. titled Wayward Kiss" tlill m cans Arabian ambassador to w Min. N. NlCl'IOlSonl ageing: 0:80. 30"“. eununy (AP)_ Germany because at what 2? ° was written b Ed- 8] n I D'es In Montaguel ' ward Cllnton and meatballs of She” we“ M n “d c.llel‘ lmt llama-y. rumour, " the cast include Anna MacCor. 5mm“? he ll quitting as Saudi 9" c“ ‘ °m° “‘1 “road He MONTAGUE — The death oc- ‘ m.“ Glyn“ “h... Chum |, told The Associated Press be ob. currpd at the Kings Countv Me-‘ Th ‘ i d Mlcpi,“_ Mr. cum“. Au“ Katherine Maclntyre. jects to Saudi Arabia's interven. mm“ “mm” qaturd’y' Mam“ SOURIS _ e mm! m Clinton, Leo Paquet. Marilyn The 9145' 1' direct“ by EIEI- tion on the royalist side in the 15' °f 1"” N°rmain J‘ N'°h°1‘.l‘efll°nal Duma'swew *5 “’9' Cheverle. Mary MacPhee. Sandy nor Clinton, and there will be fighting against the republ‘pan ’°"- “0"”“9- sentlng a three-act comedy ail-"elllE. Bernadette Mahar and specialty numbers between acts. regime in Yemen. Mrs. Nicholson was born in Cardigan on July 13. 1881. dau- ‘ M ghter of the late Mr. and Mrs. r _ Archibald MacEachern. She lived for some time in . Massachusetts. where her first husband. John MacDonald, ore- deceased her. In October. 1936 . She married Norman J. Nichol- son. Montague. also deceased. She is survived by three bro- P.E.I. Conservative Association thers. Hugh. Cardirn: Wil‘iam. ‘ Montague. and James. New, Westminster. B. C.: three sis- ‘ ters. Mrs. W. Berry (Catherine); Mrs. A. H. Matthews (Florence): and Mrs. P. .J Finnegan (Gracel: and four step-children. Mrs. T. M. Llewellyn (Eileen), Claude and George. all of Mon- tague. and Harold. Delia. Alta. Her rema‘ns are resting at the Montague Funeral Home. Fun- eral arrangements will be an- nounced later. QUAD DIES NAPLES. Italy (APl—One ot' the quadruplets born here four days ago died Saturday in its incubator. Doctors said the bay’s I lungs failed. His brother and Presidents I Kennedy and Costa Rica. yesterday in par- xgatsilgzersrrgg’tnaifige “a: Ht); Francisco 0mm Of C05” Rma ade following Kennedy's ar- 3 Mrs. Rosa Rea Guadalni. 35. wave to crowd as they ride ,Montague, Souris, Kings County We es a b ‘4 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tuesm . . . . Japanese To Take New Look With Misgivmgs At Canadian Market Needs ~f~ c» ~.. I M, -.——.__ By WILLIAM L. RYAN Today Nasser is more cau- TORONTO ‘CPI — Japanese in line with the 8dVice given 10. WASHINGTON iAP| — The tious. The tide turned in his lbusiness men will take a newiJapanese business men by a West eyes the Arab world to- direction with a Yemeni revondonk at the Canadian market recent Canadian delegation to‘ day with misgivings. that fall_ then with revolution this fall Victor Oland president Japan. The Canadians said in the surface, me West in Iraq and a coup in gym, ‘of the Canadian Chamber of fcct: would appear to have gamed The new regimes talk of Commerce saidlirrc. “ e are huge importers anti1 from recent upheavals in Iraq Arab unity. but their waders do Speaking to a luncheon given are dclighted to buy from you. and Syria Communists have not appear to invite total Egyp by Ichiro Kurano chairman of but please try to find items we? been mm. mm domination. Nasser avoids‘thc Canada'Japan Trade Coun- have to import rather than com-‘ But tlic developments pose giving the impression that this oil Mr. Oland said Japanese pete with our own industry." i new pass-hinges some of them is “.h'at he wants. delegations will come here to Japan Mr. Oland stated is} ominous. ’I‘hc \Vcst once again The threats to King Hussein develop programs for the sale concerned about how she mayi could find itself facing a des- of Jordan King Sand of Saudi of goods not now made in‘increase her sales here to ; pcratc situation. Arabia and the Arabian Fem“. Canada. This he commented is point sufficient to take care ot‘i Eventually. the Arab world sula sheikdoms worries the us _—"—~”_—" “ —— what she expects to be her in-. may be in “F 3 "NS 9V9“ Nasser has sent thousands of*0thel‘. EEYPL Syria and Iraqtcreased purcmses {mm can': more COHfUSEd and dangerous troops to Yemen to support the still depend on Soviet economic ada- - than 51181 in 1955 and “‘9 bra‘Vl' revolution there, along with and military hf‘ll). Ne“ fall's “Sim” WHL 1'91" mg eruption "f rebemon and ions 0f eqmpment- He 15 put“ The direct internal threat of resent the Japanese Federm‘on chaos which sparked US. troop ting US. policy in a squeeze. communism has been eased in Of Economic Organization: the landings tw“ ,years later .1" L91" For 5“me time WBShinfllon Arab countries for the foresee-Japanese Chamber 0m anon. The difference this time appeared to be trymg to gauable Mum Bu, Soviet national,merce and Industry: Japanese l is the impact of Soviet oil as 1810",; with Nasser and Arabs ipolicy could hope to chalk up Foi‘eiggmxpgzecgggcigchfgméj an economic Warfare “'93P?” aggrieved at the US. role inimpressive gains its broad new 959 The 1956 and 19"? crls‘?‘ mt'ithi‘ creation Of 151‘891- Perlmpslcrisis is generated. Ideological‘Develcpment' PEPIIE‘d the Hm" 0f life-5mm 0“ ithe wish to get along with Nas- ‘war in the Middle East could The giraffe has seven verte- to W§Slem Ellmpes ‘nflusm‘fllser impelled the United SlBlPS be supplanted by an old‘fash- hrae in its neck, like whales bl" “"9 3'93,“ 3’10 .SPHet 5"! to recognize the Yemeni ern- ioned war of power politics. 1and humans. was not Yel 1" 3 WWW“ to m” flutlonary regime. The Soviet trude forcefully. Since then 50- Union did so, too. but Britain vie production has become a did not. cold war {30‘0" i BASE THREATENED F R I E I . O a... 1:01.111ch LURE Britain has reason to fear de-i Western Europe alone was Velopmenls. The Yemeni re- taking ammo harmis daiiy 01 gime avowedly wants to seize Soviet on in 1951. This under. iail the Aden protectorate. where ritain has a base guarding ap- cuts Arab and world prices. It . , is an attractive political lure.'ll’}l‘10a0‘lrleS t9 the. lildilan .Otceiln. or m this “namin tot e emeni regime s Vir ua y for gov n P g jat war with Saudi Arabia. . x id ll f l. . prozusetzeeipaflue: of who mm In January. PrcSidcnt Ken- 0 e - yes, illness Shlkes you . . . Of hols the Middle East on flow ‘nedy wrote crown Prince'Fai- , . becomes a question of impai- i581! the saw” foreign mm‘Ster'. Y°llf - - - don Y you WCflY—Cfld tance to the West. Should the 1211931331: J“ gs???" w flow be halted. it is possibiei . . . . n - ITH EACH FILM LEFT AT ENMAN'S DURING THE _ ' ’ that a, least some of WestemISapgé [Agiitléngtktiggdfglm .t (H MONTH OF MARCH FOR DEVELOPING AND PRINTING. expec’ v the be“ Poss'ble hospfld a s s l i ‘ Europe's industry would be at' . . the mercy of Moscow incuu to be friends whh every. MAIL 0R LEAVE YOUR NEXT FILM, (BLACK & WHITE) fragment . . . the very me of he... . ’ :one in the tongumrvy Middle WITH US FOR HIGH GLOSS PRINTS & 0"”RNIGHT waragrnagéfigyisnt: Stiiiguaisnsa‘East. Along with Britain. per- SERWCE- m h. h h a l d V r ' 'Ehaps with fingers crossed. the "19 W IC our 05 Il’fl Cf ea £333: sandbags THIS SPECIAL FOR THE Y P s ‘ °" "' _ s, H ‘ - inized the new Ira i and S "a on... man... can Dianna...“ Unquesgonabh fight MONTH or MARCH ONLY. oring to Provide—the my type of him in 3 905mm to play the were anti-Communist and had Communists against the West.‘ . ' ' Recovering from setbacks £13m: down hard on the Com 1 treatment which may be impossible to after 1938' N355" is in at This did not mean Western} . . strengthened position to pushisiock was much hi h I Na .. f V. . I'IC . his Ara-b socialist union, extend-iser’s followers still gar? fasciilfi 24 Hour Film Developin Service P 0 Id‘ . . . "mess “us fi "cm' cam. ing from North Africa to thejated by “positive neutrality."1 9 9 I g ' Pm,“ Gum Tm. pose, a ml which to Arabs. can me ‘ Dial ~1~6 Water Street Summerside poign of the P.E.l. and Charlottetown an threat to the Arabian Peninsula, 18 in n i a i from a noose formed by leftist- ip y g o e Sde gain“ the HOSPl'Cl is SUCCCSSYIIl - ruled Algeria in the west. Syria! . and Iraq atop the Arab “fertile crescent" and Yemen in the peninsula’s southwest corner with Cairo at the centre pull- ing the knot ever tighter. The peninsula. lying between the Red Sea and the Persian You... and You lilone .. . Can Help Your Hospitals wait, Quatar and Bahrein sheik-~ dome. Saudi Arabia, Oman. the trucial Oman and the Aden ‘ T P 'd 11 se ' ' ' ‘ 11 km Middle HELP 0 row e T e Fatalities: TED IN 1958 $253303: it’s? 53.?” in”: - " ° °° FINANCE ' ° ‘ ' gygpc'iritlloenUpgified Agreed: -. adequate number of skillea ' financial assistance with which your mutton Yemenm'l‘hen a an. personnel ,, mm... 1..., mm... hospital can plan for future needs violently a g a i n s t Nasser Yemen. distrusting his social- ' 9 ism. broke with him. Finally. in 1961, a coup wrenched Syria . out of the U.A.R. ' proper equipment with which to diagnose and treat the sick ‘4 ‘ . in short, All. that is required to prop- erly treat each and every patient, re- E. A S I E R N z: 1:: “Whit, ’ proper accommodation — now lack- _ . ' ing in both hospitals gardless of their illness, regardless of . e 0.... -....e 9"seaeanpeeeeolifl B R I E F S If you are engaged in a business—or if you plan to . SUHlClOnl funds Wlll‘l lo my. "I'll need; start one—and required financing is not available else- a where on reasonable firms and conditions, you are . cl. your h°8Pllal3 invited to discuss your needs with the Industrial Development Bank. ' Is PATIENT Mrs,_James Lowery at Mon- For further information, write for this descriptive ; mu: ' "item in "‘9 P-E-I- booklet, visit an 108 office, or consult your auditor, .. ~a ” I in warm IlAMiLr s ._ m; Augustus Peters of St. Charles, lawyer or chartered banker. ‘ a l O , Support The P.E.l. llllll Charlottetown Hospital led by his daughters, , e-mnuwnmi i o . . mm Financial Campaign for $200,000 WITHnt INDUSTRIAL oevnopmeur BANK eh “I?” JW‘O" 0‘ N” a sauce omces acmss CANADA will ve a o . mmofaargdcy. .tiohbne- "ONCTON' m 8,1,. GEORGE STREET. TEL: 38945“ Your contribution—however large. however smal—wil play its. part in enabling your hospitals to My . sarvaiheneedsoithesiclt.bon'tweltuntilltlaree iata—mekayoureemibutiennew.. .redeyl