we age ~ ee ee Oa eels “Mary Burke, a freshman at the” University of Ottawa, is seen ‘rolling a cigarette with ra FRESHMEN FROLICS AT OTTAWA her nose along the pavement om the Capital's downtown mall. She is one of about 3,000 TOURIST REACTION o7Crrw]SSaee——— 1) neat henibbdiai —Lincaeele 12 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri.. Sept. 17, 1965. Major Breakthrough Is Due |For CNR Toilets In Cabs By BEN WARD | the CNR will eventually use OTTAWA ‘(CP)—Ever since | the new toilet. or some adap the first Canadian railroad be- | tion of it, in new passenger gan operations 130 years ago | equipment. | wain erews have complained President Dopald Gordon about the lack of toilet facili- | has for years been completely ties in cabs and cabooses. | dissatisfied with toilet equip The situation gave rise toa ment on passenger trains. legend of jokes and tall tales Bus and airline firms would about the staying power of also like to modernize their railroaders. At various times facilities. the railroads experimented All this may spell the doom with toilet ideas but gave | of one of the best-known pub- them up because of technical | problems and costs. Now major breakthrough, in the problem has been re- ported by the . publicly-owned CNR which plans to begin in- stalling electric toilets and air- operated water coolers on its diesel locomotives, early in 1966. ~ In a recent letter to the Brotherhood of Locomotive j (Ind.) CNR . Vice- A. Johnstone lic signs in the transportation business, the one. that cautions against flushing while the train is in the station Launched By Rail Groups said the railway will spend | OTTAWA (CP\—The Brother $1,500,000 on the program. It | hood of Locomotive Engineers fulfills a pledge the CNR | (ind.) said Wednesday night it made to the union in negotia- | jy 7 re opening a drive to sign fire- tions at Winnipeg 16 months men on the CPR and CNR and freshmen from Ottawa's two umversities participating in an- nual freshman-week frolics. Strikes, Poor Accommodation Worse Than Demonstrations — By CLAUDE HENAULT MONTREAL (CP)—A _ recent eurvey by the Montreal tourist bureau shows that the tourist is not much frightened by bombs and demonstrations but can be put to flight by below- standard accommodation A spokesman for the bureau said that, while ‘‘incidents such @s the Victoria Day hombings and demonstrations and the dynamiting of the United States consulate in Montreal don't help, they have not caused any significant drop in tourism." “However, the recent gaso- line strike in the province may have bad effects as many. tour- tsts were trapped -during their vacations and others may have stayed away to avoid inconven- ience."’ Incidents such as the gasoline strike by retailers here last July can have~a-bad effect be- cause the returned tourist tells his story to others back home, he. said. Bureav director Lucien Berg- éron said the survey was made following ‘‘the publication of rumors which claimed that the Montreal hotel industry this year was siffering a. serious drop in the tourist trade." SURVEY COVERS JULY The survey covered the month of July and almost all of Mont- real Island's major motels and hotels co-operated in it. The inquiry showed that the aggregate room occupancy for July in 1965 was 72.8 per cent of the possible maximum as against 73.8 per cent: for July~ Mr Bergeron said that at Hirst glancé this “would “seem: to” indicate a one-per-cent drop in the number of visitors but added that this was not so as there were 859 additional hotel fooms in the city in 1965. As this increase of 859 rooms represents more than 10 per cent of the total number of tooms covered in the survey, Mr. Bergeron said it is evident that there was.no drop in tour- tsm during the month. However, the survey indicated there was a trend toward the new and more modern estab- lishments. These operated at an eccupancy rate of 78.86 per eent. A Certain hotels suffered greater drops in occupaney than others. The percentage which in 1964 had an occupancy level of less than 6 per cent was 9.2 per cent, but this inereased to 11.8 per cent the following year. This indicated that certain motels and hotels were picking up increasingly greater shares lof the business. GIVES REASONS Mr. Bergeron said the survey gave Various reasons why some establishments felt greeter drops in room occupafcy than the average, “The new_roadsideestablish- ment appeals to the passerby without reservations and there is a North American trend to- ward jJeaving family vehicles outside of downtown traffic in all big ‘cities. “Thus, old hotels which have failed to modernize for decades find they are being avoided by the summer trade.” In the case of Montreal, the report said, ‘‘some_ establish- ments are currently being ren- ovated while others have been affected by changes in provin- cial highway patterns or route modifications due to auto routes and expressways."’ A bureau spokesman said these trends could lead to ‘‘hard times for the centre of the city.” The report concluded that 1965 would have been a record tour-| ist-year for the city if high prices, difficult” access, out- moded accommodation and, to some extent; a gasoline strike in_July__and ‘regrettable _inci- dents” had not interfreed. The report _also-.said_ that the number of tourists who regis- tered at the city’s information centre was double that. of the previdus year during the same month. This indicated that. though possibly twice as many tourists passed through the city, most of them did not: stay. U.S. Global Spy Operations Return To Limelight Again- By ARCH MacKENZIE_ WASHINGTON (CP) — The global spy operations of the United States~ Central Intelli- gence Agency are back in the limelight again, which means bad news for the CIA. ' Unlike: the fictional James Bond, who invariably gets his. @ US. effort to buy his $20,- 000 home for $50,000 and give | him a Royal tour if he'd leave the country ISSUES DENIAL | The U.S -embassy. just be- fore Wessin was deported to | smooth peace — prospects—via’ an_American plane —_denied- --man.-andhis.-women. too, --thé......the=general’s-version-and--said CIA * operation” which> surfaces Its successes remain secret. Prime , Minister Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore drew a comparison recently in de scribing a CIA effort to bribe him with $3,000,000 in 1960 ‘to keep quf€t about a failure. ‘Just like James Bond. only not so good,”’ said’ Lee. He said the abortive at- tempt to infiltrate the local in-. telligence #y stem featured some female dalliance. Now, Gen. Elias Wessin y Wessin, military strong man whose intrasigence has threatened the fragile peace in the Dominican Republic, ier ” “he had first raised “the ° topie ~is..inwariably...a_bungled ane... of -seHing-his-- house ==! The- CIA certainly has fte staunch supporters but its lot in public at least has not been a particularly happy one. Op- erating in such secrecy that’ not even Congress has any broad idea how it spends its | $1,000,000,000 arinual budget, the CIA keeps bumping into calls for a tighter rein on the way it works. The _U.S.state department first denied the Singapore prime minister's ‘story. Then it had to. retract in the face of an official letter of apology he produced. “No other branch of gov- | says the CIA was involved in ernment enjoys the high-rid- | TRIP TO THE SEA a reas A large clay image of the Hindu God Gonapati is car- ried into the Arabian Sea near Bombay. India hy worshino- > ae adh — 2O- ers. Custom prescribes that ten days and then immersed new images“of the God of Auv- spiciousness be made each in the sea. (AP Wireplioto) by vear, worshipped for about’ cable from London) | ago. +—-——-SPECIAL SPEAKERS The railway has also ad- | - en at “lee : comotive Firemen and Engine- vised the Brotherhood of Rail- | men (CLC) as their bargaining sot Trainmen (CLC) about | agent. the design of a new caboose | A month ago the firemen’s.un- which includes toilet equip- | ion filed an application with the ment..andcooled-drinking- wa-";}Canada Labor Relations Board ter among its features. for certification as the bargain- NINE-YEAR JOB jing agent for CNR engineers, Locomotives will start get- | Bow represented by the engi- ting the new equipment late | neers’ union. “4 this winter eas they are sent It amounts to a fight to the to .shops for general repair (finish between the Canadian work. The CNR hopes to pro- | sections of the two international ceed with the job at the rate unions. Both have indicated pri- of 250 toilets and 400 coolers | vately that they would follow up each year. At this rate it will |a successful opening bid on the take about nine years to put CNR with a move on all Cana- toilets in the railway’s entire {dian railways. diesel fleet. | The issue may not be resolved It is the first’ major railway |for six months or more. in North America to success) [MADE DECISION fully tackle the toilet prob | lem. But it took almost a year of research and testing before the CNR's engineers. hit on a ‘Unit that beats the mainten- ance and sanitation problems involved. The toilet uses some of the locomotive’s ample electric power to incinerate the (for Canadian railways want the wastes, eliminating disposal | BLE to represent them,’’ he worries. Details of its opera- | said. ‘tion and location in the diesel | Mr. Walter charged that the cab have not yet been re-. firemen’s union launched its vealed. ; Some sources here predict ;Men was made at a conference ;of the union's general chair- men. : | that \“in an. effort to stay in bust- — mess." The firemen's ing irresponsibility of CIA," |8tadually disappearing and will observes Washington column. vanish entirely in the years ist Richard Starnes. ahead. - The New York Times. edi- The engineers’ union claims a torially, says. it’ is vital that |Camadian membership of 8,811, Washington “establish the (the firemen’s 7,024. Both figures kind of firm supervision of the | include Tetired _members who CIA that can prevent such retain their cards. blunders in the future.” | A number of reports of past NURSES SEEK CHARTER failures have been resurrected | CALGARY .‘CP)—The Cana. by various publications. jdian Council of Psychiatric : The CIA controlled the ,U-2 spy plane dosned in Russia in 1960, breaking up the Paris summit conference with Rus- sia. The abortive Bay of. Pigs invasion of Cuba, which | proved to be the late Presi- dent Kennedy’s most embar- rassing episode, was a CIA job. |Nurses Association of Canada {In a statement issued Saturday | following its convention, “a cur- | riculum will be drawn-up-to-as- | inces”’ icmsaonall i ncaianyetp teas amenenattaaricepsnipnscscencir OPEN 8AM. to 5 P.M. On Saturdays ~ Prince County | LIBERAL NOMINATION CONVENTION Sept. 20th - 8.30 p.m. CIVIC AUDITORIUM _ Summerside: ‘Each poll is requested to have 5 delegates in attendafice with suitable EVERYONE WELCOME Union Fight | J. F. Walter, national legisla- | jtive representative of the engi-| |meers, said the decision to seek) ithe certification rights- for fire- | The chairmen had reported | “many firemen working | | August raid on the engineers | job is| ise says-dt—will seek_a_na- | | tional charter as the Psychiatric | sist in the education and rais- | jing of standards for psychiatric | jmurses in the six eastern prov- | é 2 stent manage po EATON S Outstanding Savings Coat and Pants _é MEN'S Made to Measure SUITS ‘All wool English fabrics, selected from our top ranges, latest fall shades and patterns. There is an excellent selection of fancy worsteds, silk and worsteds, and luxurious venetian. In colour, there. are blues, browns, greys, char- ‘coals and olives. All suits are backed by Eaton's factory or Money Refunded 79° Vet. . y 7 es Coat & 2 Pants “ 105.00 Pantsonly . guarantee EATON'S September Sale OF Ends Saturday - September 18th — ___ THESE SALE ITEMS. 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