GIRL MOLESTERS ARE PARADED Fandcuffed together and wear- ing signs reading: “I am a jack- ass‘ teddy-boy,” these two youths are forced to take their punish- ment in strides as they are par- aded through streets of Athens. Police said the pair assaulted some girls in a lonely street and threw stones at them. Recent Tise im hooliganism in Greece may lead to new law imposing) mandatory punishment on juven- | ile delinquents. (AP Wirepheto) Big Oil Companies Turn To Undersea Explorations OTTAWA — A new era in Ca- ' madian oil exploration is opening. . Currently the big funds have been well inland on the Prairies. Now the oil companies are turn- ing to promising areas along the coastline. More than 30 million acres worth-of applications and per- mits for oil and gas exploration in off-shore lands are in the hands DEATHS, “FUNERALS . MacINNIS — At his home on Peakes Road, Daniel Alfred MacInnis, age 86 years. His remains are resting at the Hennéssey Funeral Home until 2 o’clock this afteroon at which time they will be transferred to his late residence from where the funeral will take place on Thursday morning at 9 o’clock to St. Cuthbert’s church, St. Theresa’s for Requiem High Mass at 9:30. Interment will take. place in the church ceme- tery: LARTER — At the Charlotte- town Hospital, Monday, April 20th, 1959, Charles Larter, 217 Sydney Street, age 72 years. The remains were transferred Tuesday morning at lil o- clock from the Hennessey Fu- neral Home to his late resi- dence from where the funeral will be held Thursday morning at 8.45 to St. Dunstan’s Ba- silica for Requiem High Mass at 9.0’clock. Interment will take place in the Catholic ceme- tery. MacINNIS — At Charlottetown on Tuesday, April 21, 1959; James MaciImnis, father -of Houlton MacInnis. His remains re resting at the Chariotte- * town Funeral Home from where the funeral will be held Thursday morning leav- ing the home at 9:45 for Re- quiém High Mass at St. Dun- stan’s Basilica at‘ 10 o'clock. Interment in the -Catholic Cemetery. PITRE — At the \ 1959, Mrs. formerly of Palmer Road, in her 7ist year. Her remains will be transferred this after- moon at 3 o’clock from the Charlottetown F al Home to the Sacred Heart Home from where the funeral will be held Friday morning leav- ing the Home at 8:45 for Re- quiem High Mass at St. Dun- stan’s Basilica at 9 o'clock. Interment: in the Catholic Cemetery. . of the Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources. In a special interview, North- ern Affairs Minister traced on a map the lines of these potential oil and gas areas. One line ran along the cost of British Colum- bia, where large permits have been granted ground the Queen Charlotte Islands. Another skirt- ed Canada’s northern coast and then turned north into the Artic Islands. An extension ran south into Hudson Bay. SABLE ISLAND And the new area is Sable Is land, 200 miles off the coast of Nova Scotia: Sable Island lies on the continental shelf of North America. It is an extension of the sedimentary basin that runs out te sea from the St. Lawrence riv- er valley and it is in sedimentary basins that oil, gas and other mineral deposits are found. There have long been rumours and sailors’ tales of rich oi] and mineral deposits around Sable Island and now Mobile Oil of Can- gary will put the matter to the test. Mobile has applied for rights to search for oil in 600,000 acres of off-shore land around Sable Island. Because the area is all under water, it comes under the author- ity of the Federal Government and not the province of Nova Scotia. 33 FATHOMS Under an agreement signed in Geneva last year, Canada can lay claim to all minerals found in territories up to 200 feet below sea level from the Canadian shore line, or as far as it is physically possible to exploit any finds. The Phase ‘‘as far as physically pos- sible’’ considerably expands the potential area as in the Gulf of Mexico and off the coast to Cal- ifornia. American companies are drilling oil at 1,500 feet sea depth. Behind the selection of Sable Island is its promising geograph- ical location. The Island is 3,000 miles from Europe while the Mid- die East is 8,000 miles from the rich oil markets of Britain and West Germany. Sable Island is also on the doorstep of the Mari- times and New* England states while Venezuela is 2,000 miles dis- tant. If oil is found in commerical quantities there the visionaries foresee it being shipped by atom- ic submarine tankers across the atlantic to Europe. That, how- ever, is well into the future. Mr. Hamilton said acceptance of Mobile Oil's application was “virtually automatic.’’ He said that because of the special diffir- ulities in off-shore exploration and drilling, regulations govern- ing permits might be eased. Nor- mal permits are for nine years but this might be expanded to 12 years to allow the company to do the Same amount of work in more time. The Oil companies are required to put in about $3.50 worth of work per acre during a nine-year permit. Working con- ditions could hardly be more dif- ficult anywhere then at Sable Is- land. Known as “the graveyeard of the Atlantic,” is a sandy dot jut- ting above the ocean. In winter, the storms send waves almost clean across its low sand dunes. Its only inhabitants are a herd of half-wild ponies, believes survir- ors of a ship-wreck of long ago, and officers at the Department's | Weather station. ket and should be applied to Havelock, N.B. FOR THE LAND’S SAKE -- LIME Soil acidity slows down the decomposition of organic matter and reduces the yields and quality of hay and pasture. LIME is the cheapest all-round soil conditioner on the mar- plant foods more available. Always remember, “HAVELOCK LIME WORKS”. Shipped in carload lots of 30 tons or more, bagged or bulk. Order now from— HAVELOCK LIME WORKS acid soil, it makes all major Phone 438 [history has there-been- such vig-] | session on “‘World marketing—a Mi|to buy—whether they have the =i] money to do so—will trigger a de- ‘\|raise their standards of living. |Living Standards Boom|s Reported orous competition, as well as co- operation, to lift peoples’ living standards, Marion Harper, New York advertising executive, Tuésday in an address to the In- ternational Chamber of Com- merce. 3 Harper spoke to a discussion top management responsibility.” Like nearly all the topics and ‘many of the technical or near- technical discussions, the words are prosaic but the aims are imaginative... The market ~ session, for in- stance, did not deal wiih how. to seli to people who can afford to buy. Rather, the speakers upheld that simply making people want sire that they will attempt to sat- isfy. A snowballing effect . will ISLAND NEWS PAGE Summerside 2031; undieee ‘Sentsgns 0183 Souris 32-2 America—and Tuesday’ S speak- ers maintained that the same principles can bring widening even-in-now un- derprivileged countries. ‘ The word “marketing” accord- | 8TU ingly—as discussed here—means a fight against poverty. Charles G. Mortimer, president of General Foods Corporation, expressed this view as follows: MUST SHARE SKILLS “All of us in international trade must share our knowledge and skills — including our marketing coneepts—with those living.in the less developed areas of the world, where the ‘consumer-is-king’ con- cept has not yet penetrated. “This crucial job—of purpose- fully utilizing the freedom - bred concept of putting people and their needs first as a weapon for waging peace—can best be done by such ambassadors as thost at- tending this congress. The marketing session, was chiefly an American show be- cause delegates from many of the 4 countries represented wanted to know about American exper- This has happened in Western countries — particularly in north ience in this field. OTTAWA (CP) — Liberal Sen- ator A. N. McLean said Tuesday thé “‘inflated’’ Canadian dollar places a tax on exports and a premium on imports. The New Brunswick . senator said in the continuing Senate de- bate on inflation that the current exchange rate on the Canadian dollar is costing exporters up- werds of $100,000,000 annuaily. The fedéral government also was losing many millions in taxes. He said the exchange rate was being driven higher by borrow- ings by provinces and municipali- ties in the United States at inter- est rates lower than those aval- able in Canada. For its size Can- ada was one of the wealthiest countries in the world and there was dé reason “why our bonded det financing cannot be done within our country.” PRICED OUT OF MARKET “The higher exchange rate in turn inflates the Canadian dollar and puts a higher price on our exports,” he said. “If this goes on the exchange rate is going to price us out of some of our ex- Senator McLean, owner of a fish processing plant, said Cana- dian exporters often are forced to sell at a five-per-cent discoum to compete with foreign pro- ducers. On goods shipped to the US. there was another three or four per cent for exchange. “lt is very discouraging and almost an impossible situation.” Competition in the export mar- ket was becoming keener month ‘by month. Canada faced the dan- ger of a further decline in exports to Europe. The chief responsibility rested on the doorstep of the Bank of Canada ‘‘whose unwise and short- CANADA PROVINCE OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND In the Probate Court The 2ist day of April A.D. 1959. In Re Estate of THEODORICE DOUC- ETTE late of, South Rustico in Queens County in the said Province, Retired Farmer, deceased, testate. To the Sheriff ef the County of Queens County or any Constable or literate person within said County GREETING: WHEREAS upon reading the peti- | tion on file of Jeremiah Doucette of | Rennie’s Road in Queens County | aforesaid, Carpenter, and Amand (Lemang) Pineau ef Doiron’s Creek in Queers County aforesaid, Farmer, | the Executors of the above named | Estate, praying that a citation may | be issued for’ the ‘purpose herein- after set forth: hereby required to cite all persons interested in the said Estate to be and appear before the Judge present at @ Probate Court to be held in the Court House in Charlottetown in Queens County in the seid Province, on Thursday the 28th day of May next coming, at the hour of eleven o‘clock forenoon ef the same day to shew cause if any they can why the Accounts of the said Estate should not be passed and an order | for | distribution meade to close the Estate as prayed for in seid petition and on motion of Gilbert A. Gaudet Esquire, Proctor for said Petitioner. AND IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that It’s New On P.E.L SPREADMASTER by Schultz bi varast “Sa The finest spreader ever built. The) _ great SPREADMASTER features: 15’ | tandem wheels for smoother ride, will go ever mud and snow easier, side extensions, the new widespread beater, and you'll find the price is best \of ail. "Fred F. Kitson Nerih. River Dial 5056 trigue. Premiere showing in good ones fast. COMING FRI. - SAT. "KING CAROLE” with Elvis Presley and Carolyn Jones. YEO: “Adventures of Arsene Lupin” With an all star cast ~ adventure thriller based on the exploits of a world fam- ous gentieman crook. In this you see action—suspense—in- THEATRE MONTAGUE - Thor, ia 22 - 23 Time 8:30 Adm. 30-40-45 Matinee Thur. 3:30 the Maritimes. We play the a true copy hereof be forthwith published in some newspaper’ pub- lished in Charlottetown aforc@rid once in each week for at least four consecutive weeks from the date hereof and that @ true copy hereof be forthwith posted in the fellowing public places respectively, namely, in the hall of the Court House in Charlottetown aforesaid, at or near | the store of Amos PF; Gallant in South Rustico aforesaid, and at or near the store of P. J. Noye & Company at Hunter River in Queens County aforesaid, se that all per- sons interested in the seid Estate as ae may have due notice there- of. WITNESS His Heneur Harold Leon- ard Palmer, Judge of the said Pro- Senator Criticizes InflationOnDollar You are therefore|. sighted policy Me been the cause of inflating our dollar.”’ DISAGREES WITH PCs Senator McLean disagreed with Progressive Conservative sena- tors that referring the problem of inflation to a Senate committee for study would turn the upper House into a partisan, political body. “T see no politics in the situa- tion as practically all govern- ments have been plagued and sometimes helped by inflation or deflation.” There was no “use in pretend- ing that inflation is something like the bubonic plague or black death that is thrust upon us from the outside. It is caused from within and most of us have at a had a hand in generating jt He was in favor of the Liberal- Proposed senate study because in- flation had seldom been properly explained to the man on the street. On the other hand, the scare of inflation had been over- emphasized. Senator F. A. McGrand (L— Closer Study Was Desired LONDON (CP) Wi Brandt of West Bertie cove te would have favored closer West- ern study of the Rapacki plan for —— disengagement in Cen- Brandt told a meeting of the Foreign Press Association Tues- day: “It may be that this plan is not practical as they say, but I think it would have been de- si to ; HE 23 § ish Foreign Min- Rapacki on the created a danger- east central Eu- ose in Brandt’s remarks came as something of a surprise in. view of the strong Allied reservations on the plan. SHOULDN’T BACK UP At the same time, he said there is ‘‘a good chance” Russia would rethink its views about the Berlin problem if the West stands firm and shows it will not surrender its rights in the city. Referring to suggestions for making the United Nations re- sponsible for Berlin, Brandt said: “The political freedom of West Berliners—and I hope of East Berlin as well—must be protected by something more than paper guarantees.” Brandt said his talks with Prime Minister Macmillan Tues- day and Foreign Secretary Sel- wyn Licyd Monday were “en- couraging.”’ He expressed the hope his visit here would help clear up ‘misunderstandings” between Britéin and West Ger- many. Later Macmillan informed the Commons that he expected West German Chancellor Adenauer to visit Britain ‘‘very shortly.” Decertification Ruling Awaited NORTH BAY (CP)—A decision is expected shortly from the On- tario labor relations board on a bid for decertification of the In- ternational Woodworkers of America (CLC) local at the Field Lumber Company in Field, 4 miles west of here. Management and union offi- cials attended a board hearing in Toronto Feb. 18 which was called to consider the company bid for decertification. Decision Was reserved. A strike which has lasted almost 11 months had held up logging operations at the mill and caused bitterness among the people of the small community, most of whom derive their in- come directly or indirectly from the mill's operation. During the strike last year there were in- able to understand government opposition to the motion. There would be nothing partisan about a Senate inquiry into the prob- New Brunswick) said he is un- lem. REGENT Tonite (Wednesday) 7:10 — 9:15 WALT DISNEY'S 5 hrs. Bervice to Toronto. Connect Boston. Ask ada and to the U. S. F Offices in Moncton and bate Court at Chariotigtown in Queen's County, the dey ot year first above written. : By the Court, a. $) USqd) Francis 8. Vihnicombe, Rae rene ata pee ome s in Moncton for TCA ER RRERET Es Ps. cea Regular Service to TORONTO 10 mins. Maritime Central Airways to Moncton leaving Charlottetown 11:05 a.m. Connect with TCA at Moncton — frequent First Class and Tourist service to about big savings on family travel in Can- LY NOW—PAY LATER, ‘if you wish, on any flight in North America or overseas—minimum fare: $100. For {fhformation and reservations see Morton Dew Ltd., 181 Queen Street, Phone 8541, or TCA Halifax. @) TRANS-CANADA AIR LINES’ Church Drive Gets Underway With Services — O’LEARY — The five - week “outreach stewardship’ cam- paign plan for the Springfield - .O’Leary Baptist Churches was of- Sunday. Very Beginning the O'Leary Church the service was conducted by the minister Rev. Ross Howard. Personal testimonies were given by Mrs. Ralph Adams and James Gard. Special music was provided by the choir under the direction of the organist, Mrs. Melvin Eilis. At the Springfield-church in the evening testimonies were given ‘by Mrs. Trueman Harris and William MacDonald. The choir sang “How Great Thou Art’’ and a solo was rend- ered by Lester Gay. The effort of the Christian stewardship plan is being made not simply for the purpose of raising needed funds but that a widening group of sharers might catch something of the en- | thusiasm which many have dis- ‘covered in making plans for the future of ‘the church and in let- ting everybody know what the church is doing and what the church plans to do in the days ahead The campaign is being planned and conducted by the church members under the pastor’s lead- ership. Moose Saving Bill Opposed SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)—The local branch of the New Bruns- wick Fish and Game Protective Association Monday night pre- pared a’ resolution opposing a provincial government. reduction in the moose-shooting jail sen- tence from two months to seven days. The resolution will be submit- ted to the annual spring meeting of the provincial association in Hartland, N.B. Friday. A second resolution called for appointment of a business agent to reorganize old branches of the association. SUSPEND RIGHTS LIMA, Peru (AP)—The gov- ernment suspended constitutional der permitting summary arrests applies to the entire country, al- though a two - week strike y Lima bank employees was the direct cause. guarantees for 30 days Thursday | Skin because of labor unrest. The or-/ gist cidents of violence. Tuesday that the pickets have | now left the plant and men are| returning to work. It was ex-) pected a full crew would be on! hand when sawing starts within | the next few days. ok tee ek: Kk Scott Outboards} ERNIE’S Sales & Service Summerside : 2 The Guardian, Charlotietown, Wed., Apr. 22, CITY, CENTRAL In New Location Notices which formerly peared under this heading now are featured in departments in the columns adjoining the Classified Ad- vertising Section. City news is now featured on page 5—~ the new City News Four-Act Play Is Fouthed SUMMERSIDE — The four- act play, “Here Comes Miss Willoughby” was presented to a fairly large crowd at Civic Audi- torium on Monday evening. The play was followed by ‘variety rs. Members of the cast are Judy MacLean, Carla MacKinnon, Shirley Rayner, Nancy Morrison, David Weale, Don McNeill, Jim Hogan, Pat Pickard. Solo parts were taken in the musical play by Katherine Ran- kin, Betty Blacquiere and Carol 2 ‘ MacLean, and the chorus con- sisted of Carol Jenkins, Gail Jenkins, Cheryl Ozon, Cheryl Paquet, Mary Woodside, Dawna Tuplin, Catharine Hickey, and Jane Graham. Marjorie’ Ireland and Joan Ramsay were pianists. The following variety program was carried out: Irish dance — Alita Llewellyn; solo — Ann Leard; Antony’s oration — Al- fred Tupper; tap-dance — Helen Bishop and Norma MacLeod; solo, Betty Blacquiere; instru- mental music — Bobby Ramsay and Robert Godkin; solo, Carol MacLean; society notes, Nancy Morrison. Clarence Mercer, school super- visor, thanked those assembled for their atendance, and all those who helped to make the enter- tainment a success. Thanks also were expressed to Boats Phar- macy for their donation of make- up and to Mrs. Ruth Champion for making up the members of the cast and chorus. |SKIN ITCH roan on cavorent pe _Pimbles Tenine a“ es, oo septic, healing, ODE today for Zs Geant, Bia from drus- skin. It works stops itching and nd trsaton Gat WSO. ictane” L | eu eeavoureenensel ti coussuss = i Ed Bas ad SSRs a aA. a a "ae i li i Zz ® E 7 i | 4 eo. “ee : ah eh a zB =o i ; i | R & : i i f i ‘ | sg on Wednesday Evening, April 29, 1959, at 8 P. M. Public urged to attend. zxkkKaekkekkkkk & A lawyer for the company said 4 THE MASSED MIGHT OF AN IRRESIS- yc TIBLE HUMAN STORM THUNDERS ACROSS THE HORIZONS OF A CON-* TINENT! * ¢ TODAY and THURSDAY AS AN ERA DIES, ANOTHER DAWNS IN * A THUNDERING HUMAN TIDE OF TERROR! +” SHOWS | 5:80 — 6:50 — 9 ¢ i* AAR HHH —_——— insurance premiums ° dation . . . meeting medical or dental expenses. Your Scotia Plan Loan is life-insured at no extra cost to you, THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA MORE THAN 500 BRANCHES ACROSS CANADA Manager Charlottetown Branch, i William Hayward FINANCE YOUR NEW CAR SCOTIA PLAIN Loan When you go shopping for that shiny new car, keep The Bank of Nova Scotia in mind, You can save money by finano- ing your car with a Scotia Plan Loan. You can get a Scotia Plan Loan at any branch of The Bank of Nova Scotia for any worthwhile purpose . . . buying or refinancing your Car ees new home or room . . - paying taxes or e - debt consoli- Holiday Pianning?