——_— 1@ The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed.. June 9, 1965. Danish Discovery May Hurt Salmon HALIFAX (CP) —Possible dis- of the Atlantic salmon feeding grounds by Danish fish- last vear may adversely future, stecks in Cana- covers ermen affect fian rivers, the vice-president af the Nova Scotia Salmon Ang- iers’ Association said here Larry Guptill) said the Danes were fishing for cod off the Greenland coast when they ac- cidentally made the strike. The micratervy run of voung salmon from North American rivers to @ common meeting place in the Atiantic has haffled§ scientists fer vears Mr Gaptill said ane report in dicated the .Danish fishermen took 1.290 tons—‘‘which prob- abiv amounted to hetween 500,- 900 and 1.900.000 - salmon.” Growina Firm On Prairies Builds Warehouse, Office Rr KEN EMMOND ~~ WINNIPEG (CP) Gamble Macleod Lid. Winnipeg-hased parent. of a growing family of western Canadian stores, is to spend $2,500,000 here this sum- mer for an office and ware- house structure It will provide 288,000 square feet of warehouse space for Macleods division and nearly 53.000 square feet of office space for Gamble Macleod and associated companies. Comple- tion is set for November Macieods, a department store division, has outgrown a ware- house {ft build here 13 vears ago. The company has 220 retail and authorized dealer. stores and warehouses west of the Lake- head 3 This is 100 more than it had in 1956, and Macleod sales have increased about 250 per cent siftre 1956 » Last vear the company under- went extensive rearganization of its corporate structure. CHANGE NAME The company name of Mac- lend’s Ltd. was changed tn July to Gamble Macleod Ltd About the same time the company acquired controlling interest {mn Stedman Bros. Ltd, 2 Toronto-based variety store firm. with stores mostly “in eastern Canada And “tt acquired controlling interest in Clarks Gamble of Ry STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA ‘CP)-—One of the strongest, if quietest, cam- paigns centred on Parliament Rill in vears involved the abo ition of capital punishment. Since Prime Minister Pearson {ndicated some months ago that the issue would be brought to a »head with a “free vote’’ among ™members of Parliament, the abolition campaign has brought more mail to the desks of members than anything since the marathon flag fight Tt doesn’t all come from one source, although: the Canadian Society for the Abolition of the Death Penalty is the most ac- tive single organization in the ‘eld Church groups, women’s organizations, youth move- nents, legal‘ societies and as- torted other bodies have been 2ombarding members with their rews In about all cases, say nembers, the campaign is di- ‘ected at the abolition of the jeath penalty. The retentionists aave been relatively quiet. Comments: by individual MPs indicate that the feelings of the “ammons are fairly evenly di- vided on whether the death pen- atv should be abolished. Some think the abolitionists sre slightly ahead of the reten- tonists FALL DEBATE LIKELY Rut with Parliament aiming ‘or a summer recess in either late June or early July. and vith several major pieces of ecislation due for consideration hefore this, the death penalty ssue has little likelihood of toming up until late September w October. With an just Interparliamentary Strong Campaign Conducted To Abolish Death Penalty . William O. Morrow, vice-pres- ident of National Sea Products Ltd. here, said he didn't know if the feeding grounds had act- ually been discovered, “but the Danish catch last year was sub- stantially up over previous years. Usually they expect to take about 200 tons.” Mr. Cuptill said there was not sufficient” information from which to draw conclusions, but he said it might not he long hefore “irreparable harm had been done to the salmon fish- ery. They are taking them right out of the pasture, so to speak.” Among fish caught by the Danes were salmon bearing Nova Scotia. New Brunswick. Quebec and European tags Canada Ltd, a western discount store chain with chief holdings in Winnipeg. It acquired these _ interests from its own parent company, Gamble-Skogmo Inc. of Minne- apolis. or the American firm's United States subsidiaries Stedman Bros. was renamed Macleod Stedman Ltd..and Mac- lends became an operating di- vision of that company. along with the Stedman division, of Toronto Gamble Macleod also bought from Gamble-Skogmo controll- ing interest in Growth Accept- ance Corp.-Ltd.. which finances company expansion. Although. Gamble Macleod has been. American-owned since 1946, the “American parent” has permitted the~firm to reinvest all its profits in Canadian oper- ations Macleods started in Winnipeg in 1917 as a small mailorder house dealing primarily in farm supplies. Alex McGregor, advertising vice-president for Macleods Di- vision, said that in recent years the company has been trving to change a public conception of his firm as one of.‘'work gloves and overall and hardware eéods.”” To do this it was expanding its line of goods and calling its stores ‘family shopping ~cen- tres.” Union meeting scheduled for the Commons chamber in Septem- ber. Parliament is not expected to reconvene until late in the month. Before the House recesses. the present debate on the rules changes’ must be completed along with the revisions to the Bank Act. Interim supply must also be passed to clear the way for government spending dur- ing the holiday months. There are also several minor. pieces of legislation to go through. The capital punishment bill will probably come up soon after the Commons reconvenes. Earlier this week. Robert Temple (L—Hastings South) in- troduced a private member's bill calling for the abolition of the death penalty. But there was no official indication that this would be used as the ve- hicle for the vote. SOME OPPOSE CHANGE Private member's bills norm- ally are discussed for only one hour at a time and, without unanimous consent, they norm- ally fall to the bottom of the order paper when they have been debated without coming to a vote Some _ government sources say it would be diffi- cult to get unanimous consent for a continuous private mem- ber's debate on the death pen- alty, since some members are strongly opposed to a change In the light of this, the sources feel it's more likely that another bill will be intro- duced by the government, al- lowing for continuous debate until a vote is reached. The Central African Republic earns‘ nearly $1,000,000 a year from export of elephant tusks. rients. Hiah yields feeds. Cost of 100 Ibs. Total PASTURE AND HAY THE LOWEST COST FEEDS _ Productive hay and pasture crops are the lowest cost source of feed nut- cost, and lessen the need for purchased Average Yields Pasture (5,000 Ibs. milks per acre) $ .80 Hay (2.2 tons/acre) .... Corn Silage (12 tons/acre) ._... $1.20 Corn (89 bus./acre) .. Oats (60-70 bus./acre) ....... $1.90 FERTILIZE FORAGE CROPS FOR HIGH PRODUCTION OF LOW COST FEEDS! i will further reduce Dizestible Nutrients at SPORT HIRTS Long or short sleeve sport shirt in’ the latest easual look. Choose from a large assortment of: stripes or the all over patterns. Sizes S. M. L. or XL in blue, olive, gold. brown and greys. neat and cmfortatle al! day. Reg. 3.98 - 4.98 2.9% Trim tapered body or proportioned fit to look ~ Hate ma DRESS PANTS Tailored by leading manufacturers to assure dad of comfort, satisfying wear and fashion. 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