lion wants to make sure that the Liberal convention, Jan. 14 -16 itresses the “grass roots” aspect association sent MP J. W. Pick- ersgill, former immigration minis ter, a box ofgrass. Here he hands PROVIDE THE GRASS R The Galt 0nt.. Liberal Associa- of party organization. The Galt it over to Duncan MacTavish, QC convention chairman. (CP‘ Wire- is photo) Defected Diplomai’Said Anxious To ‘Return Home LONDON (AP)—Guy Burgess, one of two high - ranking British diplomats who defected to Russia is reported anxious to come home. , Michael Ingrams, a television official who spent four th-s in the Soviet Union .making films, ‘says Burgess is asking British visitors whether he would be ac- cepted here. , Donald Maclean, ‘the other dip- zlomat who crossed the iron cur- tain with Burgess, also came .’back into the news after months of obscurity. The mass circula- tion SundayPictorial reported he has split with his 41 - year - old .Amenican wife, Melinda, a-nd that ;she wants to get their three chil- _0ren out of Russia. The report said Mrs. Maclean has appealed for help to British and U.S. authorities. Ingrams brought no word of ‘Maclean except that he lives in In pleasant house in a Moscow ssuburb with his family and that ‘the three children, who go to I state school, speak only Russian. COLONY OF “RUNAWAYS” The television official -told re- porters Soviet authorities let him mix freely with the people and he met a. small colony of “run- away Britons.” “I refused invitations to attend their parties and to meet Burgess,” Ingrams said. “But they talked a lot about him. They told me he was most unhappy and looking very old. “He is keen to meet Britml visitors because he wants to get back to England. He is contin- ually asking people from this countryif they think he would bet accepted here.” Ingram-s added that Burgess is drinking heavily and has only one close friend, a Russian miner. Burgess and Maclean disap- peared from .London in 1951. Rus- sia never officially admitted they had crossed the iron curtain, but the two diplomats finally held a press conference inMoscow in 1956 to confirm reports that they -had gone to work for -the Soviet foreign ministry. HANDIWORK INDICATED There have been Maclean. in 1953. of Russia. washed their hands of him.” indications that some Kremlin notes to 1.11: _ Atlantic Allies we;-_e wo;-‘ded by ltion form is received in the of- Mrs. Maclean and the children went to Russia from Switzerland The Pictorial said Mrs. Mac- lean has. been “living a night- mare” and parted with her hus- band “because of his drinking." but the existing leg-islation will She was described as making frantic efforts to persuade her relatives to do all they can to get the children —- Fergus, 12, Donald, 10, and Melinda, 6 out Maclean was reported by the ‘Pictorial to have lost his job in the Soviet foreign languages de- partment. The Pictonial said the Russians now “appear to have In 1957 the Cliarloltetown Old Age Security Office forwarded 83,685 cheques totalling $3.808,- 058.00 to persons in this Province who are seventy years of age or older. The entire amount of this payment was paid from Federal Funds. This information was announc- ed recently by Mr. A.S. Tait, re- gional director of Old Age Securs ity. The following table shows the number of pensioners , in this province and the total payments made by months for the year 1957: § Pensioners Cheques Issued ayments 9- $279,665 279,585 281,650 285,770 292,761 286,565 328,690 329,200 329,396 329,214 7,028 393,166 . 7,005 392,396 Totals 83,685 $3,808,058 “A noticeable increase in the payment for the month of July over the month of June can be seen in the above table.‘ This is due to the first increase in the amount of the pension from $40 to $46 per month. A second in- crease in the monthly amount of the pension from $46 to $55 was made effective with the month of November, thus making the total payments for November much greater than the total pay- ments for October. “The Regional Office continues to receive application forms from persons after they have reached their seventieth birthday. Be- cause of the delay in making ap- plication, the applicant has lost one or more months pension, as payments can only be made com- mencing with the month follow- ing the month when the applica- 9' 6,879 6,882 6,900 6,908 6,965 ‘ 7,005 7,011 7,024 7,043 7,035 G50‘: QDCD QDKI Cobb: 7,002 N.“ 88 I-—-G 7,112 7,129 7,146 7,142 7,134 Nov. ' 7,113 ‘ Dec fice of the Regional Director of Old Age Security. Representa- tions have sometimes been made to the Regional Dirctor’s office for retroactive payment to the month following the month of applicant’s seventieth birthday, not permit such payment. Some of the reasons given for the delay by‘ the applicants are, “I did not have any documents available at the time to prove n._,' age’ or “I was trying to get my birth reg- istered so that I could send my birth certificate with my appli- cation form”. If an applicant’s birth has not already ‘been reg- istered with the Vital Statistics authorities it is not necessary 'post'offices or can be obtained by Old Age Pensions Approach p 4 Million Annually In P. E. I. to do so before applying for Old Age Security. The Regional Of- fice will give every assistance;} and direction possible to appli- cants in obtaining_satisfactory proof of age. When a person who is a resident of Canada, and has‘ lived the required number of years in Canada, reaches the age of sixty-nine and a half years, he I is eligible to apply for the Old Age Security pension. Applicat- : ion forms are available at all writing to the office of the Re- gional Director of Old Age Sec- urity, P. O. Box 1238, Confereda- tion Building, Charlottetown, P. E. I. If the applicant has noth- ing to prove his age at the time he is eligible to apply, "e com- pleted application form should be sent to the Regional Director's office so that no loss of pension will result because of delay in applying. When the application form is received in the Regional Office the applicant will be advis- ed what he may do to obtain sat- isfactory evidence of age." Former Nurses’ Registrar Dies Mrs. Reagh Horne. R.N., died Friday at the Prince Edward Is- land Hospital. Until two months prior to her death. Mrs. Horne had been the. Registrar of Nur- ses, Charlottetown Central Reg- istry, a position she had filled most efficiently since her appoint- ment nine years previously. Born in Brookfield, P.E.I. she was the former Helen MacLean, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. L.Y. MacLean and widow of the late John Reagh Home of Winsloe. A graduate of the Prince Ed- ward island Hospital School of Nursing, she came to Charlotte- town following the death of her husband several years ago and after practising her profession in the City assumed the office of Nurses’ Registrar. She is survived by two daugh- tens, Betty (Mrs..Maurice Blake) and Margaret of this City. Also surviving are a sister Margaret MacLean, R.N., Sackville. A bro- ther, Wilfred lives in Charlotte- town and a brother James lives in Brookfield, Three other bro- thers in Western Canada also survive her. Her only son_ John Reagh “Bud- dy” was killed in an airplane crash in Alberta, in June 1955. / JORDAN JAILS REDS AMMAN, Jordan (Reuters) — A military court in Jerusalem Tuesday sentenced five Jordan- ian Communist to prison terms ranging from 15 to 19 years for subversive activities and for tak- ing part in demonstrations in Jor- dan last April. '4. MR. CUTCLIFFE Former Islander Writes Article For Engineers The December issue of The‘ Journal of Applied Mechanics, published quarterly in Easton, Pa., by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, carries a Is Remanded Charged with remanded until January Magistrate K. M. Martin. costs or twenty days. two were each twenty days in County Jail, another was . five dollars and costs or days, and the fourth was remand- ed until the 18th. On Theft Charge the theft money in the amount of over fifty dollars in City Police Court Saturday an accused was Charged with drunken driving, an accused entered a plea of guilty to the lesser charge [ driving whilst his abilities were U impaired. by alcohol, and was fined one hundred dollars and 0f four drunk and incapables, sentenced to the Queen’s hon boyage as he leaves to take up his new duties in Bangor, Maine. The presentation on behalf of the Gideons was made by Claude Lewis and the address was giv- en by Millar MacFadyen. Mem- bers of the Gideons present spoke briefly of Mr. Runtz’ val- 13 by uable contribution to the society - , where he has been a past pre- sident and secretary and presen- tly is Zone Leader for the Pro- Vince. Takes Roll Out Of Small ‘Ships ANGLESEY, Wales (Reuters) , A boon to seasickness sufferers—‘; Monday. Jan. 13. 1958 The Guardian Page 3 three years to Perfect it." “It will reduce the rolling ef fect of small ships to the greatest possible extent and thereforc should reduce seasickness to the absolute minimum.” The invention can be used or pleasure steamers. t I‘ 3 W 1_ 9 1‘ 5 coasters, yachts and all ships of less than’ 1,000 tons. The admiralty is having a minesweeper fitted with the stab- ilizer and foreign navies also are interested, the company said. of of filled a stabilizer for small ships—has§ Expeh 5‘ two been developed here, it was an- . nounced Wednesday. A spokesman for Saunders-Roe,‘ the Charlottetown Gideon Local’ Gideons "Honor Mr. Runtz During the week members of waited upon Mr. Vic Runtz to make a presentation of a colour- ed Island Scene and to wish him Look smart in expertly cleaned clothes If your clothes are not becoming to you— They should be coming Limited, who developed the’ new, stabilizer, said “it has taken us 25% OFF LADIES’ COATS and DRESSES to US Cam? HELEN’S DRESS SHOP Master Cleaners 54 Grafton St. Dial 9388 122 Fitzroy St. Dial 5636 paper written by a former Is- lander, John Lloyd Cutcliffe. Mr. Cutcliffe’s paper deals with the symmetrical buckling of a} series of uniformly loaded par- allel struts supported by spot con- nections to a long thin plate. It was delivered in June of last year at the Applied Mechan- ics Division Summer Conference held in Berkeley, California. One of Mr. Cutcliffe’s former teachers H. S. Heaps, Associate Professor of Applied Mathemat- ics at Nova Scotia Tech, drove all the way to the American west coast city in order to deliver Mr. engineers conference. The son of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Cutcliffe, Fredericton, P.E.I. Mr. Cutcliffe graduated from Nova Scotia Technical College in 1956. At this time he was the sole honor graduate in civil engineering. An employee of the Dominion Bridge Co. of Montreal, Mr. Cut- cliffe is Structures Engineer at the Robb Engineering Works, Am- herst, N.S. MONUMENTS Vere Beck 8. Son“ Ltd. MONTAGUE and CHARLOTTETOWN Skilled Memorial Craftsmen since 1870 Cutcliffe’s learned treatise at the‘. durum CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES heavy quilted Men's Station Wagon Coats." collar. To 29.50. Sale 16.95 Ladies‘ Winter Coats. Values to 39.50. Sale15.00 - 19.50 - 24.50 lined‘ mouf'on 9 _ Cruiser Coats. Men's Suburban. Cor Coats and block and red check Sale 10.95 Ladies’ Dresses. Values to 14.95.» Sale 4.00 - 6.00 - 8.00 Ladies‘ Skirts. Reg. to 10.95. To 16.95. Sale Men's Genuine Horsehide.Ju_c- kefs. Reg. 18.95. Sale 3.00 and 5.00 Ladies Suits. To 29.50. 10.00 Sale 19.50 Men's Suits. Values to 39.50. Sale 12.00 to 15.00 Chi=ldron's‘ Coats and "Cool- and 22.50 Sale Boys‘ Cor Coats. Reg. 10.95. Sets. Reg. 16.95 to 32.50. Sale 10.95 up I 6.95 rhé Greendcil co. Ltd. \. iFor’mer Antarctic Exploration 7 Ship Loading The “Theron", a ship with an enviable record among those that have sailed the frigid wastes of the Antarctic, Saturday was her- thed at the Railway Wharf load- ing a cargo of 8,500 bags of.Is- land potatoes‘ for United States '-ports. The 849 ton freighter and sealer is under the commandof . Captain Marold Maro of Halifax, ‘formerly of Aalesund, Norway. Potatoes Here January 29, 1956 to land equip- ment and stores of the expedi- tion. When unloading operations were completed she started on her northward journey only to be caught in an ice-trap. Even- tually with the use of demolitions and a shifting of winds the The- ron was able to work herself clear. The spot where the Theron was locked in the ice, was almost the .aWhen Everybody Works .4 . Everybody Benefits! A Get‘ Your JOB exact location in which Sir Er- nest Shackletonfls ship the “Dis- covery” was crushed and sunk. The 39-year-old skipper said The Theron first came into ' prominence in the winter of 1955- 56, when she was used to trans- -port Dr. E. Vivian Fuchs and Sir D0 IINOW DONE This Winter! v _, Edmund Hillary and the remain- der of the advance party of the British Antarctic Expedition from London, England to set up the Shackleton Base from which the expedition was to operate. Leaving London on November .14. 1955, the sturdy vessel head- ' ed across the Atlantic stopping at Cape Verde for fuel andtthen con- 2 Q brief stop there they again set ’ sail for South Georgia an island located on the very rim of the Antarctic. REACHED ANTARCTICA The Theron finally tied up llongside the continent of ice, on Four Traffic Cases In Courl In Queen’s County Magistrate's Court, Friday afternoon a resi- ‘dent of Charlottetown was fined ten dollars and costs or ten days by Magistrate Gilbert Gaudet, on in charge of speeding. _ Two accused from Breadal- ‘bane and Rocky Point respective- 'ly. were each fined five dollars and costs or five days on char- zes of operating motor vehicles Wllh defective equipment, lights, etc; A second Breadalbane man W18 a similar charge was giv- 911 a reprimand. COMING EVENTS Dance in Bonshaw w_I_ Ha“ _ _ _ y B 0 d r CHARLOTTETOWN P.E.L has the men, your local merchants have. the materials._Get yuesday Jan Mm to discard the superstition that y I‘ e , I u in touch with both . ’ ' the moon influences the time , t , ' - , b0Annual meeting Murray Har- 05 birth I — James A- Fl1l1e1°t0n: -— . r P b ' - t‘ i _ , . ch..m1f°;uf,:ff;:" 3': Material in MEDICAL MIRROR City Clerk. CHARLOTTETOWN BOARD OF TRADE , 2 p_m_ ’ is based on various scientific ‘ _ . _The annual meeting of Brook- field Church will be held on Tues- ,d3.V Jan. 14 at 2 o’clock. 999111118 Card party at York J Int School, Wednesday night, ‘““‘31‘y 15th at 8.30 pm. Spon- -‘°“ed by York Point w.1. . ‘The annual meeting of Harts- congregation will be held in ll‘°_Church Wednesday, Jan 15, oclock. mslratlialliyn District 1,. o. I... Jeets in Bradalbane Tuesday. an. 14th at 7 ‘ “ tinuing on to Montevideo. After a / that he had been going to sea continuously since he was fifteen, except for three years during World War II. Captured by the Japs, Captain Maro spent three years in_ Japanese concen- tration camps. 0 Babies And The Moon Q. Is it true that more babies are born when the moon is full than at other times? A. No, but this is a popular and world-wide notion. A doctor in Danville, Pennsylvania, recently decided to prove or disprove this ancient belief. Records of almost 10,000 births showed no’ increase in deliveries at the full moon. In fact, births at the Join Your Community Campaign Agoinsl'Seosono| Unemployment edical Mirror - without delay. new moon outnumbered deliver- ies at the full moon by 3 to 2.5 It’s high time, says the doctor,; publications and does not neces- sarily reflect the opinion of all. doctors. The diagnosis and; treatment of disease requires: the skill and knowledge which only a physician can apply by personally attending the patient.. Scnd health questions to SCIENCE EDITORS. P.0. BOX 396 Madison Square Garden New York 10, N.Y. benefit of all. CHARLOTTETOWN J. DAVID STEWART, Mayor of the City-of Charlottetown; To the Citizens of Charlottetown, GREETING: Whereas there is much work to be done on residential and business premises within this City; and skilled and un- skilled workers are now available to do that work promptly and well; and the National Employment Service is con- ducting a campaign to alleviate seasonal unemployment. . ‘Now Know Ye that the Mayor and Council call upon the Citizens of-Charlottetown to ascertain what repairs, remodelling and constru tion are desirable on their re- spective properties and urge them to have the same done This is a case where good citizenship is good business. We can have the work done with the least possible delay and help to maintain a constant rate of employment to the s S the II Purnlx Yes we are living in a new age. Old customs are being left behind. More and more people are accepting the idea that winfer employment is not only possible but economically sound. Don't‘ be handcuffed by tradition. If you intend to renovate, redecorafe or make an extension to your home or business premises. don't waif fill Spring. Material is more readily available now than at any ‘lime of the year. and also the finest type of tradesmen. For more information call NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT OFFICE OF THE UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE COMMISSION. CONFEDERATION BUILDING, I WINTER .1035 CAMPAIGN now UNDERWAY! For Any Advice Or Assistance You May Need . ,. . Call The Above Phone Numbers "Our Friendly. Courteous Stall Will Be Pleased To Assist You In Every Way" the result that during the peak period men and materials LET'S HELP’ OURSELVES Habit is the enemy. We have got into the habit of hav- ing most of our work done during the summer months with - are often not available to finish the work within a reason- able time. Many men are seasonably unemployed in Char- lottetown and vicinity, during every winter. The loss in wages adversely affects every business establishment in the City and the I payment of unemploy- ment service benefits only partly relieves the situation. It is necessary to substitute common sense for habit and distribute the work to be done as evenly as possible throughout the year. This, like the breaking of any bad habit, requires a real effort. The saving of -time and money to the householder_ and businessman; the spread of employment over the whole year for the worker; the intelligent use of all our resources of manpower, material, transportation and storage; can add to the prosperity and well being of all our citizens. Do the job while there are men and materials avail- able. The National Employment Office in Charlottetown