' "' — —. .PA—v \ F— .vgv ‘_'.‘ WI)". .vqy-aw— __ w“ " 2*o$ "N I‘ l i V. E 4 I A FULL-LAWN CONFERENCE ‘ Repirters’ wives and c'mld- lawn of the White House n Chief Executive invited the gen helped fill the seats lined Washington at President John- wives or husbands. as the case 'up Wednesday on the south son's news conference. The might be. and children to at- tend. There were about 600 brats." (AP Wirephotol visitors and “quite a passe] of [ Crump Sees Outlook Good 1 , For Business TEE—*0“ seems: MONTREAL 'CPI — N R. l Crump, chairman and president iof Canadian Pacific Railway ‘Company. said Wednesday the ‘economic climate both in Can- ada and in the rest of the world its stable and forecast a favor- f able environment for CPR's op-‘ 1erations during most of this iyear. Citing good outlooks in such [economic sectors as resources.‘ Iexports. public investment. em-, lployment and consumer liquid- ‘ ity, Mr. Crumo said at the CPR annual meeting: “These factors suggest that consumer expenditure will re-, main buoyant throughout 1964 and that the business environ-. ment should remain favorablei ‘for your company's activities1 lthroughout most of the year." Mr. Crump said that "there are no signs of economic weak- [ ness in Canada or in the inter. national economy as a whole,"£ but he cautioned that “potential linflationary circumstances. ‘ , prevail currently." , .‘LEss TRAFFIC IN 1964 t On CPR's 1964 prospects, Mr . ;Crump warned that the volume. PLANS VISIT T0 CANADA OTTAWA tCP>~-'Illle Duke of Devonshire, Britain's ministeri ‘qucl of the Royal Common, the British Columbia Interna-' wealth Society in Montreal May tional Trade Fair in Vancouver 8, then travel to Ottawa whereltMay 13. he will be the guest of Governor- m‘ "——”— of state for Commonwealth rela- General Vanier at Government? NAMED To CBC POST Lions. will visit Canada May 8-16. House. The duke will visit Vic-i OTTAWA ICPI—Appoinlment He will address the annual ban-l toria May 12 and officially openi of Donald L. Bennett, 42, as‘ming poliCies and SIMPSONS-SEARS ACROSS-CANADA NATIONAL ALLSTA'I‘E (SIZIIHDSJLIN NYLIIN 42-31037?! (BL'ARJNTEE Plan bin-lulu [576 More .‘luea'a Guaranteed In erlln" Better Quality Than Tires Listed B" Manufacturers" ALZSbO 6.70-15 Tillie -Typn Blacluull ALLSTATE GUARBSDIAN SETS TIIE PACE... IN QUALITY—A premium 4-ply nylon lire, built to rigid specifications by Canada's largest tire manufacturer. The safest, quietest running, longest mileage tire we have ever sold. IN SAFETY —A premium extra-wide trend with over 1500 tread sipes. This trend adjusts auto- matically when you brake. accelerate, or hit high speed turns for road-hugging stability. IN MILEAGE—A premium cxtra-dccp tread of the finest rubber compound available is built into the outer edges of the tire. Guaranteed in writing to give you 15% more mileage than the tires you replace regardless of make or quality. ‘é. auv_mou mu "ll OLACIWAAL I “IV my" "5le "MALI ——.7 . ‘ Cam ;_O;r‘ - Al, ,, 9’""a-__l§?§i’fl’£l-3“é_!l-§‘:-i___ffflff._ lw-MLfi-p; 1N GUARANTEE—42 months" guarantee against 31°,” ‘1’ "' °'° A9 *gz—a} 7"" U gig ‘ Eggs; " all road hazards regardless of tread wear with ‘skso’f '6I i ENS 3336 adjustments based on months of service . . . P S 383 : l 3: , 9%}? 3“ {I 3&8, 3232 a further guarantee for the life of the tire against agg- " 3°53}: fig‘ all road hazards (blow-out. cuts. etc.,) after the 3.503 - 637015 "I" no no 33.10 42 months have expired, with adjustments based Ed: I EEEEES ' on tread wear. a? i IMMEDIATE TIRE IN S'I‘ALLATION ARRANGED PRIZES 10 BE Aim mum IN 11 (305115.631 .mrzns. THE FOLLCDWING PRIZES WILL ‘ m; AH’ARIIEID 13‘ runs commas? AREA » ~- 1" PRIZE A 1964 Studebaker 4-Dnor Commander Sedan Equipped “ ith 6-tlylindcr Engine, Automatic Transmission. Allstate. \I liilcu all Tires And Other Studebaker Features. Approx. \ nluc 33000 Every customcr \v ho purchases any Allstate tire between April 2nd and August 31“. 1964 from a Simmons-Scars Catalogue Sales Office. store located in the content are: below becomes a contestant eligible Io win one. of the valuable prizca subject to the V l e ' contest rules. 2nd PRIZE 3rd PRIZE Plus 10 P (Joules! A re. MerChandise Maritime Producer: and Newfoundlou Cash Cash Certificates SEE YOUR SlMPSflNS-SEABS CATAL‘IGUE SALES 0FFICE TED-DAY Low Trade-in Prices On ALLSTATE BATTERIES 9.45 With trade-in. ALLSTATE Rebuilt ENGINES AS S LOW MTHLY. AS Allstate rchuilt engines when Installed In a passenger car carries the same guarantee as a new engine! That's how highly we think of our eng- Gunranteed 30 only Stu No. l, 0 volts, months. With trade-in. Size No. l. 6 volts. Guaranteed 50 months. only...1295 Size No. 28M, 12 volts. Guaranteed 30 months. With "860- files! Cheek the price of pm on], . . . 1345. your model Simmons- sne No. 2F. 6 volts. Guaranteed so months. With tradttdn. Sears- Each rebuilt engine only . . . 14.95. “‘5: Size No. 28M. 12 volts. Guaranteed 50 months. With trade- . New “sums and new In. only . . . 15.95 Pins nu nus-ran: batteries are quality Iii-ranted and 90"" 0 New PM“ rinzs rated . . the s. A. E. ratings are right on that battery "'0" . New hearings included Io you know exactly what you are Rem“! 10' Vol“ mm" . New gaskets Allstate guarantees are valid right across CInndI and the V ‘ ' United States. Trade-in your old exhausted battery today It . "'I’l’m'd “he” Simpson-Scars! 156 KENT STREET —'- PHONE 21251 MAIL ORDER 2125: . ‘ flll'f‘f'lnl‘ of program policy for ‘, equal that Of 1963‘When tile bulk‘ CBC televismn and radio serv-t 0f ices was announced Wednesday. iment 10 RUSSla W35 mOV‘Ed ‘- in his new position—a newly- crealed post—he will be respon- sible for developing program- ‘ standards. ‘ of railway traffic will not likely" iv 5 anada's masswe grain ship-‘ gard to what legislation would be introduced in line with rec-l ommendations of the MacPher-f son royal commission on trans»I portation made it “hazardous to - t In addition. uncertainty in re-l ‘ Dr. Roger Bannister. sec- ond from right, celebrates his ’mn‘dimt . Charlottetown, Thurs. May 7, 1964. 'THE Chris Brasher, left and their four-minute wives at an after-midnight b mile. Clockwise around t a e are Brasher, MIL; EREMBER‘E‘D WITH CHPAGNtE PAGE 13 diseases and Anna Ohataway. (AP Wirephoto via cable from London) flash an alert to the U5. Stra- had been decided to ll Empress of Britain. the olde I OPR’s three empress pas- isenger vessels, and l duce substantial changes in i manning, organization and sell-: ; mg methods ” O r. mon DIVIDENDS ‘ By THE CANADIAN pnnss I dig? Bow Valley Industries Ltd.. been‘ ‘ eight cents, May 29. record May 15. - n Canada Permanent Mortgage'nauo “19 . cents, June 5* : her so ‘ I Ge 31 com- I H . ‘ 65 cents. special common to '"n'P‘fiO cents. (both U.S.l June 10. 14 :record . a . Graftons Ltd., class A 25 cents lawyer Samueul Resnick. Res- live became the first deputy ck, arrested at Toronto Inter- commander of forecast the probable level of I 3.59.4 mile ten years ago ch- p a rt y in London. Chataway Moyra Bannister, Chataway. 1964 net railway earnings." nesday sipping champagne and Brasher paced Bannister Shirley Brasher. Bannister, MR Crump said the Com-f with Chris Chataway and to his feat. world's first under- now a specialist In nerVOUS pany‘s steamship operations in 1 were “unsat‘SIaCtm‘V-n It‘commmn 18 cents. class A 18 1. record May 15. Motors Corp. FACES 31 CHARGES ;came and went_ but RCAF Arr . . ,RCAF in 1924 when it was “ONTO ‘CP ' ‘ Nineteen J Marsnd] Roy Slemon seemed to ‘ formed. will retire from the air. lonal charges of theft. have i S" “11 forever. ' force this summer, . laid against disbarred The 60-year-old Winnipeg na-i MI. Heuyer said m a state. North Ameri- g nal Airport April 1 after a i can Air Defence Commandideputy commander.in.chief of ’P- common 50 cents- “W 2-l year's absence from Toronto in (NORAD) when the 200300-1118!!! NORAD, Air Marshal Slemon record June 15- :Israel, now faces 31 charges in- Canada-US. force was estab- has Shown leadership, judgment Canadian Tire Corp. Ltd., volving $341,988_ ished in the late summer of and ability of the highest order ' For the Smartest Ha’ts Adella’s Millinery DIDN 'r PANI ; \l he VEI‘ made it. appear at ‘headq uarters ‘Springs. Colo. that a floc fbeen fired at North America. He was in tile NORAD "hot lthose around him, pale and ‘shaken. clamored for him to e . “In his responsible position of land his dedication to service .and country is an example for in ,3“ "Canadian 59m“ WSW-glint the time during the last C Slemo ; r Marshal Slemon probably; him to he showed greater leader-2 *ship and judgment than he did, room of his house. one in his lch- 5. 1960. when radar infor- 3 car, another in any aircraft ho ‘mation from Thule. Greenland.’ travels in. In seven years, he NORAD has hardly ever been out of at Colorado, touch with his office." 0.; He formed the RCAF's No. I ; in le r continental missiles had! bomber group in 1942 in Britain tegic Air Command, he quietly and quickly checked out the in- formation al false. The Thule radar,then fairly new, was pick- ' up echoes of its own Illa 11315 from the moon. Air Marshal C. Dunlap. 56. chief .— fl on R. of the air I I . . — . 0» staff, will succeed Air Marsh | “In the first quarter 0‘ this when]; Eliaidllllifillcgdmnion 30 , Slemon at Colorado Springs. ,Year. there was an improve- cents June 10 record MW 15, Air Marshal Dunlap won’t be inLem in earniinllz): of$440,000.| scy'mes and' Co, Ltd,, ‘l-om. replaced hbecause ftfhe 111103: of ‘T e situation 5 ing carefully — . . . . . , __ . . chief of t e air sta wi 'sap— watched. and more changes organs: 12; ‘ems' lune 1' ’ewld By DAVE McINTOSH _ 19.14. He has occutpied tips posl- pear this summer with integra, Ea fundamental nature may be shop and Save (1957) Ltd, OTTAWA lop) _ canad-‘an'uoil etVer Since oug seven Lion of the armed forces’ com- lmquu'ed m {mum}, ieight cents plus 41': cents extra.lgOV'ernments changed, the cold negiérxznigéisgeerarfieu er am mand structure” Air Marshal ‘ em“, 29, record ]\/Iav 14. war thawe or me more 3’ . Dunlap Is a natlve of Sydney I i » . . nounce ednesday that Air d 36 y 'mgld' new weapons syStenls Marshal Slemon, who joined the Mlnes' N's" an hasl years experience in the air force. IN ‘HOT SEAT’ Though Canada has provided only a small proportion of NORAD's jet interceptor strength—some five per cent- Slemon’s position as deputy commander was never in doubt politically or militarily. Be- cause the American comman- der has to be away a good deal 'of the time, Slemon has been the “hot seat" more than , seven years. n said his Job required a slave to the tele4 phone. He has a phone in each sand was deputy commander of ;’ the RCAF overseas in l seat" at the time and whilei few months of the Second World . War. He served as ‘ chief of air ‘ staff from 1953 to 1957. Rev. T.H.B. Somers of Char- give Mother a Gift Certificate from dent of the Prince Edward 15- land district of the Canadian lBtble Society at the annual meeting here this week. The report of the nominating icommittee was presented by Rev. Donald Nicholson of Bel‘ Charlottetown p... In it I gave these details: i i Grafton Street t FREE Thursday - Friday Saturday EVERY (GAME PAID WE MATCH WITH FREE GAME GRAND OPENING Patron: Hon. Thane A. Camp- MINIATURE GOLF S'Side Civic Stadium Thurs. May 7th -- 7 p. m. PRIZES: First Night Low Scores . . . LADIES' & MEN'S MINIATURE GOLF SETS WEEKLY SCHEDULE OPEN DAILY 2 P.M. to II P.M. SATURDAYS and HOLIDAYS 9 AM. to II P.M. PRICES PER 18 HOLES . . STUDENTS—25c .. STUDENTS—15c ADULTS—40c SATURDAY 9 am. to I p.m. . . . . .. . CANTEEN SERVICE . BIGGEST & BEST MILK SHAKES 8: SUNDAES 1 lottetown was re-elected presi- l Side- ? Charlottetown, I \ Bible Society Elec’rs Officers ,betl, Chief Justice, Summer- ' Honorary president: Rev. E. C. Evans, Charlottetown. ‘ President: Rev. T.H.B. Som~ I crs, Charlottetown. Vice-presidents: Rev. 1". Loull I Elias. Charlottetown, Rev. Ray- ’mond L. Gillis, Clyde River. , Rev. Malcolm F. Harlow. Chin'- lottetown. Rev. C. R. W Summerside. Secretary: Ralph J. Rupert, Charlottetown. Honorary treasurer: A r in U G. Putnam, Charlottetown. Treasurer: Donald A. Woman cott, Charlottetown. Executive committee: The O!- ficers of the District and tho following: Rev. D. E. Adams, Souris, H. B. Armstrong, Char- J. G. E. Ball lottetown, Rev. , S. N. MacKay. Charlottetown, G. L. Bennett, Charlottetown, Charlottetown, Albany, Rev. K. W. R. on. Cape Traverse, Rev. D. . Campbell. B.A.. Charlottetown, Vernon Craig. Bedeque, ev. B. C. Lowery, Montague, Rev. E. L. Estabrooks, s. T. Green, Charlottetown. \. .l. Haslam. Charlottetown, Rev. T.W. Howard, North River, Rev. D. L, Howlett. Summerside, V. S, Ling. Charlottetown, E. S. MacEachern. Summerside. Eric MacMurdo. Kensington, Hebe: MacPhail. Cornwall. Clayton .\lill. Kensington. Rev. Maxwell Nesbltt, O'Lcary. Rev. Donald Nicholson. Belfast. W. H. Phil- lips. Charlottetown, Rev. A. E. Piercey. Milton, Rev. Peter D. Ruddell. Hunter River, Rev. C. K. Benn, Charlottetown, M... ior R. H. Walker, Charlottetown town, C. R. Leland. Alberto E. H. Worth. Charlottetown. Representatives to general board: ev. TH. . r3, Ralph .l Rupert. Alternates: Rev. .l.G.E. Ball. Heber Mae- Phail. Auditors: Ralph R. can, Charlottetown. Messrs. I. R. Donne and Co, Chum. , District secretary: To In '0 1‘ pointed " Bible House manager: luv. 3 t .l. Humphrey. (ham. l Nominating comma: In. l Donald Nicholson, M I. - ti IEacherI. I. H. Burton. a“ , ,l man. ?|. I