T5-16 SALE DATES .lA . ,,_,. Extra Special ROBIN HOOD TRADITIONAL cnoc. PECAN - cuoc. - ORANGE Cake Mix Per Package GIANT SIZE DETERGENT A. B. C. '43 .. 0 JANUARY see. New, us we bulenee our FLLIFFO Shortening O A SAVINGS SEND-OFF TO A BRAND-NEW YEAR! We bought too much, lost to everyone had plenty of their favorite fer the Holiday lselence your budget. In every values galore. Bring ‘the finally and let them help WI 0.1!’! instills has at b-Ides rnelreeune LIQUID JAVEX Choice Government Inspected-Blade or Chuck llllAST CKEN WINGS 3 #5? 99° E 3 Ls. 54 oz. - l rm 0 m. l KING COLE HY-GRADE CRISP FIRM HEADS OF ‘ TOMATOE 45° MEXICAN—l"ULL OF JUICE lettuce 2-~39‘ Oranges5 ,.— 29° SCHWARTZ PEANUT HEINZ TOM-410 Butter I. B. J. 16 OZ. 43" Ketchup 2 g ” LLIS BROS. @@U ‘T o.S'AVE*/140a?E I III 5 .. 47- TEA SAVE-EASY INSTANT IIEIN Z BABY FOOD CIHIISTIES PREMIUM SODAS NABISCO SIIREDD WHEAT SILVER SEAL FANCY BARBADOS MOLASSES soopornr KLEENEX CREST TOOTH PASTE WHITE RAIN’ CLEAR OR LOTION SHAMPOO 2 K Ll. PKG. I O2. JAR 5 OZ. TINS FOR 1 LB. PKG. 2 18 OZ. PKG5. 55¢ 75¢ $l. 33¢ 67¢ 37¢ 27¢ Lane: 33¢ 81‘ OZ. BTLS. 99¢ @@ BRING THE FAMILY To HELP caaav YOUR are ones or saacams iioAsr ROAST LEAN. FRESH GROUND HAMBURG PLATE BRISKET GREEN GABLES BACON ATLANTIC SALMON SUPERIOR SAUSAGES 37 LB. r-' P5 LB. Sliced Lll. Ll). Piece LB. 59¢ 43¢ 49¢ 27¢ 59¢ 75: 69c 53¢ WI’/MI/YW \ KOLD PAK Strawberries VALLEY FARM French Fries 15 OZ. LBS. FOR 2 DRAGON BRAND CHINESE Egg Rolls ZERO PAR Peas PER PKG. 2 12 OZ. . PKGS. L\ ‘t\\\\ ‘.5 R\l \RGS 39¢ 47¢ 39¢ 39¢ Sherwood §.\\° MOPE-J3’/V’64 !—ne Guardian. Cherlottetowll. Thin-s. less. 16. 1004. I By DAVE MelNT05 . OTTAWA evening damps of East Anglia and Yorkshire they rose. un- ‘gainly as ba-ts, bound for Ben'- n or Hamburg or Munich. l Aboard were “blockbuster," .“cookie," “tall boy" or "grand .slam" and seven frightened men who wouid deliver the prey to orange flak, spit- ting fighters or other terrors of §those flaming nights over West- lern Europe. The Lancaster bomber, which dropped 608.61 tons of bombs d War—one RCAF .‘CF-104 nuclear jet bomber now lC0ll'ld accomplish the same de- struction 3O minutes-—is H- n RCAF headquarters h a s an- nounced that its last three Lancasters will be taken out of service April 1 and turned over to Crown assets corpora- tion for disposal. ONLY THREE LEFT The final trio has been serv- ing with 408 Photo Reconnais- sance Squadron at Rockciiffe station here. They are more 1 than 18 years old though the log ‘ books. summarized a number of years ago. don't in d l c ate whether they were ever on a wartime bombing operation. . Lancasters were taken off santi-submarine duties 1959 ;and off search and rescue op- erations last year. They have been flown by 408 Squadron for 3 14 years. (CP)—Out of the Wtu Last Of lancasters Will Retire l e r replacement for the Lancaster in the squad- ron is even older-—the Dakota. The Lancaster was developed by A.V. Roe Aircraft Company of England almost as a fluke. AVRO had produced the twin- engine Manchester, which turned out a flop. So the cons- pany added two engines and rned it into the Lancaster. toter of the world's biggest bomb——22.000 pounds—-until the Americans carried the first atomic bomb to Hiroshima in 94 All told. 7.366 Lancssters were built, 430 of them in Canada. ;At its peak strength, Royal Air Force bomber command, includ- ing No. 8 RCAF‘ group, had 42 squadrons of them. USED MANY WAY The Lane was used in many different roles: Saturation raids ‘such as the ones which caused Ithe fire storms in Hamburg: llow- and high-level precision at- ltacks, such as the 1943 breach- Dams and the 1944 sinking of lthe battleship Tirpitz. l The Lane first went opera- ltlonal on the night of March 3. 1942. and a few weeks later. on April 17, Nos. 44 and 97 squad- jrons, RAF, made a daylight ;raid on the diesel engine fac- tory at Augsburg. The last Lanc raids were imade April 25. 1945: A daylight Jattack on Hitler’s mountain re- gtreat at Berchtesgaden and A ‘night attack against oil refiner- lies at Va-lio, Norway. \ month OTTAWA (CF) Negotia- tios with the United States on the Columbia River power and ‘flood control deal are ail over th except for e formal signing, ,Prime Minister Pearson has iannnunced. He said he hopes the signing can be done Jan. 22 when he ‘visits President Johnson in lwashinaton. That would be three years and five days after the original treaty received the signatures of then-Prime Minis- ‘ Diefenbaker and outgoing § President Eisenhower. , Additions and clarifications affecting that treaty have ‘worked out since la .first in two Ottawa agreements .wit.h British Coiumbia and then with US. negotiators. arrangement for the U.S. to buy a big block of power credited 000,000 in advance. also far as The important change is an ‘ to BC, paying more than $400; 1 This would finance three Co- Columbia River Negotiations Said All Over Except Signing lumbia - COilLI‘filllnE storage dams in BC. costing at least l$380,000,000 and probably more. 1 Such an arrangement is in line with csires of Pre- mier Bennett of 13.0 who broke with the iormcr (‘onservative federa‘. government in 1961 be- fore the ink was dry on the treaty — although a provincial representative had ininalled the draft accepted at that time by both the Canadian and L'.S. gov- ernmens. Mr. Pearson told a press con- ference Tuesday that "all the ‘formalities have been cieared we are concerned and, in fact, so far as British Columbia is concerned." Under the federal-B.C. agree- ment, each government has cer- . t-ain responsibilities. B.C. gets the power-sale money and is re- sponsible for the nine-year dam lcouid begin this year it parlia- lmentary approvfi eoanee soon enough. By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CF) — The govern- ment has been told that unem- ployment in February — gener- ally the worst month in the year —- wil’. likely be lower than ‘in any other February since ‘ 1957. reliable sources said here. This bright. outook for the unemployment situation. contin- uing a trend that began some months ago, is reported to have been made in a confidential forecast prepared by govern- ment economists. it says unemployment. next. may be around 510,000. This would be 35,000 lower than inst February and 209.000 under employment in February, 1961. the forecast. proves true. sources say. it could mean a seasonally adjusted unemploy- ment rate of 51 per cent in February. This \vould put February un- employment at the same level as in November. when the sea- sonally adjusted rate of 5.1 per cent continued a downward trend from its mid - summer hisrh point. For Action To A By STEWART Macl.EOD l OTTAWA I(‘P) — From all. sides. the royal commission on - taxation heard that something has to be done about education. The Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities said c i v i c governments. almost wholiy dependent on property Itaxes. can't hope to meet soaring costs of education The ranadian Teachers‘ Federation said teachers need help to im- prove their qualifications. The Wanadian Union Students ‘said help is needed by the stu- dents The entire field of education .was well travelled by the com- lmission during the day. I The delegation from the Fed- ;»ration of Mayors and Munici- jnalihes was headed by Execu- 1-? =3‘ 0 Dawson. .\‘lount Royai. Que: Armand Turpin. Hull. Que. and Angus Campbell of Pembroke. Vlooney said there is general {agreement across Can- ad that education should not government asked to iift the the shoulders of municipalities in that province. SAFE LIMIT REACHED A brief from the federation ‘said that Canadian municipal- ities must have more money, the post-war winter peak of un- ; Feb. Employment Outlook 1 Expected Improved This Year I This unemployment rate is- -the number of unemployed ex- pressed as a percentage of the labor force. then adjusted to {compensate for seasonal fac- itors. Since June, this yardstick ‘ has shown a steady decilne from six per cent. LABOR FORCE UP Meanwhile. the labor force z(‘O|lllL for December is to be i made public today. It will prob- ' ably show an increase in unem- lployment from November but a |decline from the previous De- cember total. In the latest forecast for mid- lwinter unemployment. the gov- ernment was told that employ- ment is rising on a year-to-year basis and should he better in ,Febl~uary than originally ex- l pr-ctcd i The estimate is for some 6.- 140.000 workers to he on the job lnext month. compared with 5.- } 951.000 last F‘ebruar.V l The growth in employment is .i expected to outpace the expan- sion in the labor force which L will llkelly show a lump 0f be‘ tween 150.000 to 170.000 over the .year. l Tax Commission Hears Pleas id Education or fewer responsibilities. are to discharge their Some had reached the “safe limit of their borrowing capac- ity" and vast programs of re- ldevelopment were still be ‘carried out. ‘ The teachers’ federation dete- ‘ggation, headed by secretary- ltreasurer Gerald Nation. at‘- lgued that teachers are twins discriminated ngalnst—for tax "purposes-—when compared with isclfcmployed professionals. If lcanada is to be assured of a sufficient supply of \-'cll-quall- -fled teachers. steps shouid be ;taken to give them encounte- ‘ment under the Tax Act. , The Canadian Union of Stu- 'dents—previously known as the National Federation of Cana- ‘ ' University Students—sin- -gled out the student and his parents as those who need the imost help. if they ‘es ; Among the recommenrialionsn iadvanced _ six--member ‘delegation wac that parents or guardians be alimw-d to claim as tax deduction: iviltmn ‘res paid on behalf of a student. ‘Now. only the strident can .claim them. Under the present ment arrange- tion as a reduction ents should be allowed construction p r o 3 r a m which V said CUS President l‘|a- .