Chliliahvrlgingcwhole 'I'uesday.Aug,jl'4.l A . i ; ,. on Tour Of ,' Trails In Colour Eyes MONTREAL (CPI - Coloration "This." s-ysinr. Kent, "would point to the important factor that basic personality could also be L ' garish. Lot 1. August one of the attractions at this year's provincial. Exhibition is this beautiful Jersey cow owned by Mr. Campbell Macxay of Route. say, N.B. named ”Klllgshurst Mllady Zinnia" she was hased by Mr. Macxay last April for the sum of 310,500 in New Jersey. she is reputed to be the most highly year consecutive record of 1.000 as a spectator bug gm. y", with erici-on and Saint John. N.B.. Ina her!-" 0” r".”d5 have; be?" Wldelied can understand and get along well Fertility of the land priced cow ever broughttocanada. lbs. fat. l-ler sire was the famous his 18 head of Jersey cattle he is ."he" "'9 "my Shrmd l0l'milIE Molt OI the clmillite construe and st-alghtened in many places Wm, blue and browned - eyed G00d hlisblindry Mr. Macxay has been guaranteod Commando bull which. rated one an it! till camp in 1953- And with a lion. including the ranch-type and hayflelds are being cut and people, a minimum of 32.500 for each of her calves whether they be male TV Achievement Recalls ll.Vork Of Late Col. Rogers A name memorable in the his- tory of broadcasting in the Mari- or female. Yesterday he stated that the calf she is now carrying to be born September is has al- ready been sold for 33,000. Mllady Zinnia" comes from very promin- ent parents. Her dam, Marlu Milady Zinnia" was a three time gold medalist and had a three of the best Jersey sires that ever lived in the United States. Milady Hlourslicso ANIMAL Zinnia's latest milk record is for 1-'l.800 lbs. Mr. Maekay who began dairy farming 19 years ago after being connected with the Macliay Lumber Company of St. John re- calls that he has been coming to. the Provincial Exhibition here for 33 Years. Most of these visits were active participant in the big W. Guardian Photo Is Critical Of Sentences For Minor Offences sho OTTAWA (cm '- Magistrates 0 Su.rr.oundhingiAreai - trodden-down training camp area. crsta Within the 427 square miles of Camp Gagetowll. biggest military training base in Canada, farm 'tractors have been replaced by Sherman tanks. Barns shelter Bren-gun carriers instead of hay wagons. and soldiers on sentry duty stand wIth' poised rifles by farmyard gates. On the hundreds of miles of twisting roads signs have been pulled up replaced by the maple leaf mil- itary slogans. Military police pat- rol the highways which carry streams of convoys. BIG TRANSFORMATION - on hills and mountains troops are tearing down forest and bl.lild- have been hacked through wilder- ness and a maze of communica- tion lines strung through trea. By old scenic covered bridges, military police hurry along the many vehicles. a All this is happening in the hills and river valleys between Fred- 360.000.000' allotment the whole face of the area is being changed. all conventional , and ephone and power lines. lng up mock battlefields. Roads- go . schools. churcllg. stores. atres and modern living Quarters are rising with the salutary bulld- lngs at cl-omocto. and occupancy wlllbeglnhaloretheend oftbls I From a central heatlnl rim that eats zoo tons of coal a day. a seven-loot-deep tunnel burrows rpmileg around the 11.000-ncrc antpslte. This also carries tel- IILIT TOWN what pletsd Oromocto will be a military town of about 12.- tll) people, including dependents. ma they will llvein 2.930 mamed quarters and the centralized bar- nck. blocks. Outside the camp gates the town will be run by an elected rnayor and councillors, and cornmercial businesses wlll be allowed to open. Private doc- tors and dentists can set up prac- uggg in this area, a senior officer says you would be sur- prised at the number, of these men who are interested in com- mnrried quarters, is being done by private contractors: '- OTTAWA (CF) - Federal and provincial legal experts face a Legal Experts Faicelweiglhty Conferences Within Months Gerald Fauteux of the Supreme Court of Canada. The committee In.N.B. But while this new area springs farm houses are fast becoming delapidated. IN ARMY HANDS BIB paint-patches and numbers onpthe sides of these buildings indicate what the army engineers are to do with them. Some houses In being used by the provost corps, others by various reg. iments. and some for postal and telegraph offices. Churches are lwafded iii! and unused. and one carries a big sign, ”pay tel. ephone." Old one-room school- houses are boarded up. while most barns, once filled with hay and animals. are used mainly as service deposits. Tanks and trucks lule harnyards. Graveyards have not been touched and wont be until there is a definite decision on their future. So far they carry ”out of bounds" signs. but an officer said it hasn't been decided whether they will be moved or maintained. The whole camp area is still open to motorists and these spots can be visited. burned. Rivers. in some cases, have been deepened and some dams have been ripped down. There is no indication of when all this work will stop. Officers Sly the area will be developed and changed as battle exercises call for changes. Its only purpose. they say. is to train soldiers. of the eyes is a definite indica- tlorl of basic personality charac- teristics. says -Dr. in Kent. a servable sign that would indicate tine lbasic personality of the indivi- ua. Blue eyes. says Dr. Kent. indi- cates a person who Is a ' ' ' hereditary and lied to the same gene." Dr. Kent's research is being noted in part by the defence re- fit personnel managers, marriage counsellors. and the young man or woman try- ing to pick a mate. career , transmit- consultants no new. craft. dubbed the its relative using let power to operate lers. ' any you ulpl .9 Britain earl-out. ab mile-an-hour crulaiill svecd Stall Writer anent Jrrinaius up in up in the wilderness, th - i stilll Mchiatrlst .. Mccm Ummny. -- . p 7 call? oaom-own, N.B. (or. Virgin . about 20 miles I and note for the ngl-firs 3-000 dI:!I1laI::.Yc:lllIBiI:l'(!ue gin-3 C3," lbIechacm:tl5lyIvhtl4l:hjulhd?ee.'seIl?vi't:: Glut." Irrived "WW 9" A -The Canadian army within two of loved mean are being gaze: gmlliest who had to leave their Ken, W5 mm mm,” 3 in re; personnel best suited for various not-ul American tour. i W ll-.a'i trllrudal-rnIa!r.ic'k villa”. of modern con- Likngeaano mullllleeldlallatmllhe arm? '"" 0' 13 Years of scientific re- 59"" Tile four-engine Diana is till " "V "I" lo ' y 5 "I "'3' "'59 search for a reliable, easily, ob- Dr. Kent's work may also bene- Bristol Britannia. Wliilill "Ml - thinker and an administrator. He feels physical pain keenly. but has no great need "to be loved." He proceeds slowly, methodi- cally and in a straight line to- wards a predetermined objective. He wants to dominate and be in- charge. : The brown-eyed person. on the other hand. says Dr. Kent, is sen- sitive, creative and self-centred! He needs to be loved and maltes' decisions through his feelings, about persons and situations. rather than by logic. He is an artist and an original thinker. but he is not usually a dominant. forceful personality. COLORING PERMANENT In the middle group. green grey- ish or brownish eyes. are people with about equally divided char-1 acterlstics. says Dr. Kent. These people are fortunate because they They are flexible. adapt.abie.l uick to react. but apt to be ir-; rtable and unpredictable in theirj reactions because they are pulled- two ways by different personali-l ties. . Pigmentatlon of the human eyep is genetically transmitted and, THE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND DAlRYMEN'S ASSOCIATION Welcome visitors and exhibitors to the Fair and extends to the public an invitation to visit D THE DAIRY BOOTH ON THE EAST SIDE OF THE JONES LIVESTOCK PAVILION Dairying is the Foundation of Island agriculture promotes - Stability 'ot Income Buy Prince Edward Island Butter, Pasteurized and Cream, Buttermilk, Cheddar Cheese, Cottage Cheese, Evaporated Milk, Ice, Cream, and Powdered Skim-milk. 0. . does not h min t life. time Provinces is am, of the he who sentence youths to one year series of weighty conferences spent more than two years study- ...... c........ x..... s. 3...... or m mom. in ....... .. ......... max on can on mo---s u.u-- --um c---1--mam or FOR CAREFREE TV njonegr g-aqlp ope;-gun nnd mg... g" offences are in effect passing use changes in the administration of remissions. ldent andmn an-gem; gnu. sentences. Clarie Gulls said Mon- illltice in CInIdl- its two major recommendations island ,Broadcas pany. lily in the Commons. The federahprovincili 11138 Wm call for stabllshment of a five- Lu, until his dun. 1.. 954, col. The CCF member for Cape be M0015 0" I0l"' V0I"mll'0"' "is member national parole board and onel Rogers had Ions: been work- ing on plans to bring television here in connection with his radio Elation CFCY. h'il'll.lle Itl.)ll(i.':e8!b3f;I the ompany reac o ctlve featured in a special supplement is today's Guardian. ; Born and educated at Summer- glde. Col. Rogers buut -his first -vllriilesswsel in 1904 and during the - n er 1910-1911 served as wire- gss operator on the lcebrcaltar C. II. S. Minto. In that latter year :2 Joined thue Csnadlan dsligni orps as a autenaht an t and operated the first military portable wireless telegraphy set at Petawawa. During the First got-id War he was stationed at alias: as Fortress Signals Offic- er. 1 in mo he built. the first radio phone on Prince Edward Island and the following year started roadcasting, one hour a day with power of ill watts. Col. Rogers was granted the first commercial rlldlo" license in llastarnv Canada- incinl with the present call let- lqs.ol'.C.FCY. , v r. on his retirement from the Can isn Militia in 102! he was pro- ted to the rank of lieutenant col- anel but in 1940 he returned toitba krvics to organise the first Re- rve unit. No. 6 District Ell-inlis. in the Province. , "lie was a past president of the anadisn Associa” of Broad- casters and past president of the arlottetown Board of Trade and took a keen interest in the nadian Chamber of Commerce. the Canadian Author's -Association and the American Academy of THE LATE COL. ROGERS Army Negligence Seen In Accident . .1ll:G.lNA (CP) - A coroner"; jury Friday said there was ev- idence of negligence on the part of the army in the death of Art Lean Yes. 21 killed in the ac- cidental discharge of a bazooka Julylal at the Regina exhibition. Mr. Yee was decapitated by the back blast of a rocket fired from ills 3.5-inch weapon on display in the army th. The jury's verdict said: "Death was due to severe in- auries which included decapita- on. "We attach no blame to any in- dividual but we do find negligence on the part of the Canadian Army agencies against who sentences. g ized for the rest of their lives .SCHO0LS FOR CRIME Breton -South said there is I growing tendency among Cana- employets and employment hiring persons have served short prison This practice caused many crime repeaters. Mr. Gillls said a "whol elot of kids" convicted of slight misde- meanors should not be stigmat- Lecause their records followed them from job to Job. He suggested the justice depart- ment establish an agency to ed- ucate the public in rehabilitation of formerprlsoners and that mag- Istrates be cautioned that I one- year sentence can he a "life sen- ence." - Gage W. Montgomery (PG- Victorla-Carleton) said , he agrees with Mr. Gillls. He would like to see more done in the field of probation so that imprisonment would be used only as a last resort. In a good many cases, prisons were schools fo rcrime. Mr. Montgomery also main- tained that poverty should not be the cause of imprisonment. it was not a right law that a person couldn't pay a fine had to spend so many days in jail. Mr. Montgomery also said a man leaving prison should come out with a clean slate. He should not be met at the gate by a sheriff bearing a warrant for arrest on another charge. ports tabled in Parliament in June and July by a joint Senate Commons committee and a spe- cial committee appolnted by the government. The recommendations in the re- ports now are being studied by the provinces which are respon- sible for the administration of lus- tlce. Many of them could not be implemented without the appro- val and co-operation of provincial governments. The initial conference is ex- pected tn be attended by Justice Minister Garson and his top offl- clsls and by provincial attorneys- general. However, the bulk of the work will be conducted by deputy ministers and their officials di- rectly involved in iuatlcs admin- Iatratlon. First consideration likely will be given to a report by a special four-man committee recommend- ing sweeping changes to the whole Iigid of penal corrrections and pa- r es. FEDERAL RESPONSIBILITY The report was prepared by a for federal responsibility over pri- soners sentenced to terms of more than "six months, instead of two years as at present. The committee also suggested amendments to the criminal code. as it affects prison terms. The three other reports were tabled by the Joint Commons-Sem ate committee on capital and cor- poral punishment and lotteries. The committee recommended virtual outlawing of large bingo games and lotteries and prohibi- tion of advertising contest lnolv- ing chance. It proposed. among other things. a 55,000 limit on the value of prizes offered in one year by organizations sponsorinl bingo games and lotteries. The committee urged retention of the death. penalty in Canada but substitution of electrocution or the gas chamber for hanging. and abolition of executions for con- victed murdera of ill years-or un- der. lnladdition it recommended abolition of the strap only as a "last resort" to maintain order in committee headed by Mr. Justice prisons and jails. NOTICE A special meeting of Village of Parkdale will be held in Parkdale Hall, Thursday, August 23rd, 1956 at 8 P. M. the Ratepayers .of the Business-Proposed new Fire Hall. V... .g .w- an... calslns lvlhodeldivsx The beautifully proportioned elegance to any room - - - brings you glare-free WATCH IVE viclng! . i 4w 21" Caribe a d d I STlIIlilIOIISE. All NEW FOR 1957 see THEM NOW on DISPLAY AT our T.V. SHOWROOM AND OUR BOOTH AT THE FAIR Where we will demonstrate The 1951 Westinghouse Television All. THIS WEEK Ar Westinghouse - Qualify Comes First That's why we can promise that from the day you blw Westinghouse, you'll enjoy television perfonnance that is iecond to none. Performance that will keep its high standard over the years. with an absolute minimum of ser- Eight engineering ..d.ancemcnts (available only from Westlnghousel make this promise possible. They are built into every Westinghouse television set. Area-Proved for flop performance in your locality! The new Westinghouse has been tested, and its perfu- coast to coast. 30'”-Ii-'1' 5I3lUl3CI- In "'9 '”'I0”9"W"i ”lmll:h '13 viewing and top tuning. Subtle Copper-Tone styling Westingclgousel pioneered in Area-Proved TV. making hundreds of field tests 9 i'lKlI' " PWA ' ' 9 points up the beauty of rich Walnut. satin-psmoot across nna a. mini 33" l""""F 0' "II" "I COMMISSIONERSOF PARKDALEL 'Mahogany or Blonde Oak finishes. The powerful In every instance. these tests demonstrated the superior sensitivity, pull-In Coming Events :'Weat ltoyally Dancs cancelled gar this week olliy. 'lisgulsr Dance Bonsbaw inn, sy night. Burns Orchestra. linnunl lobster supper, Is: ml-lra ammunition. " Second Arrest . In Police Slaying. MONTREAL -(CP)-Police Sat- urday night arrested a second suspect sought for questioning in connection with the gun-slaying of "Sliver Safeguard" Chassis has for interference-free performance. The brilliance and clarity of the picture is matched by the "Concert- Tonc” sound. Adaptable for UHF. Remote control available. Height: 37" Width: 2-W4 " been Area-Proved power and picture quality of the Westinghouse receiver. This means that whether you live in a primary. you'll enjoy the best reception on a Westinghouseg What's more, if your reception area combines stations in all three categories secondary or fringe area. you can expecie to receive them all when you watch Westinghouse! Depth: 1995" At Firestone Home & Auto Co. Ltd. We are pleased to have CFCY Television OPH- 31 tuba functions for top reception Full 20 tune complcmellt - - - performing :1 tube functions through the use of advanced. multi-purpose tubes. Far more tube functions than most television lbsncs Mt. Stewart Memorial sets. TE"; T""d', "ulm mm" M.” :oo,t'tJrlIc.to:v.tlp.:fmSIt:.aAelaLtI.l'eI.re3ll:I 3il"ll'W9 IWIIEVG ll will "b9 "'9 l"dl"3 T919 This means that in the Westinghouse receiver there's a tremendous reserve &9il'-kl 0l"3l10W'l- jug '1-uegdgy, vision Station in the Mnrltimes. of power to provide clearer. sharper pictures under the most adverse con- , The s n s p a c 1. identified by . dltiollt , I 3'" due. " wmnd F" lies as Bernard Landry. 33. was ly's. 1 mile lid. Tussdaynlght. 9” s. 14. Wohstars Orchestra. 1 Dance Cardigan North school esday. Aug. ll. Turners Orch- tra. fJean's Snack Bar. Fredsrlcioil. vltes you to come in for light acks. You'll enjoy it. ' lnsnca St. Peters lfoiy Name ll. Tuesday night. MacEwsn's chastra. g - Dance Mt."gt:ht:art Mam&rial ,'ruasd Rollin an 's gifkad up while walklns net 1'53- therlne Street and St. Law- relics Boulevard. one of Moni- -rual's busiest intersections. Police said Landry, who also used the name of Roland Cham- pagne. offerad no resistance when spotted in a thick Saturday night crowd by I traffic officer. He was unartned. , The mall was one of two per- sons sought for questioning in shooting of Captain Ernest Chali- loux I. following a predrawn gun-battle in Ste. Asst-he. Ibo!-It 8 hours after another suspect. idsntiflsd as Michal Benoit. a 8:- Rlng announcer at the Exhibition this year is Mr. Allison Profltt of Freetown. Mr. Proflit kept a large number of horse classes moving into the Coliseum yesterday. A competent ring announcer is an l LANNOUNCER Westinghouse 1957 TV brings you O" "'0 f0il0W"i9 F"? advantages. Yes for "57" its your best buy. Buy Westinghouse. NEW FREEDOM FROM INTERFERENCE No fewer than five separate engineering advancements no matter how they originate. in an actual test. against six leading competitive makes of television. only the Westing- house maintained a steady picture. when all were subjected to artificially- strcaks, flutter. fiop.over - - - . important part of the show and 0d ed mm, 3.0.1., ".9. gnu” mpg, your-old Montreal snot-chant seag pr uc his.-an s:so-13:: sum man. wmmohrghihgdisnngmmg, ,"f,,f,",f,':,':,;"f,: ,”,ff,;,,5,”?" ”' Cchestl-a.: -......".""....."?"'”'..... l'?"c.'2 Moose Cllcirgs Cars .In N.VB. STAR CAB LUCKY NUMBERS I IllTElilIIlI'TlIlII IIIITICE Iiarltldsj Electric co. 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I , - ' ,p- -v '95" K0 In" mtg.-re;-gnce. In fringe areas especially, this highly sensitive tuner gives . . . ' g , ' u pue of the line ni North River clusewax inure definition and far less "snow" than other tuners. X J ' . . "I m 5531 mg , 7 5531 acarunoo Model 2V17i' Smart leatherette grained finish of this zl" tabla- top beauty is brilliant'y set off by the handsome Copper-Tone styling. The Acapulco has the fanmns standard in telsvisloa history. . 4 5 lfsight: ml." wlalla: as Ms" Depth st MI” . . v . .. ,4." en . , I I I "shout 0, my mm. 'mIm' ' s:dh:aTc.mwa&hgfdlti.:naTly 2 1. higher-priced u:NmC:scol;au1;:I's.r. gait ' i it it age lnderaa. p nag. a no - roar:-savllt cuwum 3.3.; .. low a... it ......n..... . ... value ; 1' 5 a an pl-oven. ,fl-om - 5 -5.-.