F,-gay, September 3, 1954 The Guardian Page? GRAFTON STREET ESSO SERVICE STATION WILL OPEN THIS MORNING The Grafton Street Esso Service Qtatlun. situated in the uptown .,u,iness district of the City, opens m. bu.iInESS this morning. The ,.iipi-ietor is Mr. Pet:-r.DesRoche. 511-. Dcsltoclie, a native of P. E. H ,5 a veteran of the Second Wnrld War having served a term of five years with the Royal ckinadian Air Force. Attached to glue Motor Transport Divisiong he spent three years overseas. Since we war he has followed the auto- mobile trade extensively having served both as car salesman and service station operator. He brings 1”;i,dcl'Zll)lC cxpcricncv in the :;1xI('P IIDICI to the motoring pub- ,K. and is vseil qualified for his nIIiI0lI'lIII'l9l"IL to the latest addition DI the Imperial Oil Essa family. Air. De-sRo."he is fortunate to ngire associated with him, Mr. H”-ry Maciieod who has had three BXpDl'i('llL'e in the service other com- i"illS Rtallnn business. and Hvlpnl staff members. I iiho Grafton Street lzlssn Station Iwnms for speedy efficient ser- . ('P and is equipped with modern 1...; rooms. it stocks Imperial Lggt) and Esso Extra Gasolines. iilarvelube Heavy Duty Motor Oil. yiai-velube Grease and Gear Oils, Atlas Tires, Batteries and acces- gnries. The. station has very mod- .-;n lubricating equipment and ya”: one may make use of the izintenient Essa)-iitaitc Credit Card SFl”t'l('l". There is a large parking ' Mr. Peter Deslloche .and arrangements may be made for morning, afternoon or all day area parking. Canada-Wide crop Decline Effects Harvest Labour Force By THE CANADIAN PRESS lhe. effects of a cold. wet sprint: Riltl adu-isc summer growing con- riilions in many parts of Canada mi; year are becoming apparent now in the harvest labor force. with some exceptions, crops are below last year's yield. In many nieas. slow growth has pushed hor- Wmng beyond last year's dates, and farmers fear fall frosts may iiitiier lower (I18 Yield- A smaller labor movement, es- peclally between provinces, will be seen this fall for two main reasons . grnpg will not be as heavy and many areas will use PFOSDECHVC harvest helpers to alleviate local unninploymznt problems. MECHANIZATION A moron The swing in mechanization nn Faiiariian farms has further re- lllCCd the demand for unskilled la- Vil'. Help mainly in demand Is ex- prricnced combine operators. truck ind tractor drivers. There is little lemand for ordinary harvest labor. On the nther hand. the national -mploymcnt office In Ottawa rc- . ts an ample suply of farm 13- Imi-, more than has been available I4il' some yrars. About 1.500 harvesters will mow into the prairie provinces If pres- ent crop estimates do not change. or 200 less than last year. Alberta has asked for 750 men. Saskatche- wan. 500, and Manitoba 250. The reduction is chiefly due to the situation in Saskatchewan, the largest grain-producing province, Ottawa reported. Much of the crop in the northeast section of the province was spoiled by rust. and the provincial government is plan- ning to move men and equipment from that area to other parts of the province as they are needed. Wages in the three prairie prov- inces will average about S7 to S8 at day for field workers. with exper- ienced and skilled workers making considerably more. HARVESTING DELAYED Because of the late spring seed- ing. farmers generally are not ask- ing for help until about Sept. 7. although employment offices have asked workers to arrive about Sept. 1. Manitoba reports some scattered harvesting already in progress. and expects it to be general by the be- ginning of the month. Harvesting is expected to be spread over a longer period titan ustial. because of staggered spring planting. British Columbia reports it has at the Colombo conic:-once in can s7rlX'l3 were India. Hkistsn. Burms, Ceylon, and Indonesia. INDIA HA3 ALTERNATIVE India. while agreeing with China that such a pact would be desir- able, fears some of the more timid nations among the colombo powers might not wish to sign such I bind- ing undertaking and has suggest- ed I series of bilateral pacts a.- mom; these powers. The effect would be precisely the same. It is obvious from the press that the Chinese government is thor- oughly alarmed at the idea of SEATO and will endeavor at all costs to torpedo it. is more than See Secret Talks: Proceeding On Far East Security The following story was written for The Associated Press by the correspondent for the London Daily Telegraph accompanying the British Labor party group visiting Red China. PEIPING (AP)-High-level talks on Far Eastern security are re- ported golng on behind the scenes here among Britain's former prime minister Clement Attlee. Chinese Premier Chou En-lai, and Indian ambassador Ned-am Raghavan. These talks are apart from num- erous public functions for the visit- lng British Labor party headed by likely that U. S. Legion would Use Force To Stop Rod Aggression WASHINGTON (AP)-The Amer- ican Legion convention gave over- whelming backing Thursday to a proposal calling on the United States to meet any further Com- munist aggression in Southeast at the Manila conlereiice, but the Chinese are pinning their hopes on the present British government losing the next election to Labor. Bririslns Attlee to their viewpoint they feel they could neutralize SEATO before it could become an SEATO will be formed next month. effective force in Southeast Asia and by tallstion." The legionnairu agreed this re- tslistion should be taken "with or without the co-operation of the other free nations of the world." The convention adopted a report of its foreign relations committee which said the veters.ns' organiza- tion believes co-existence is impos- sible with the Communists "be- cause Soviet Russia and her satel- lites or puppets have not offered the slightest evidence of good faith." OLD SETTLEMENT Dartmouth across the harbor from Halifax was first settled in 1751. , Attice. China is convinced Attlee will be the next. British prime min- ister. Peiping is said to have sug- gested to him that instead of the West's proposed Southeast Asian Treaty Organization, there should be a mutual non-aggression pact among China. Britain, France and the Colombo powers. The five countries represented a large reservoir of labor avail- able, made up chiefly of workers from completed construction pro- jects. Much of the Okanagan lruit har- vest during the last two weeks of September will be gathered by women and students. Pay will be slightly less than last year. Ontario farm employment offl- cials report that about 750 workers will come into Ontario to help with the harvest. about 100 more than last year. Of these. about 250 will come from the Maritimes and 500 from the west. SLIGHT SURPLU5 Many come into Ontario regu- larly to work on the tobacco crop. I and this year officials report a slight labor surplus in southeast Ontario. Quebec reports that demand for farm labor so far has been slight. but officials expect it to pick up . when the harvest season develops in a few weeks. Employment service officials in the Maritimes report no outside help will be brought in. Local fa- cilities for meeting farm labor needs have increased. and this ocupled with reduced demands for help for other parts of Canada. will assure enough workers for present estimated needs. The two major crops requiring harvest laborers are apples and potatoes. Weather conditions dur- ing the next month will decide the condition of the potato crop, and how many workers will be needed. if the weather remains favorable, the requirements are expected to be the same as in 1953. A brighter picture was painted for apple crops in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley than in 1953. With hopes for a large crop. it is ex- 97 Water St. CONGRATULATIONS TO IMPERIAL OIL LTD. ON THE OPENING TODAY OF THE GRAFTON STREET ESSO SERVICE STATION PETER DesROCHE. Prop. COUNTY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY LIMITED GENERAL CONTRACTORS Dial 9535 pccied that 300 or 400 pickers will be required. They will be drawn from local sources. mnmodilts mnituy re- I I i I ALL GOOD WISHES To The GRAFTON STREET ESSO SERVIOE STATION OPENING TODAY Complete Electrical Installation was by the- BURKE ELEOTRIO LTD. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Wiring - Fixtures - Appliances - Supplies SALES E SERVICE Authorized G. E. DEALER OIL-FIRED HEATING UNITS SUOOESS to the... GRAFTON STREET ESSO SERVIOE STATION OPENING TODAY PLUMBING av. BEVAN BROS. PLUMBING & HEATING ENGINEERS SHEET-METAL WORKERS 60 Queen Street Phgn. 4533 IMPERIAL Esso SERVICE GASOLINE MOTOR OIL L T ESSO AND ESSO EXTRA ”' MARVELUBE HEAVY DUTY I ATLAS TIRES, BATTERIES AND ACCESSORIES I MARVELUBE GREASES AND GEAR OILS ANNOUNCING THE OFFICIAL OPENING TODAY OF PETER DESROCHE, PROP. - . -”."'w;:.-I 'Y."”9".",!!7'.-Vws-ry-:1-v-..w . at .. no . . f 2” 1) 5g'&'.. . A w 1;-we-wnfvvvv-u:.a ...,u .... . . Hi. You are invited to visit Peter DesRoche's Brand new Imperial Esso Service Station conveniently located on Grafton Street, in the heart of the uptown shopping and business district. GRAFTON STREET IMPERIAL ESSO SERVICE STATION T SPEEDY EFFICIENT SERVICE I " MODERN REST ROOMS " ESSO-MATIC CREDIT CARD I; SERVICE " MODERN LUBRICATING EQUIPMENT ' LARGE PARKING AREA GRAFTON STREET IMPERIAL ESSO SERVICE STATION PHONE 92I9 CHARLOTTETOWN Ill-",3--3.1,;-'