to the Prime Minister's An - Their disillusionment by now must be complete. The latest CYC talk of getting 250 into some sort of work inside Canada this summer grows more and more vague. Which prompts the Vancouver Sun to sug- gest that whoever thought up the - CYC plan hadn't been doing homework. For one thing, the Lib- _erals apparently glossed over the fact that a group of young Canadians al- ready was doing a fine job of volun- . teer work overseas. The Canadian " University Service Overseas has 350 teachers and technicians sprinkled around the globe. On their own small scale, they have as fine a record as the American Peace Corps (which they preceded) and their drop out rate is far smaller. : Failure. to. take into account the role of the CUSO was just one indica- WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, j, 1966. | tion that the CYC’project was hastily - thrown together and badly planned. ~The-CYE- Jeader, Duncan-Edmonds, has already left. Even the recently- ~advisory- council Ag still ‘labelled “provisional.” ee Some University of British Colum- “bia students have grown so impatient waiting for Ottawa to move:that: they have formed their own project, Student Volunteer Service, to ‘do their own warring on. poverty. Similar groups have sprung up in Quebec, Kingston and Saskatoon, That -proves that we have “eager beavers” ready. for humanitarian service: that there is nothing wrong with ‘the vigor of our youth: But they deserve better of the country, than to be exploited ‘for partisan purposes in election cam- paigns, under whatever highsounding slogans: “Refuge In Fantasy — “ Sometimes, desperation compels men to think clearly. by bringing — -them up hard against reality. But sometimes -the-starkness of a sit- ation, to seek ‘mental comfort in- myths and rationalizations. That may be what is happening in Rhodesia; at least if we can believe a British Liberal peer, Lord Reay, who has just returned from there.. “He des- éribes his experience in the London: - Observer. ~Lord Reay- gays—all_the— maior. "Rhodesian factions—white - liberals, white reactionaries, black national- dream worlds. As a cofisequence, the prospect of a negotiated settlement of the Rhoflesian issue is “a fantasy.” ‘The black nationalists prate of ‘their plans’ to organize: mass’ strikes ~ and-paralyze_the economy with. sab- _ed by action, and their power is. kept in check by the regime's security | police—so far. The white liberals wait for the day when economic sanctions .will turn the populace against the<Smith regime. But-none of this is happening. If anything, most whites have fallen.into line be- hind Mr. Smith. There is a tribal in- stinct to collective wert pi csetyaunn in all races, it seems. And what of the Smith govern-~ ment itself? ‘It is the dream of the Rhodesian Front that is most im- Lord Reay. One senior minister told | him that Smith had the support of Rhodesia’s- blacks—a fantastic asser- | ‘tion. Mr. Smith’s minister of infor~ | mation seriously believes that the. Western churches and the BBC have been infiltrated by Communists. Internal communication in. Rhod- available resources, and encouraging | esia—-thanks to censorship and-a business and industry to develop in | anata of selected areas. This fund Forestry Minister Sauve described as “indispensable” to the effective use of ARDA—yet it is only now being brought into effect!” Disappearing Act Its a year ago now since the’ Com- -pany of Young Canadians was_ pro- | claimed, with impressive. fanfare, by oe Prime Minister pearson. He asked. for. 1,000 selfless young people . to intimidatory fear—is ‘breaking down. There is good evi- dence, Lord, Reay says, that the premier himself, “who sits at the _ apex of a cumbersome hierarchy”of | committees established to deal with | the economic emergency, doesn't . | understand what is ee to the - economy: Ve EDITORIAL NOTES | y appTeciate ‘the attitude of. ~ wanting to die in harness, but while venture abroad and another 1,000 to | this may be all right for the old horse help out in the war against poverty at _{home: What we're looking for, he “said, are “eager beavers.” Perhaps it was this impassioned plea to “the | .- vigor of youth” which inspired our. it-is seldom good for the harness.”— Dr. Thos. Bloomer, Bishop of Carlisle. * * * Thousands of. brightly coloted butterflies may decorate . London's provincial Liberal leader to strike | parks if Mrs. ‘Peggy Jay, chairman the same resounding note in his | of the Greater London Council's Park opening appeal in the current elec- committee, has. her way. Wife of .a tion: ‘caYnpaign. And- indeed, it does _; British cabinet minister with lots of make the blood tingle to hear such | pull and prestige. she is backing the strains from our politicians, presag- ing such wonderful-things to come! - But back to ‘Mr. Pedarson’s noble experiment: Today, after ‘all these months, the, CYC has reeruitéd no ( ‘anadians, It has a staff of 13 in Ot- | idea of-a butterfly farm in Lee Valley | park, which is planned as a hugh recreation area stretching ~ from the London, docks. to the eastern sub- “urbs. Britain has the know-how, for such a project—two butterfly farms. tawa, and money-—over a million | already exist in England. The cost dollars—has been-set aside; but_legis- _lafion establishing the plan is only | ($140,000). now. being presented in Parliament. 4 _Some. 1,400 eager beavers C0 se ml “give to park visitors. |_of this one is estimated at £50,000 Well worth it, .says supporters, in the pleasure it would ia .° ¢ a - 2 uation drives men, in their desper-- ists--are living in their own. little = otage. But their threats are unmatch- "this is portant and most frightening,” writes - its 4 J tie remained, powerful agg wit |. ' | ones to bs SOUNDING THE ALARM “New Gastro Camera | By Dr. Theodore R.’ Van Delien -|. More. than a-year ago I wrote | about a Japanese camera that took colored pictures of the in. side. of the stomach. Shortly. | thereafter I attended a medical | convention and was attracted to | | an exhibit on gastrophotography. I asked the exhibitor if this was | the Japanese camera. He re- a switch considering the reputa- tion At any rate, the gastric -cam- | era is capable of taking 16° ‘sim. ultaneous photos within 30 see- ' onds of being: swallowed. Altho | each picture is less than a -quar- ter of an.inch in diameter, en- largement is possible for more detailed study. The stomach is plied, ‘‘No, it is ours.” This was & the Japanese for copying. | Crucial For Britain By Harold Morrison Canadian Press Staff Writer i} Whatever British © seamen's ‘strike, seems to pric® jine cannot be held with- j gut some form of government- imposed restraint. The proble mprobably is more | erucial for Britain than for most Western countries. Britain seems unlikely to be able to bal- ance its trade account this year and its ¢reditors, the interna- ttomat® ‘bankers, are giving it close scrutiny. . For a country that seems pe- riodically to teeter atthe eco- | Romie brink, Britain ‘shows a lot jot throbbing strength. British tentacles reach ‘mysteriously into ‘many strongboxes in inter- | national financial centres. . distended to smooth out the wrinkles and the instrument | Per. cent of:the interior. | | "The camera’is tubular, less | | than one-half of an inch in di- | ameter and two inches long. It is attached to a stom- | ach tube one-quarter of an inch - jin diameter. The business end |is divided into an upper and lower camera section with an them, Each—partition has eight. | -pinholes.-with—shuttersand..-a. lens with’ a universal focus. the ( 16._pictures are taken, simultan-. usly during a single exposure. lof 1-500 of a second. : ‘ The apparatus is swallowed while-the individual is seated -in { a chair. It is withdrawn as soon as the pictures have been taken. | The film is removed and deve- | Joned,_ It is nat Guite this ‘siniple | | and - most physicians “must take | | a special course on, the use of | the gastrocamera. Special train- | | ing also is needed to interpret | | the film. The camera detects . polyps, | shallow. ulcers, erosions, and | | early cancers not easily recez | ALL QUITE LEGAL ter Robert Winters will not be surprised by the careful arran- gements he made to protect | himself from excess income tax | payments when he returned from_business_and_ went. back in- | to public life last year. - Questions may be raised, how- ever, about whether—the particu-: | _ lar arrangements .were proper “nnfor a men about to become a cabinet minister. ae The: facts are relatively sim- ple. Mr. Winters retired as pre- | a cat “of Rio Algom Mines’ Lim- ) | ited last’ December\ preparatory te joining the ca’ pany paid him a r lowance of $499,000. ‘A sum of this size would, of | course, be“subject to an enor- - rement al- ed as income for the year in which it was received. The In- come Tax act, however, provid-. es several methods by which. an - individual receiving a retire- | ment siete or a lump pen- | | sion postpone and reduce | gy ‘liability. Mr. Winters | chose.the one known-as a defer-— | red profit-sharing plan. | HOW-1IT-WORKS vipat a system by. which em- ployers make payments to trus- es. The money is not taxable in the hands of the the employees only become |i- able for tax when they actually receive__payments__from~__ the fund. Mr. Winters set up a com pany called Windix Holdings | | Limited. The officers of this con- cern are all, with one exception, | members of the Winters family, and there can be little doubt that | itis. controlled by Mr. Winters. ‘Windix appointed a trustee to administer a deferred profit- sharing plan, and the money. from Rio Algom was paid over to this trustee. Mr. parently qualifies as an .‘‘em- ployee” of Windix, and is entitl- | ed to receive payments from the ' fund. The whole arrangement was-approved by the Depart- ment of. National Revenue. HIGHLY... ARTIFICIAL This was, of course, a highly artificial set-up, to the real intention of the act, which was to’ encourage com- panies to set up genuine~ profit- sharing plans for all their em- ployees. In fact. tighter regula- tions were foreshadowed in this '—- year's — budget. Many persons have taken advantage’ of this particular loophole. without ob- jection from th» denartment. There ~.are three important ‘points to be. considered in judg- | ing this matter: —It' was quite legal and in accord with. established _ busi- ness ethics. Canadian courts have repeatedly ruled that a tax- “payer has a perfect right td or- der his affairs so as to reduce | his tax liability. —It involved no: apparent con- flict between Mr. Winters’ priv- ‘ate business and his duty asa member. of Parliament’ and a | of Sicily and 582 -have been ar- : | cabinet minister. ~ rested. NO oe ATMENT |. Recently, an international SPECIAL a whe know Trade Minis | . The com-- mous income tax if it were treat- ~ 1 000 6° $3,500-One | tees for the benefit of emptoye-—|- trustee, and _ Winters ap- | and contrary | _ Trade Minister Winters & the Tax Act _ Toronte Daily Star —There is.not' the slighest evi- dence that Mr. Winters made... use of any confidential informa- ‘tion that.came his way as a ; minister, or that~ he received \ any special treatment from the | Department of. National: peanut i because of his position. 6 The issne, in fact, boils down te this: | nized via X-ray, but it is not a | substitute for X-rays. It has promise of being a valuable actreening “device Japanese now have an | improved: version’ that takes’ 32°/ colored photographs each one- | ) fifth of an inch in diameter. he | slim apparatus is adapted to the | small oral passageways of the | Japanese. . 4 Different people wilt” “answer the question in different ways. | So far as The Star.is concerned | __we ‘do not regard the affair asa —RESTORED SOPRANO . ‘serious ‘stain—on—Mr.—~Winters* Mrs. M.Z. writes: Will’ a wom- record. Yet we, confess to beings, an’s voice that deepened after alittle disappointed in him. | taking cortisone go- ‘to_nor- We believe people in pu blic | mal when the medicine is dis ‘life, particularly cabinet mi is- | continued? ‘| Was Mr. Winters’ action | proper for a-cabinet wm’ ‘ster ters, must set an septic : Yes. All REPLY t f, ‘| |and one who undoubtedly aspir- Winters failed In this respon 1201 ot the good effects of, this es to the-prime ministership? | sibility. : iarnyote are temporary. aa ARM PAIN: -Plain-Living In Canada Ottawa Journal Plain liv ing is. the undoubted |} The remainder were “tn more | fortunate income groups but the lot of many Canadiana and, per- | haps, they add high thinking. The -tireless Dominion Bureau of Statistics continues to send | out information based on the {1961 census, the latest covering | | incomes” by family size, counties and census divisions. In Canada, at the time: of the - survey, there were 1,073, 121 two- rperson families. More than one- -quarter.of_ these had. 4fcomes._of | less than $2,000 annually, ant | another soars fanged from $2,- ine fifth of the tot-— al bad between $3,500. and: $5,000~.| “DM. J. writes: Does inter: “| nittent ‘pain in the lett = necessarily mean heart disease? | ~—REPLY No. This type. of distress also may stem from muscles, | nerves, ligaments, blood vessels, | bursae, or tendons of the shoul-' der. Arthritis ‘and disturbances of the: brachial plexus are other possibilities. ‘SCALP RINGWORM Mrs. HJ. writes: Can adults | catch ringworm of the sealp| average for the 1,073,121 was $4,615 a Any ‘trying to get en $4,615 -while paying ,, rent - other’ unavoidable expenses it-hartenough, but not_so ward f “that. they can’t sympathize with | ; those who have even less. ' affluent society remains an ugly | from ehildren? , joke for many citizens, ial- .REPLY . older Canad Yes, but for some reason | ty the lane-whe hav : \ ringworm of the-scalp-is-rare-in— | seen the cost of living, high im | adults. A hormone usually is | —-1961,—march-remorselessly—high-‘; blamed because~the prsence—or-> er. | absence . these ‘secretions dif- Sissy Senator Arthur Roebuck says hopes ‘cold firecrackers’ ~ will be available some day for chil- | dren. He has urged: fellow sena- tors to support a move to get the National Research Council to develop just such a firecrack- er. According to Senator Roebuck, | a eold firecracker would. be one | ‘without fire, a Doha of: light | and very great noise.’ By the sound of it, it wouldn't | be a firecracker at all. It would undoubtedly leave children cold. Nevertheless, the senator has Firecracker: milton Spectator DAMP QUARTERS Mrs. L. M. writes: Could ‘liv- | ing _in.a damp apartment cause. s rheumatism- or arthritis? 4 rible list of children whose eyes REPLY have been burned by firecrack-| I doubt # dampness e ould ers. There are alse recorded in- | cause these disorders but it will stances of death resulting from | | aggravate tendencies to these- serentinte childhood fr from adult- | oe “tes will carry new labels. | familiar 20-ounce tin will be la- NOW IN DEBT But Britain is heavily in debt.” Its scarcity {8 foreign © ex- | change. It must earn its way | through world trade and money transactions. © As one British financial news- paper notes, the government ap- pears to be..trying to extract +seme—extra—leverage—in—world Pay mi =through- what may. | be described as secret export. could, under conditions of finan- ies. these But sooner- or later, __ subsidies. as competitor countries will yelp that in’ peacetime workers and increase, ee ‘with pain. The-final test will be Britain's ability to (against o-t-h-e-r_producers, ‘te rms _ of,» production - costs, wages and distribution charges. The seamen are. just one part in the great marketing machine, | but they forni an important ‘seg: | Just Sign the result of the | ment. it 7 indicate ‘the British compete | in-; The 17 - pek= cent wage |-hoost-they-demand_would mean ‘higher. transport costs, higher market prices and ‘lower pro duction ‘Téturns, or even mag _ ket losses. : ‘expectations and seamen are demanding their share. Po- litical strategy has forced the. Labor administration to’ accept a temporary retreat if the wage-price battle. Higher wages" for—one group of-unions have led to increased demands by oihers. — DOCTORS WON HIKE - The government has a <policy.. of trying to keep wage de- mands in line with increased productivity, about three or { | per cent a year, But doctors en- rolled in the -national health service recently got a pay boost. ‘of some 30° per cent. The |of the demands is not im sight) The government also has ~been-trying_to_control price. and_ -wage boosts by a combination of public declamation of- ficial warnings. These ' methods [have not been ‘successful.’ Failure of:-voluntary methods cial crisis, lead to compulsion. Most democracies have -found producers don't easily ‘resvond _/ to price and wage controls. Of _major_issue to all com : tors,. therefore,, is the question | of how long any price be allowed to continie before | the British gov ata is forced | fo call are. SAT RTE RL Here, Rex. eas. Sua Why the Australian press< ‘bums, dinner menus and paper thought it worth reporting ‘that | Prince Charles won't grant au- sogeapts is a bit of a pitizzle. y any. man-bites<dog stan- | dard, surely, it only ..were- it 4 buld be news other “wayeoas round. eA : The most sadistic anti-mon- \archist,if there was one decent * bone“ left ‘in his body, ‘would spare the royal family from this ultimate intrusion of privacy. It would be imposition enough ifthe young man who could suc- | €eed to the throne could satisfy | the petitioner with~-the-~usual~ scribble — “‘to:a-real good fan, Charley” or “your old friend, Chuck.” But no enrich the autograph al- | Winnipeg If_you buy a tin of fruit juice labelled “net contents 20 fluid ounces”, how much fruit juice have you bought? Not 20 ounees, ” according to the Canadian food and drug directorate. A stan- dard,20-ounce -fruit-juice tin i-s——~ | more likely in fact to contain 19 | fluid ounces. Although the manufacturer has probably put an accurate measure into the can shrinkage, die to cooling, ac- counts for the discrepancy. The shrinkage is unavoidable. But , unavoidable or no, this, ac- | cording to the directorate, is un- ir_to the consumer. Begi ing on January 1, 1967, there: | fore, all” standard - sized tins of ‘ocessed—fruits—and--vegetab-—; The | i belled ‘“‘net.contents 19 f luid | ounces;”’ the regular 6-ounce tin |, will be labelled ‘5 fluid ounces” | they were eettng. Se A LS napkins of the Commonwealth |with ‘Prince Charles Phillip | Arthur. George, Duke of ‘Corn- -wall, Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Carrick, Baron Renfrew, Lord of the’ Isles; ‘Prince and Gréat | Steward -of Scotland’ —why, | the mind reels. “It’s ‘possible to sympathize | with autograph - hunters whe | through royal. precedent. are denied a signature which prob-- tably would be worth three Rin- go Starrs any day. however, if they wait patiently |until it“arrives on that letter ‘from Buckingham Palace salut- ing their 106th birthday, as the |rest of of us. must. Truthful Tinning. Free--Press-- 1 ‘and ‘so- on; 4 The tins will remain the sare size—and—the—quantity of; food inside will continue to be the | same. The only difference will be ee label will tell ‘the Y thea. from the federal health department under whose. juris- diction the food and..drug diree- torate operates, we shall have a ; Sift of honesty for the Centen- nial year. Canadian consumers - most of whom probably never — errs they were: getting fee should be ‘appropriately ; grateful. “Of coutsé they would ~ -be even_more grateful if the |manufacturers were to enlarge the tins to give them, for the same price, the full measure that, all these years, they thought Britain is in the grip of rising. al wil They will appreciate it more, °: jos Tents! at Dairy Oven | ie the misuse of the May °24 and“July 1 ‘‘playthings’’. Any- | ailments. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Exposure to repeated loud | noises can cause deafness. (NOTE: All correspondence te-Dr. Van dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore. Van Dellen, co™ Chicago Trib- une, Chicago; Dlinois.) § thing? sensible and reasonable that can be done to lower the risk would be worth sublic sup- | | port. But a firecracker’ without fire, | light or noise wouldn't be the an- | swer. It would be like warm ice | cream, popcorn without» butter | and salt, and stringless yo-yos. .. There must be a more realis- tie solution. Our Yesterdays a point. There ae indeed a hor- Rooting Guelph Three years of patient investigation by police, supported | by the government, has put. that | dreaded secret society, the Mafia Lan the ropes — and on the‘run. {At least ‘it has in Italy where the society has its roots. | Interior’ Minister Emilio Ta- | viana has expressed confidence that the back of the evil society may have’ been broken. During the past three years since the | government launched an all-out | campaign against. the Mafia, | thousands of witnesses have | given evidence before a.parlia- | mentary anti-Mafia committee. The names of more than .2,500 persons emerged from the testi- | mony, all of which were inves- | tigated by police. As a result, | some 846 suspects have since | been banished to remote -corners Now It’s McGill” _ Montreal Gazete ; McGill batvantity will no long- | er insist on Latin as one of the entrante requirements for the course in Arts. McGill can scarcely he Said to have acted with _ undue Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard and Princeton had all dropped | Latin already. - The move’ will no doubt be hailed. by those who have thought Latin. a. dead lan- | guage that: ought long ago to | have been buried. | - Yet Latin is: not dead, and | never will be. It is part of the ci- vilization-of the western world, |--woven into its very texture. For | Latin“is not only the key to the classical world and its litera- | ture, it is essential.for under standing the centuries that have | followed when the Latin tradi- haste, | , the basis of education and eul-. | ture. It is a change that was bound to come. The defenders of L atin ‘have long been waging a rear: guard action,in the universities | Though Latin will still be taught in the Arts course, its . disap- | pearance as a requirement for. | university. entrance will dimin- ish the number knowledge of it. ‘to manyit-will not —matter | much. But those of the older generation will, as the years passe look back with new satis- faction to the little Virgil, or Ho- ‘race. or Pliny, or Cicero. they +may have-léarned.__In_the vast abyss of the hasty modern world ' they will grow ever fewer - rari nantes\in gurgite. vas to eee ee i seen At ” ‘vho ‘had. some. (From The Guardian Files) © t E il TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO UT EVI (May 18, 1941) Mercury i -| Battered London forgot its troubles in the first carnival-like operation which ‘Inchided. Tta- | display since the start of the lias, German, Swiss. and. Ameri- | war as a campaign. was inaugur- | can police as well as_ Interpol | ated to raise $445,000,000 to buy (International Police Organiza- “planes, ships, tanks and guns. tion) Jed to the accu of /evidence against 43 persons, many of whom are said to be- Mafia leaders. The~- suspects are thought to be connected with a wave of crime in the heart © “The Royal Air Force took the | offensive on all fronts in the Mid- | die East, destroying 22-Axis ‘air- > craft and damaging a score of others while*losing only three of of Sicily that included 15 murd- | its own. ,ers and. other acts of violence. | Police have unearthed enough ~ FEN YEARS AGO |.weapons and explosives to arm (May 18, 1956) several hgndred men and blow up a large part of Palermo. The Mafia is a vicious .organi- zation that has thrived on terror and crime. It has terrorized Sicilians for centuries and, it is S said, in some parts of the island, actually dictates a way of life. Perhaps if the roots can be pull- ° ed out, the branches, which Instructor Lieutenant J. LeClair, RCN (R) - Training | Officer at HMCS Queen Charlot- te, left for Esquimalt, B.C. He had been appointed to the instru- tional staff of HMCS Venture, the cadet training establishment. for the summer months. » town was promoted to the post- | spread their evil influence -into: | tion of Program Director for ra- | many other countries in the | gio CBA and CBH in Halifax. world, will eventually wither and I bs RTT . Hf you like ot Water OMFORT - You need us ! ! Lennox air conditioning and Esso. warm air» heating and ventilating. We Heat, Treat, Cool and Move Air. | Palmer Electric Ltd. Fitzroy St. Dial 4-8543 STARTING AT BOTTOM / LIV INGSTON, Scotland (ori) Officials opened-.a £220,000. pri- jf mary school and.welcomed the (J. first pupils—three of them: The- town has only a few dozen of its planned population of 20,000 people so far: The school wilt fill up AS new families arrive RARMAID’S STILL BEST: ““LONDON. (CP)—Managers of a firm manufacturing an aufo- ‘matic beer and Hquor dispenser | assured people the days of the harmaid are not over. They say’ their device is to be sold to | theatres and. race tracks.) where’ it's - speed that counts | and they -have no intention of i gehumanizing the ae local. a Robert |: John MacEwan’ of Charlotte- | DAIRY QUEEN _ 213 Elm Avenue Charlottetown, P.E.1. ad _the tomate __._. #