-Maxims n olHa Mere Man IH.Qil0lOXlV&h0pO. 'i'2'F.i.Gsa a I Elie liluur YHI PIC PLI'. PAPII f. IAD IV IVIIVIO A CHARLUFTETOWN. CANADA, TUESDAY. MAY 31, 195 liloiicion. N.B.: Mayor Gladys Porter of Kentvllle, N.S., Joseph's Hospital, Saint John, N.B.; Lt. Col. Leo F. Mac Donald. and Mr. N. D. MacLean Charlottetown ltehubdifofion of Mcirshlends OTTAWA (CP)-Federal grants for rcliabiliiatlon of marshlands in the Maritime provinces have Imnuuled to 37,402,252 since March ill. 1949. A return tabled Monday in the Commons for J. R. Kirk (L-An- lizonvsh-Giiysboroughl said Nova Smile received 34.002.7lI.'l. New Briiiisiuick 33,461,059 and Prince Efilinffl Island 529.410. No grants sci-o mode to Newfoundland. The grants are paid to the pro- vincial governments under the Maritime Marshlands Rehabilita- Elnn Act. C oming 'Events Hal. "Dance. Fortune Tuesday night 'rDaitce. Kory Hall. Georgetown. Vim:-rsday. June 1st. 'ihe: Bedeque Players in Win- Ilnr Road hall June 2. "lioauisr Dance at Gordon Loriiie i-very Friday night. "Dilute in St. Andrew's Hall. Ml Slrwart. every Wednesday. "R:-giilar Dances. Qapaud Rink 1llrrlnrsda3' nights. Starting June every .' llrtluiar Dance. Crapaud Rink Zlxlglisdny lll!lIt.- Burns Orch "llnnca Lorna Tuesday. May all ehesirs. Valley Hall. Websters Or- "twddlcrs Concert. Mt. Stewart Nciirrial Hali.- cancelled until later date. K "llvscrie .luly iith for Picnic. lmviiariilnle Conception Parish. Iellingtnn, "lion-I-r Dam-r. Stanley Bridge '”'V Tllfsflay. Rollie McKenzie's Orchestra. B"llilllF0 postponed. St. Peters I.l' Holy Name Hall until follow- ing Tuesday. "Rcnefil dance for Orwell fire "films. Millviaw Hall. Wadnas. do-. June lat. "Reserve Wednesday sveiilag. 33!: it for xlnkora lay in Him- River lllll. Alllp OI 0.W.Ia. ."(.'urnivall Pl are resent "Th! lash Mllilonaira' in last as Hall. "miny. June tid. Dance after. c”""'lI Opening Traveler's Rast ””'""'.V. Club. Thursday. Dancing '”ll'9 Dovleis Jamboree Band. 'il7""i9 to the opening of Sea lllin at Victoria. Wednesday. hm ll. Fresh lobster served 'l;N0llco-Th! lunch room at "-1011 s General store, Vernon " l' "W open for business. fmh lobsters served. "limes csnu... llall w.a. VIabatar's no on 1- .-2,-; "Clllns Dopsstsiicst. "3Hadaib'a 'a-Fred Ic. Qfggggfii-a:lb'I'i'mw oou'o'ut ). M M mum; F':l:dIy. June 8rd. gjgn llmmgwma lose I- ? lll V '”'g- June 8. Ali: entries ll n Toala. lloaabaw. "Cllmmancing June lat we will do" "' WWIMW afternoons notice. D. R. Cun- .'.,i:fl- 3- J. Macnoisgall. Ver- - W" Vflrllwall Players present of?" i"v- Mini... a" is Ban- ..."".:' M--It - love 'W'om2fi?"ll:t.itute. aw. tau. M :'.::::.i:Zl'..':"'--"'.." "W .IQ b. k . VI ,, .. ....... .3"i:..... CU”; ml . lviembers Of 1.. lp.II. 1" or the second time in as many months, Mayor J. D. Stewart will have the honour of welcoming one of Canada a woman Mayors when he brings greetings to the nth an- nual meeting of the Maritime Hoa- pltal Association convening for the next four days in this City. Meet- ing concurrently with the Hospital Association will be the Maritime Hospital Aids Associatlon and the Maritime Hospital Exhibitors As- sociation. - Her Worship Mrs. Gladys Porter of Kentville. N.S.. secretary of the M.H.A.. although sha arrivedln Charlottetown yesterday minus her baggage through an error in ship- ment. was in good humour when 550 Ill-Glldvd in executive meeting at Prince of Wales College last night. She is looking on the bright si e. hoping that the luggage will reach her by the first plane today. Mrs. Porter is following in the footsteps of Mayorchsriotte Whit- ton who honoured this city with a Centennial visit last month. A heavy schedule is ahead of the delegates until the convention breaks up at noon Friday. After the official elcome today. there will be an hour for visiting the hospital exhibits which includes everything in surgical and hospital equipment as wel as hospital sup- .Marilime Hospital Association Executive A smut? from the executive of the Maritime Hos ital A i ' - .- fourday convention which opens in Charlottetown gt Pri ncsemoifLifl1:l?esag:ll:.g2 talflsuiifgriilieit 1135: tdlughft pm" no . around the table they are: Mrs. B. L. Moran. president of the Maritime Hos ital Aids Ag. iat' ng c'l.)"i me left 13.: Dr. J. A. MacDougail, chairman of the board of the Maritime Hospital lServi'oes astciqcii ms ' a ham N- B.: Mayor W. D. Morton of Windsor, N.S.; Dr. E. Wilson. st. John's. Nfld: Mr R S SkeetCl;rg?den:mcEfJ1e1h1PI'.F' l ' ' ' t . . ., secretary of M.H.A; Sister Veronica. administrator of St. Heavy Schedule Ahead For Hospital Ass'n Conference ure. the balance of the morning and until -1.30 in the afternoon. A pleas- ant interlude will be enjoyed by the delegates when at 5.00 p.m. they will be guests of tin genlor and Junior Ladiea' Aids of the Prince Edward Island and Char- lottetown Hospitals. Outstanding spealterg featured at the various session. including Dr. Gordon E. Wride. principal medical officer. Nation- al Healtb Grants Ottawa and Dr. Douglas Plercy. tfltecutive director, Canadian Hospital Association, Toronto. The president of the Mar- itime Hospital Association. Mr. R. W. Skeat of Monclon will preside ll all general meetings. The Maritime Hospital Aids As- sociation will begin sessions this afternoon at 2.20 when they meet in the P.W.C. Library under the chairmanship of the president. Mrs: B. L Moran. Chaiham. N.B. Their meetings will conclude to- morrow afternoon. will be AIR PIONEER DIES WASHINGTON (AP) - Edward L. ”5wansee' Taylor. 57-year-old air pioneer and aviation writer. died here Sunda night after a long illness. A bai oonist during the First World War. he was for some Years a barnstorming airplane plies. Sectional meetings will feat- )! HOWARD WRITTEN LONDON (Reuters) - Thousands of worried holidaymakers w a r a stranded far from their homes MOMHV llilhl by the two-day. rail strike which threatens to dislocate industry today when the country raturna to work. Tl" Ilflke .on the state-owned lines in Britain's first country-wide rill stoppage sinca ms. Combined with a damagln dock strike in six motor ports. has lungad the country into the worst abor tlaup in a generation. The Ilfllln. b 70.000 locomotive engineers and f man. caused Bi-t. tons who want to saaslda resorts for the long weekend to an around is search of niakasbl transport. wars ros sun Many. with luggilge around their "Unloading car Quaiiar and Ful-0-Pep cattle. poultry and hog feeds at Oharlottetown Wednes- day. Speclal prices at car. Lsnk Bros.. phone 7570. "All arrears of tastes due Byrnaa by June 7th. The names of all da- faultiiig ratepayers will be pul- :'lal::d in the local press after that a . 1 ' "The Annual District Conv tioa of,North Shore Queens W. at csvaoatsa. June and. Afternoon Lshaiviaw . tea I . in mama proarsin. mfiaiihpitsll. ”Dss't Inlas Annual harms: . praaan ton It. 's llall. sourls. i"'&..'3""”-7 Road School District must be paid lain pilot and wing walker. Thousands Of. British Holidayers Stranded By Country-Wide Rail Strike feel. stood helplessly in the silent railroad stations hoping for news that the strike had ended. or that a spare train might be running. Many pleaded with private mn- torlsts to save a place for them on the homeward journey Monday night. The Whitsun holiday weekend has blunted the first impact of the stoppage. which the locomotive union called at midnight Saturday to support their demand for hi her pay differentials between "sklled" and "unskilled" rail workers. Operating the handful of trains still running are members of the National Union of Railwaymen. who are not on strike. But only a small portion of tha NUR men are an inccrs and firemen. or today. when moon persons normally would commute by rail to London. the railways said only 80 of 'ihe 500 needed trains would be available. The strike already as hit the tourist industry. Travl agencies in Edinburgh. Scotland. wera ax- pariancing ”pandamonium" trying to readjust travel arrangements for Americans and other ovai-seas visitors. Others were leaving Bri- as fast as pouible. WILL HOLD OUT The union on strlka says it is capable of hol nl out for three months. in the f ea of warnings by Prints Minister Eden that the strfle can cause widespread un- employment and endings: Bri- talsn economy. .1'ha' emergency committee of cabinet ministers. who are argania- ing communications and Ismae- ncy supplies of coal and basic coda; were to meat lata sfnd:y. Arno ks were 11. In. I. 1-. cases. tlazillfahira Dairying --no touowtss Iaular will be :-pi: groin Fac- ottvsr ssslaolin An: draws. c A. . Robert V4"! Altlly Newport. would be made a cabinet meet- ing in the next hours. the news- ps says. was no encouraging da- valopment Mo h the dam strike 1!. dealers. . has hits! on more than Ill. vuaala is at their parts. ran! from an ties to lag peoaaad fa. ".:..l'-'..”."""""' Bat-ter's Film Lab. China Plans To Release Four U. S. Airmen TOKYO (AP) - Plans to release four U.8. airmen. probably in Hoiig Kong later today. were dis- closed by Red China-along with a hint that 11 other imprisoned U.s. airmen of the Korean war also may be freed shortly. First Peiping radio announced Monday night that a military tri- bunal May 24 convicted the four airmen of "intruding" into Man- churia, then sentenced them to im- mediate deportation. They have been in Red prisons more than two years. Then secretary - general Dag Hammarslrlold announced at Uni- ted ' ' headquarters in New York that Communist China's Pra- mier Chou En-lai had informed him by letter the four airmen prob- ably will reach Hong Kong today. The letter also lnted at the probable release of the other 1 1. now under sentence as "espion- age agents." U.S. RESPONDS The U.S. state department re- spondcd to the Peiping announce- ment by exprcsiilng hope the de- cision to free the four preaaged early release of the other ll fiirs and also 41 detained American civilians. Even before the Hammarsklold '. New Delhi reports had suggested release of the other lil filers ml ht well be in the off- I (Conllnu on Page 2 col. 2) 2.100 ACRES BURNED OTTAWA. lCPl-- Forest fires biirncd 2.l0fl acres of timber dur- ing April. the National Research monthly report on forest fire losses in Canada. There were 140 fires compared with a long-term aver- age of 184 for April. Fire figures will be Issued monthly for the first time through co-operation between rovlncinl. The toll of fishin homes and form ands is expected to reach 3250.000. Council said Monday in its first. the IV uc LAYSIJOWN L or llEMAlillS.0ll GOVERNMENT Relief Neede By GERALD FREEMAN LIVERPOOL. N.S. ICP)-A com'- mittee of hardworking neighbors is trying to help people like l-lanry Myra and his wifa.. The committee met here Monday to compile a report an damage caused in south-central Nova Scotia last week by ravaging forest fires. boats and gear. Merrill Riiwding. former minis- ter of highways. will present the R committee's plea for assistance to the Nova Scotia cabinet today. Henry Myra is 70 years old. His wife is 73. Like dozens of their neigbbo I the Myrna were burned out of their home by a forest fire the weekend of May 21. LIVE IN TRAILER Now they are living in a cramped trailer between the rubble of their fire-flattened home and the black- ened trunks of trees ringing their farmland. Their home was a solid structure with rambling ells, packed with the accumulations of a lifetime. Only part of a chimney and pins- tcr-littered cement foundations are left. The grotesquely-twisted remains of the kitchen stove and Mrs. Myi-als sewing machine poke up through the rubble. The fire burned so intensely there is practically no ash. nor any sign of their prized "electric ra- dlo.” ”Sometimes we laugh andnjoke about it." Mrs. Myra says. And sometimes we Just bawl." She struggled to keep back tears as she spoke. CALL MEETING It was to help people like these that municipal warden Roland Irv- last week where Disaster Relief Fund. At a public meeting tlii next- wera named to a rehabilitation committee and the work of assessing damages and night about 25 citizens raising money began. editor Cecil Day of the Liverpool Advance has been a madhouse. Sub-committee chairmen rush in Store keepers. for information. Probe Death Of Ontario Mon . STRATFORD. Ont. (CPl -Po- lice Monday investigated the cir- cumstances surrounding the death of William E. Smith. 42. of Lis- towel. 25 miles north of here. Smith was found dead in his bed early Sunday and police said they think he was struck on the head with a rolling pin. Police Chief C. Rocher ordered an autopsy and went to Toronto to confer with officials of the st- torne-;-general's department. Police said they had been call- fedcral and industrial orest pro- tection agencies. the council an- noun:-ed. lly HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press staff Writer OTTAWA (CPD - The govern- men now is offering to the entire dairy trade its surplus butter at a price below cost. in efforts to rid itself of a huga winter stock- is officials said Monday the gov- ernment is selling storage butter at so cents a pound wholesale reduced from the winter price of or same. They said they believe the trade generally is passing along uia reduction to the con- surner. They said similar action to re- duce government prices to en- courage greater use of storage butter was taken in two previous post-war years: 1854 and 1060. The butter was purchased by the government from producers at be cents a pound wholesale. winter storage and freight In- creased costs to about It cents. CONTINUE 0l'l'lI In addition to offarllll the sur- plus butter to the general Cana- dian trada also eants. the eminent is continuing its of selling the butter to hospitals and similar institutions for It cents a pound. This latter pro- gram has stimulated sales by ts:-glliflln only a few extra million pounds. rm” 'M ed to the Smith home the previous evaning over a quarrel between (smith and his wife Madeline. Gov"r Offering Surplus Butter At Below Cost sga butter at ls cents. The loss will be borne by the federal treasury and the Canadian tax- payer. about 50,000,000 pounds, too successful so far. I-ajaclsd. . Committee Decides On Of Forest Fires In N.S. ing called his council to a meeting they voted :10.- 000 to start the Liverpool Area For the last week the office of for executive meetings or phone in The government entarad tha 1055 batter production year this month with a record surplus of up 20.- 000.000 from the previous year. Efforts to sell some of this on the world market have been not The world butt 1- price is about 40 cents a pou d. one reported iron-Curtain ottar to buy Canada's surplus at as cents a pound was d By Victims lawyers and Mersey Paper Com- llany works have neglected their Jobs to help the committee. START CAMPAIGN It's expected the damage assess- ment will hit 8250.000. That would represent nearly 5100 from every- body in Liverpool. The committee plans to raise as much as it can in a campaign starting June 7. For the rest it de- pends on government aid. Already donations have started and Mayor . H. Lockward Monday waved elatedly s 3100 cheque from a Shel- burnc. N.S. firm. The .emphasis is on speed. be- cause l-i fishermen lost their boats and others their nets at the start of the herring season. The committee's aim is to help the people rehabilitate themselves. Immediate relief is being csrrid out by the Salvation Army, Red Cross and the welfare sub-commit- tee headed by Salvation Army Lieutenant Jim Tackaberry. OTTAWA tCPi-Farm live and CC? parties joined forces Monday in requesting that meat sold on retail markets be graded for the housewives. Thcy,saiti in the Comiiimis that when farmers are required to sell livestock by grades. the grades should be passed on to consumers. Agriculture Minister Gardiner replied he can't see how the gov- ernment can safeguard everyone who buys meat. He added that he doesnt believe housewives are foolcd often by butchers. "Housewives know about as who's selll g it." he said. TAKE L0 ER PRICE G. H. Castledeu lCCF--Yorkionl said hog producers sell animals by grade. taking a lower price for low-grade animals. But there was no assurance that the meat wniild not be sold as top-grade pork. There were no grades marked on retail pork cuts and the buyer could not distinguish. The discussion arose during con- sldcratlon of a measure. later passed. to consolidate standards and grading legislation for inter- provinclal and export trade in dairy products, livestock, fruit. vegetables. meat and canned foods. John A. Charlton (PC-Brant Haldimandl said moat producers are docked for low grades. "We would like to sea those grades follow through to the con- sumer." Although the measure applied to a vstrirly of farm products. most P;l;;And Paper Production Up lilONTl-IEAL (CPl -- Canada's pulp and paper production in April 757 fans in the month last year. the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association re- ports. Production during the first four months of this year totalled 3.7.12.- Ill tons. compared with 3.084.970 In the first quarter of 1954. Exports in April advanced to 215.004 ions from 170.507 in April last year. the as- sociation reported Saiiirday. The Canadian Press erroneously reported the April export figure as being the production figure for April. lN.IURAN(7Il. CLAIMS DROP OTTAWA (CPl-lnlllll and re- nawal claims for unemployment insurance benefits dropped in Can- ada during April to l54,2ti0 from 243.544 in March and l58.4ll in the corresponding month last year. the zircon of statistics reported Mon- y. increased to 823.073 tons from 7M.-' correspondlngl Parliament At A Glance By TIII CANADIAN PRESS Monday John Diefenbaker (PC-Prince Covers Prince Edward island like The ONE: 8 Dow PRICE 50 ERIE By John l.eBlanc. Canadian Press Staff Writer WINDSOR. 0nl., Congress of Canada Monday demands on governments but ibaie on health insurance in t lster Martin. . lvleeiing in Mr. Martin's (CP)-The Trades and Labor laid down a long series of avoided a convention dia- he presence of Health Min- home town and with the Amer” md PFRA h" b""m'l minister addressing the annual convention, the 750 dela- patrona e for retired. rejected or resigns politicians. CCF Leader Coldwell said PFRA is becoming "more and more a political machine directed by Agri- culture Mlnister Gardiner. Mr. Gardiner replied it is no dis- grace to hire men for PFRA who have served their coulniry in Par- llamenl. The Commons voted 94 to 44 for second reading of a bill empuucr- lng Mr. Gardiner to awzird PFRA contracts up to 315.000 without prior cabinet approval. Farm spokesmen of the Progres- sive Conservative and CCF parties said grading of agricultural pro- ducts should be carried through to the consumer. Prime Minister Si. Laurent said he is not yet able to say when the Canada council on cultural de- velopment will be established. Tuesday The Commons will consider gov- ernment busincss. The Senate will sit. Want Meat Grades To Be Passed On To Consumer spokes--of the debate centred on the mar- men in the Progressive Conserva-lketing of meet our NEW nurcunn represent the quality of mast sold ernment grading, which was he nest and uniform. deal should look around for a bet ier butcher." much about meat as the manjRCuwuy Loading; Up OTTAWA (C?) - Railway car statistics reported Monday. while western division loadings in creased to 2ll.6ll cars from 22, 682 cars last year. Commodities carried in volume included grain 7.577 (5. stone 4.591 i3.ll7l; (4.070). volume included andise l-1.589 t 15.336 i. period of 1954. -7i'oEu-cfnwsiissnsi. .in making hard steels. Charles Yuill 'SC - Jasper-Edn son). a retail butcher for many years. said he believes it is a com- mon practice for butchers to mis- But that was not the fault of gov- ”Pcople who are getting a raw lnhdings in the second week of May increased to 31.405 cars from 69.748 cars in the corresponding period last year. the bureau of Eastern division loadings rose to 52.884 cars from 47.066 cars larger 104 a year earlier); iron ore 3.764 (776); sand. gravel and crushed and miscel- laneous carlond commodities 6.510 Commodities carried in smaller vegetables 470 (935 a year earlier) and mcrch- Cars re celvcd from connections lncrcaacd 'fo utai from 2R.lln.'l in the same Peru is one of the world's lariI- ' est producers of vanadium. usedieiiident lgatcs first then deferred action on it. The minister himself told the convention it's his view that the initiative on health insurance ishnuld come from "the people and .the governments of the various provinces.” WIDE FIELD l Meaiiiilillc. the riiuvciilinli rovnd, .lhrriu;:h a wide field of resolutions iinclutiing these that were adopted: l 1. it feels that governments and lemploycrs are adopting I "get ltough” policy towards workers and traces on record as "unnllerably uppusc-(l lu a ctiinpiilsury 'nu striKe' policy. ' l 2. There should be national and ,provincial bodies charged with res- jponsibilliy for the control of large- scale projects such as crosa-couu- itry natural gas pipeline and I second trans-Canada highway. .1. The federal government should get started immediately on the South Saskatchewan river irriga- tion and power project. on which iii has been in negotiations with :the Saskatchewan government for several years. I PUBLICLY-OWNED 4. The federal government. should be pressed (in immediate adoption of a crass-Canada pipeline as a publicly-owned enterprise exclu- sively financed in Canada and built by Canadian labor. 5. There should be no sub-letting received is resolution calling for a national lhealtli plan organized by the federal government and should conduct an invcstic.'ilion into the price of medicine it appeared that a "good percentage" of prescriptions sold by drugrzlsls were at an "extremely high ' profit." (in the health insurant n flims- tinn. the resolution broufxlil hcl-ire the delegates declared that ran- ada lags behind many countries not as wealthy as this one and that the enactment of a com- prehensive contributory plan by the federal government is ovciriur-. It should be undertaken "nut in the future but during the life of the present government." Ford Executive Ponders Unique Union Challenge DETROIT (AP)--Top Ford Mo- tor Company executives huddled Monday night to consider a unique. tinion challenge to let Ford em- ployees decide who's right in a dispute that threatens a strike of the big auto firm later this week. The CIO United Auto Workers made the challenge Monday at an emergency bargaining s c s s l o n aimed at heading off the threat- l of contracts let out by the federal government. it. The aircraft industry should be developed under auspices of the federal government to stimulate employment. ,7. Canadian materials should be used -as far as possible in the con- siruction of the st. Lawrence sea- way. on,whlch Canada and the Unitedlslales are spending jointly about i9oo.ooo,ooo. N0 FISH EMIIARGOI-Iii ii. The federal government should try to prevent the US. from put- ting embargoes on Canadian fish products going to that country. It should extend "further assistance" in getting new export markets for fish. 9, The gnvcrnmcnt should limit ' or suspend temporarily imports ' that seriously affect Canadian industry when they are brought in at out prices. ' 10. There should be I national fuel policy that would utilise coal. oil. atomic energy and other fuels "for the greatest advantage of Canada." ll. The federal government should make available to the prov- inces large. grants for the training of handicapped persona. SUPPLY SERUM 12. It also should supply cancer-' treating cobalt bombs in hellth centres throughout the country and should supply polio serum for srhoolchildrcn of the appropriate age to he treated. The TLC ly meant Salk vaccine. The federal government enlng walkout. The union proposed that Ford's 140.000 employees in the U. S. be polled by secret ballot on whether they prefer to stick with the UAW guaranteed annual wage demand or accept Ford's counterproposal of a "partnership in prosperity" plan. The result would be bin on both parties to negotiate for w "ch- cver idea tha employs... choose. BAKING GAMILI The surprise union move was re- garded by some as a daring per- sonal gamble by UAW president Walter P. Reuther. A solid vote for the guaranteed wage would he a boost for his leadership. A vote for Ford's plan could be inter- preted as a no-confidence vote for the union leadership. . Belgian Bachelors Feted ECAUSSINER. Belgium lReii-fiirazcguies. it is the lndins who TORONTO lf'PiL.MmimunI and feral-Bachelors were fFif'(l with m;'l':"l:lT me" '0 "is W Md la!" maximum iemeeratureswh mm ch”"p""' "id Nuke" hr waikfl. Al neariiv Rouqiiicrcs. liowevar. Dawsoti . . . . . .. A-- i .55 ll! I Wflfllllllnll ll"""'l "i "ll" ithe, bachelors call on the splnsiers Victoria . 4.2 56 here iilnndtiy. . .to uril9 "mm mm Edmonton 47 70 Five hundrcd single girls from Ecaiissincs v-cnt all-out for run Calgary .. -tl 522 all nrcr the country turned up to verls to the connublal cause .'lion- Regina 52 T'- lake baciielorii of their ch-iice1(ia,v. Bachelor: coming to the town Winnipeg . 46 70 .ihrough the tunnel. a romanlicyhall were uolronicd uilli chain-ioiiawa 56 V-7 winding path overhung with (rec pagm-, "Toronto . S7 57 branches. l Iiniiners pi-nclmnwd surh slo-lblontrcal A0 71 And If the 02 previous Wliilsudn gun: .1: "You mi'lS(yl1P lfil8I'l'lC(l : 37 Monday excursions are any var -ito e happx ” nnr ” '4-u'l never -- l.-tick. Monday's sirnlls will rosultihe married it you keep sucking . 47 .-- lln about 50 weddings. .your lhumb ” d . 42 - This mass mate-seeking is an The day's scliorlulr include a i - .. Si 04 annual event at.Ecaiisslnes and 5 each by the unmarried prr-s- Charlottetown .. 47 its -two other villages near here. It 1 pm of the hopeful snclriy of the Sydney 40 VI lsiarts with s "matrimonial lea" Fmniisiiicilcl llcr topic ”Thc Yarmouih 31 on (though only coffee was drunk hon-iiio: nl mntrlmonv.” Then in 5. Johns . . . . .. 3:! M iM0llfiAy) ls.-no noon air dnnre went on wolf DHLIFAX WP 3”” hmmlmn ln l-It-niiasint-s and the village olilnlo tlio night I JIAI CORELLI Can an Press stall writer HALIFAX ICP)-The ma w probably knows more abou t watery part of Canada's north tn Veteran Skipper Gives Views Says Russia Lea Arctic. H00 miles north of Moni- -I aal. Capt. Robertson said Soviet Arc- iic specialists "are slreeta ahead of ours." largely persona of many commercial shipping corridor that extends aa st across the "roof" of Siberia. an ICI ISLANDS He. said the Russians have scien- yaars' experience developing the from Murmansk way for the landing arties The two-nation project. om falt Russian M tiflc observation teams on "four sneak attack over the fog of the will "ill "ail as-ails as tal cendI- or five" Hosting ire rushes in the world. will badlractedhy ear Ad- "'3'”''"" ' if" '"""""m "in none." Arctic ocean "and we have one." Iniral Redmond Mason. chief of the EWING lb Imvl '"l'Pl"' NM The 0-year-old visions officer "They know how to work and us. Military Sea Transport Serv- gom producer! "-1; mm It wtisiutysamoa uanau-as i-as theft." so Paart gt lea. Atlantic. - I -II! Id ' an to maintain it-e' me at M u 333 list rqaesars '3' "'.l3uiIi"s. lo usffii. ronlcnrr level sntn Havel two days listen as b sasaaiilsd ts that disadvantage. no lahdhg sites are too-secret In othar'words.”lt will now sell an a mask-.aI'd.alua.la-month stubby 0.500-ton warahl . at are honll: generally follow him OI! 090 my tetla -NWMOCUIIIQ uil drawa& mlpua. taittsswsssotsu-isssisr sadnsdhhlhaafaataewdlntbaatha iasnsuuisnnasstuus ds West In Arctic Queen Mary's 31. will complete a series of beach surveys to make at- slgned to build the U. .-Canadian Distant Early Warning innwi ra- dar system. Tbesa civil-military construction teams will begin mov- ing north from Halifax and New York in two task forces in July. which will give Canada and the United States additional protection against sonar. more could be used in Canada's stretch-drive to chart her that -I-0" electronic sutrtracliiiig gadgets like Labrador is the only ship of her kind in the navy and Capt. Robert- son said he personally believed i-aaebas. "If we are to learn more about the Arctic. and it's obvious that we have to. then we'll need more re- search vessels of this iv!”-" l" said. "Somebody! got to chart all vi'PRll1Ef' office. here says cnntimwrl unsettled weather is forecast for today as the boimrlary line san- araling warm and cool air con- liuucs to lla across the ventral Maritimes. and a weak disiurballu wast. of the district isiovas east- ward. Regional forecasts crew and 15 federal scientists in Northern Nova Scotia. PHD” the fields of oceanography. aao- Edward Island. OIDMPI N-W araphic physiology and hydro- use. lower st. has river vs Mi grnpby. Just two the many cues; wlta CD00”.-H M phase: of Arctic study vital to da- meek stiaau ch N";-mg" ence are currents and water sal- s. law-hill! lg. "gill. Fml. lnily. The first would determine used 0.0! huh, h v" "N. tactics against mines and the ow aetctaa 40 and I. 0 I ond governs the affeetiveneas of I ilppcr St. John river vaileY- ll4i.V of Chalaur: Cloudy with - W showers; rnntinumit rmli ll l" pulprly winds. Low-high ll -fl mundsion 46 and M. Camvbflllfm 44 and ID. High tide today -1 Charlotte todwn at GM s. m. and 7.20 p. m.: at Rustic-o at 2.08 a. in. and 2.07 p. m. Sumrneralde tide eighteen minutes later than Chnrlnilrinwn sun rises today at 4.!) a. II. and sets at 7.51 p. I.