‘wna “income of $13,834,185 or $1.82 a : pects, 28 months and $1,303,819; “grin at pet chicken of Mr. Thi-- “his “rifte-but-the~animal-struck "Many Canadian Connections « Noted In British Elections By PETER BUCKLEY LONDON (CP) — Canadian connections of every sort have turned up in the list of candi- dates for next Thursday's Brit- ish general election. x. Davie Fulton’s former secre- tary is running. So are former New Brunswick,. McGill and Saskatchewan. And so is Lord Beaverbrook’s great - nephew. +]The list cuts through the ranks of the four parties which have offered the most candidates. Upper Canada College, Tor- onto, alone has thtée of its for- | Mer students out on the hust- | ings two bearing the Liberal banner and one a Labor candi- | date. Among those running again is | the only Canadian-bom “mem.- | fessor of law at the University {? ‘ory MP seeking: re-election in |ber of the last Parliament God- |of Saskatchewan. in 1941-45, pro- )Blackpool South, was educated ‘man Irvine’ 56, Conservative aes for Rye in Sussex. |ter, the has represented. Rye | | in Sussex. A native of Toronto | 1943, and has many other - laid & puiser ta wad tones. y con- |cilla Tweedsmuir. sented Rye since 1955 and had a 16.976-vote majority in the 1964; general election. HAVE GOOD CHANCE Several of the Labor candi- dates stand a strong chance of | | Peaching Parliament if public- | opinion polls prove accurate in | predicting a swing to Labor. Joan _ Lestor, 34-year-old na- tive of Vancouver, is contesting | Eton and Slough, where the | |and was secretat { ry in 1960-61 to granted after a Conservative winner had a mar- | Davie Fulton when he was Con- Canadian speaking tour gin of only 11 votes in 1964. Bruce Douglas-Mann, 38-year. | CHICKEN? Qucien Thibodeau (LEFT) of Ridgeway, Ont., and service station operator Roy Pearson bodeau, which hitched a ride on the axle of the family car from Ridgeway to Crystal Beach. The-bird wasn't dis- covered until-the car,;was put on a hoist for a grease job, and Mr. Thibodeau said he had been driving upwards of 60 miles an bour. Turns out the chicken had been chased under the car by-a dog. . (CP Wirephoto) Pipe Lines Profits Up TORONTO (CP) —- Trans- Canada Pipe Lines. Ltd. had net. share last year. compared with $13,243,311 or $1.76 a share in” 1964. the company’s annual re- port says: | The _report, released Monday. | shows operating revenues were a record $136,973,000, up 14% per | cent from $119,612,000 in 1964. qo James K. Kerr | “Net income was proportion- ately less than the increase in Operating revenues due mainly to the increased cost of short | term supplies of gas purchased pending completion of the new | Pipeline through the United } States.” ; In August, 1965, American | Natural Gas Co. agreed to be an equal partner in a project to build a $200,000,000 pipeline from Emerson, Man.,_ through the U.S. to Sarnia’ and Sault ‘Ste. | Marie, Ont. | Hearings “for application to build the line opened March 1 before the national energy board | in Ottawa and are scheduled to | open April 19 before the Federal | Power Commission in Washing. | ton. Commission _ Cost Given | OTTAWA (CP)—Estimated j cost of the royal commission on bilingualism and biculturalism | to March 31 will be $4,502,635, | te Commons was told Monday. | The figure was given by John | Matheson, parliamentary secre- | tary to Prime Minister Pearson, in reply to a questioqn by Robert C.. Coates (PC—Cumberland). Estimated cost of the com- mission. for the 1966-67 fiscal year starting -April 1 is $1,200,- 000. It was established by @ cabinet directive July 9, 1968. He gave these? figures’ for the length of time and cost, of ear- j* Her commissions: - MacPherson royal commis- gion on_ transportation, 38 | months, $574.090; Glassco com- mission on government organk zation, 30 months, $2,791,915; Porter commission on banking, 30 months, $732,901; Gordon | commission on economic pros | Rand commission on coal,“ 11 ‘months and $98,166; O'Leary | eommission. on publica- | tions, eight months and $136,121. eee cess MORELL ~ Mrs. William Kelly; Morell; has entered the Charlottetown Hospita! for treatment Reggie Peters was a Visitor in Morell Monday visiting Vince McGrath who had been in hos- pital. Mr. McGrath will be 95 on April 26, 1s enjoving fairly good health and has a wonder- ful memory» : A baby shower was held at the. home of Mrs..Clem Sinnott for Mrs Geo Kells BEAR TURNS, TABLES MOSCOW (AP)—The hunter became the hunted when Pyotr Artsimovish returned to his win- ter hut in-Siberia: A bear was sleeping on his bed He raised it out of his hand, loosing off a shot. and disappeared into the ' professors at the universities of, Upper Canada College, is rep- resenting Labor in. Maldon, |where the Conservativ’ major- lity last time was 1,531, Geoffrey Hickman 57, who spent three boyhood yeais in has the chore of trying to unseat Tory deputy leader Regin ‘Maudling in the London-area riding of Barnet. 4 Malcolm Macpherson, 62, for- mer U. of N.B. lecturer and Canadian army major, is de- fending Stirling and Falkirk riding, which ‘he first won. for Labor in 1948. Labor MP Raphael Tuck, 55, | who had an upset victory in | Watford in 1964 and is seeking re-election, was formerly pro- | fessor of political science at A|McGill in 1945-47 constitutional served in Canada with-the Brit- native of Toronto anda barris- | adviser to Liberal Premer'tish foreign service . \Stuart Garson of Manitoba in nections with Canada. STANDS FOR LABOR | Shirley Williams, 36, daughter | of former professor George Cat» | | tin of. McGill, is seeking to re- |tain Hitchin for Labor after | winnitig the riding in 1964. Among Conservative hopefuis / was educated at McGill and Sir George Wiliams University in | Montreal, lectured at McGill) |servative justice minister. Dobson was: editorial director old solicitor and alumnus of! is Christopher Dobson, 30, who® : t <> ¢ of Canada's royal pea eiadiae Mamentary existence may be in 6- The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues. March 29, 1966. on taxation and still is a special representative of the Canadian | Commons’ Speaker studying procedure in state legislatures He is running in Bolton. West riding, whee the Labor MP had ‘a majority of nearly 3,000 votes in 1964 Jonathan Aitken, 24-year-old | great-nephew . of Canadian- born Lord Beaverbrook, is contesting Meriden, which’ gave the Labor n the last election. Aitken, a publisher associated with _Moni- tor Publishing Co. of Montreal, was on. the. Oxford ‘debating team which toured Canada and the U.S. i n 1964-65 LOST IN 1964 Tom Stacey, 34,.. a Montreal Star reporter in °1955-56, failed to win Hammersmith North for the Conservatives in 1964 and 1s contesting the Labor-held seat of Dover this year. Peter A. Bilaker, Montreal and Port Arthur a candidate a margin of only 363 43-year-old ‘at the University of ‘Toronto and In Aberdeen South, Lady Pris- law of a former Canadian, gov- ernor-general, is defending a Tory seat she won with a ma- jority of 3,808 in the last vote, The Conservative. candidate in Wandsworth is Sir Hugh Lin- stead 64, who held the seat from 1942 until he lost it in 1964. Among a long list of distinctions is an. hpnorary doctorate of ‘laws from fhe. University of British .’Columbia _ in 1956, coast-to-coast |Britain’s health service The Liberal party, whose par- « per Canada daughter-in- | about — peril in this election, has al Festi. nder in Eric Lub- boek, 37; Upper Canada. Col- lege graduate, who ‘seéks. re- election in Orpington. %y Agnes Scott, 57, who “trailed in a three-way eontest for the Conservative riding in -Woking | in 1964, again is the Liberal can- didate ,there,,, Mrs. Scott’ was educated in}, Hamilton, Ont., and served with ‘the Canadian .Red | Cross and later the women’s | section of tre RCAF during the Second World War SEEKS TO UNSEAT A. TORY Cyril Cary, 40, Liberal canai- date in the Tory riding of Liver- pool Wavertree, 1S another Up- College alumnus.| and also went to Ridley College | it St. Catharines, Ont. Communist party hopefuls in- | clude. Bert Ramelson,- 54, son ot van Edmonton fur dealer and a law graduate from the Univer- sit of Alberta, who is mabing another bid fo; the Labor-held seat of Leeds South, and Tony | Chater;°35, who spent two years on biochemical research in Ot- i|tawa and is contesting Luton, | another Labor-held seat. EARLY TO BED SANTIAGO (AP)—Chile's tel- evision programs now end at 11.15. p.m. every night except Saturday. This is part. of the government’ s efforts to get peo- ple to go to work earlier and ido without the traditional three- ‘hour lunchtime siesta. HOW TO MAKE THE MOST IN SELLING YOUR CAR Is there really a prime time c sell your car? Do you know its actual worth, both’ wholesale and retail? Can you realize more for it through private sale? April Reader's Digest gives six simple rules to heed in ‘How to Make the Most in Selling Your Car’. This timely article, of i i terest tg every car owner, based 6n answers See from the men who know — car dealers to Finance company éx- ecutives. Don’t miss it! 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