Unemployment Insurance To Be Greatly Changed showed that very few people were using their maximum period of benefit while a good many were still unemployed when their bene- fit period ran out. By reducing the maximum from 51 to 36 weeks and raising the minimum from six to 15 weeks. protection has been shift- ed so that. in total. it is more comprehensive. The requirements for drawing benefit under the new Act have. in some respects. been made easier. To qualify. at least 30 weekly con- tributions must have been paid in the 104 weeks before the date of claim and eight of these must be in the last 52 weeks. This entitles the claimant to the minimum of 15 weeks. A further week of benefit is earned for each additional two weeks of contributions. up to go ? maximum of 36 weeks of hen t that can be allowed in one benefit P period. To re-qualify (having had a pre- vious claim) there must again be at least 30 weekly contributions in the last 104 weeks. but eight of them must be in the last 52 weeks or since the beginning of the last claim. whichever period is shorter. Any contribution week that is more than 52 weeks old and that came before the beginning of the last claim cannot again be counted. The new Act eliminates the non- winpensahle day. modifies the rule regarding subsidiary earnings. and intioduces a scale of allowable earning tsee table related to the ordinary earnings of the claimant in the period preceding his claim. A claimant gets full benefit pay- ments if his earnings from casual. part-time. or short-time employ- ment while on claim are not more than the allowable A establi- shed in his case. if that amount is exceeded. his benefit is simply re- duced by the amount nf the excess over the allowable scale. when Canada": new Unemploy- lb nt insurance Act becomes ef- ;',l:...... on Otobev 2. 1955. it will mlrk the first major revision of the ..-tgiiial legislation. The Act was ",5: passed in 1940 and was put in cration July I-. 1941- The new legislation makes .hangcs respecting contributions. files and duration of benefit. quali- ..-mg and re-qualifying conditions for benefit. and earning which are ,l1owsblc without loss of benefit. The new Act relates contributions two table) to weekly earning and 4'.-ops the former daily basis. This .111 make it easier to record con- mhutions and determine periods 5; employment where a person is on short-time or where a holiday falls in the middle of the week. Thc scale of contributions has my. made more even. so that a woltliclilb contributions as a per- cmtage of earning will be approx- lmately one per cent in each earn- lugs class, with a like amount con- mhuted by his employer. Formerly u..- pm-cntage varied in different w.,.,,,:,- groups from slightly less it”... one per cent to more than ihroc per cent. Three new earnings classes have been added at the top end so that mghoi' benefit rates will be possible (or those in higher salary ranges. rht. was necessary because of-the sir-ntly upward movement of wage r;ilt"- sinre the last change was mzuiv in tpgarii to benefit rates (see Ialllrg it. was felt that they should ht: not hat-it in line with the general uazr sll'ilFllll'P The s t e a it y in- .-tr.-t.-.9 in wages in recent years has meant that henefits as a per- rvntage of wages have been con- stantly decreasing. The new rates rot-lily this. A somowliiit dtffcrent emphasis ...,s ht-cu given to duration of bene- lt under the new Act. Records to of te at w v is vice at Lorne Valley Church was conducted by the Rev. D. A. Camp- bell who delivered an impressive message. Mrs. Daniel Shaw pre- sided at the organ during the sing- ing of the hymns. Lorne Valley llrs. James Callaghan and son. lllr Louis Callaghan were visitors to rharlottetown on September 6 where they were guests of relatives. out of the Province visitors to this xtviiiity include Mr. and Mrs. Milton MacDonald. Montreal. Que- her. who were guests of the formers brother. Mr. Wilbur MacDonald. tlltss Doris MacNeil1, Boston. Mas-. arrived on the Island re- until She is spending a vacation with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. James MacNetll. llr. Francis Macintyre was a vis- ltnr to Souris on Wednesday. Miss Anna Goodwin who recently arrived on the Island from Mon- trcal. P. Q. spent a few days in Lorne Valley during the week. while .-he was here she was the tzut-st of her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Ferguson. s. ..TT.';l 'l.".ii'.'..ll.5!'”"..l'.l".lli13l.”"f.; '”Wxx3 - V ararn Lot-no Valley during the past uleek. IC ' ...l.".'..:.l.'1...”.l'.5t..3T,"i?3”3L3'il'.I.lI ..,..........,.....,...,.....- .....,... inn on the island. On September . . . ' 7”, "H... "W9 guests of Mr. and low-lying Suti'olkBroadsdistrict tut-e flculwn Mccannell. Lorne Val- l of England bring in the boy by l” watcnsolwaslogicalfors British beet builder to me light- wight aiorninum to produce a 650'-pound punt capable ofair lit and Mrs. Hugh Macbeod l with daughters Ruthie. Lorna andl Heather. Central Royalty, motored In l.t-rue Valley on September lltli l.":'::.:.::2 ”'::';. "' rm-'o-dothw-"tart 8l'Pfl s. r. an rs. . - . . l llalrolrn MacLeod. um” "3 5"” "wt - ill and Mrs. George Blasser. h ” bum Ruitniry. Mass. are guests of Mrs. l””'" "n" h''”''" E ”" Blaum-"s brother. Mr. George Mac- Donald. llrs. George Mat-Innis spent a lew days in Charlottetown the guest at her eon-in-law and daughter. Mr. 'Fl?ll'td.lnhn Spencer. Mount Edward 03 mating, heat-iehctiig. aasil, handled inatciial for hams an- loot: nd dies . . . diondi o. con: i has many other Iann usaefroininitkmnstowiiidrntll blanks. ilo hey-beau. Iiongh. ALUMINLIM OOWIANY - OF CANADA, LTD. (AI-CAN) lira Sterling MacLeotI and tiauchter Donna, New Haven. spent the past weekend with Mrs. Mac- Lends brother. Mr. George M”. Donald. lit and Mrs. George Mt-Aulay. Chat-ioltetown were recent guests "l the farmer's mother, Mrs. Mae McAtila,v. . gjigay. September ilth. ser- Moreil Edges Gee'town 4-3 The Moreil Beavers evened e Kings County baseball fine on Sunday by edging out the home- wn Georgetown team 4-3 in one the best ball games of the year. The series is now tied up at one win each. with the third game at Moreil on Sunday Sept. 11th at 15. After a shaky first inning both ams settled down to give a large arted for Georgetown but gave ay to McPhee in the sixth. Murphy was the loser. Batteries: McCarthy and .l. Cof- in. Maclnnis (2) D. Murphy. Mc- hee and McPhee. Lavers t2l. Pisquid East Miss Doreen Jay left during the tek for Charlottetown where she taking first year at P. W. C. Mrs. Owen Kelly spent a couple of days during the week in Donagh with her daughter Mrs. White and Mr. White. Walter Mr. Floyd Jay and Mr. Alton gay motored to Cross Roads on usiness Mondayf BA Wished He Had Fired CHICAGO. (AP)-Former presi- dent. Truman says he wishes lie had fired Gen. MacArthur two years sooner. That. he said is the only "re- pentance" he has had for re- moving MacArthur as supreme commander in Korea on April 11, 1951. crowd a real exhibition of base- The 71.ye3r..,ld Truman made ball. with bol-It Side! iaulllns 0lf;the statement in a question-and some very fine plays. l Joe Coffin. of the Beavers. hit the only extra base blow with a line drive triple into left field. Mc- Carthy went all the way on mound for Moreil to gain the win. Murphy. answer period following an ad- dress before the executive club of Chicago Friday. The former President fired MacArthur on grounds that the general was ”unable to give wholehearted support" to the poli- cies of the United Nations and the .Ti'u.man administration in the conduct of the Korean war. A questioner asked why UN forces in Korea did not drive to the Yalu river "as MacArthur said they could” instead of bait- ing at the 38th parallel. "MacArthur never was ordered to stop at the 38th parallel" Tru- man retorted. "There were a million and a half Chinese be- tween him and the Yalu river and he couldn't get through them." UN forces had reached the Yalu earlier in the war. only to be forced back when China en- ... Gen. MacArthur Earlier said there would be no iirunediale comment from the general 'l)ll Truman's remarks. Potato Bulletin Late blight spores are pi'tldll('NI on the plants so long as any green foliage remains. Tlicrclorc. states the Weekly Potato Bulletin No. 13 for Prince Edward island and Nova Scotia if a field is due while some living foliage is pre- sent. the tubers become inocula- ted and losses in storage or tran- sit result. The spores. under favourable conditions of temperature and moisture. may remain viable on the soil surface for several days after the plants have died natur- ally or have been killed Ilui'p(ISCl)'.l Because of these facts. and in the interests of protection to both the producer and the purchaser. no field should be harvested until the tops have been dead for at least ten days, whether death has lie:-ii caused by disease trust, or (-limii- ical top killer. The bulletin is issued by FM. Cannon. Field Crop Insect Sec- tion; L.C. Callbeck. Plant Patho- logy Section; and the Science Ser- tered the conflict. A MacArthur aide in New York vice Laboratory. Charlottetown. 0. E WHEN Q60? ANY r nouns Illi'IIlg.gl-'IliiTHElt NOTE You LIKE ME You LIKE Matches Peaches 1 s For t P",'f;'oi”" 1 Giant sn- 25c t 2 for 49: 69c : me we HAVE SCRIBBLER noon REFILLS. 5 for . . . 65: MON. TO THUR. 8 A.M. - X P.IiI. FRI. & SAT. 8 A.M. - 10 RM. BRIEFCASES. Etc, 1 .25: lb. Salado Tear-Free Tea Bag; l'EA. I-2 lb. . . . . . . 59: Instant: PUDDINGS. 2 for 25: York Diced CARROTS. 2 for . York Diced BEETS. 2 for . . . .. 29c 29: Five Roses White CAKE MIX I9c Five Roses Chocolate CAKE MIX 23c Sunlight SOAP.2fer............2lc Kellogg's CORN PLAKES. 2 for . . .o 35c Plato or Brisket CORNED BEEF. lb. . Half COTTAGE ROLL. lb. Rindless Maple Leaf titans: "3" .'.'HIC'KENS. lb. . . . . .....29c sacor ts.............ss . tee ': cuvZ3i3"5o'i??ii-saemtn:'iu pl... 0, nmht in end: dfbwelrsae ----W sotuuc. MEAT. ts......29c ””'””"b”””'”" "&U”WlI6 mp4,, SAl.MON.Ib...........49e ........,'”'!"......."”"i-”'l""””""""' AND LOOK AT mass BARGAINS SEE OUR DISPLAY OF GUNS -- WE TRADE GUNS -- 24 MONTHS TO PAY. no TIREISALE, FOR CA RS and TRUCKS . 24 MONTHS TO PAY FIRESTONE WASHER. SALE Beech Gas, Electric, OlI,Coel&Woet:l RANGES 9Q.5O X7050 INJOY Tl-II FINEST mmninusm wm-i . WESTINGHOUSE I956 TELEVISION "SP NOTHING DOWN IDEAL FOR OU , '1! DP" stems opp” - :'3.'.'.'tie"3.'ie5t".-',.7"llo.h.;..'."l.l.'.'.l?;': Au pAy "nest SlliEET"a01l5 T692, (meat fIbrics.astemtaIo& SATURDAY , .43-,.. u ' . - naevhe no roentgen:-at-use-aw!-ere. ENDS SATURDAY, SEPT. 17th 20 ONLY rtnisioni ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS 7.3 cu. It. 229-95 WITH THESE OUTSTANDING I'-EATURES:-- "' FULL WIDTH ACROSS THE TOP FREEZER "' 3 BIG DOOR SHELVES 9 TOP TO BOTTOM REFRIGERATION. "' COMBINATION ALL-PORCELAIN MEAT CHEST AND RAPID CHILLER Thursday. Sept. 15.1955 The Guardian Page 7 CHOOE TODAY from it Huge leciion of Exciting Fall Fabrics including- loometi by World Famous Mills it the Seosoitls Newest (oloots including- COFFEE TONES, CI-IARTONES, ANTIQUE GREENS OOK" HAND-CUT & IMLORED TO YOUR EXACT MEASURE Tip '1' '5 Imbencic and popular T31 lookzpaauiidcsigned mbetheinoa lame:-ingyon everowued. The square. natural shoulders, the narrower lapeis. and our-LII general slimming eifea adds so much to your appearance. Band-atand superbly iailoredtoyon Manama. THE RIPLEY with two button from and jun-ii pockets-yusi ooc ol the many new models. Tip Top's new TRIM LOOK tailored in fine iin-posted fabrics. ll 89?, ELECTRIC APPLIANCE BARGAINS 2 Slice Automatic POP TOSTER. reg. 529.95.. SALE Si 9.95 General Electric Feotherlighf DELUXE MODELS ?R0N- res 5l2-95- SALE 510.95 G. E. Electric KEl'TLES.,reg. ECIAI PURCHASE SALE 513.95..- SALE st l .95 . 24 MONTHS TO PAY . SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS 6. E. Steam lR0N5. ms- 520.95- SALE Sl7.50 2-Brush FLOOR POLISHER. reg. 354.50.. SALE 547.25 ectrlc KITCHEN CLOCKS 55.95 MAKE YOUR ltOLI.ARS COUNT. Save On All Your ICK CHILLING OF SALADS. BEVERAGES. ETC. new on DISPLAY Non-lino newn- tow Moim-a'.Y PAYMINTS HOME & AUTO CO LTD. Bill. 554' Needs at FIRESTONE Home 8: Auto Co. Ltd. 187 GREAT IEIIIIOEST.