A._,_ 4'.’ rom oc If a sn- . V ‘.2 or « I » ' ' 1‘ .f!n¢'-Vlhsn ' COLORADO seamen. Colo. ~si:y_ishie!d III while igh1ii:Ilv‘all were siionosea to he. '.'PCP-AP!-Mock air battles that emit planu raged at supersonic speeds over gfroryi the air from 3’ P. me North American conthient Min!!! 8730 inn 3 s. , - Officials" say each of the ‘Sky- along the ' shield operations has’ led ‘to de- l ' ' ried out the grim make-believe, warfare sunday in operation éleared Ityas -the oiihr report of mu ' ' s ' «trill. . . - NORAD estimated 3,000 sorties rth of . A C s ' ......».i.n.i..n'~«ea;;imi;..f.: astmg Benefit Seen ti ‘ ‘ not related "in: " I .aIciviiinnT I at Eversltidcs. 8. lined during the Inn-military aircraft as a‘i\ Wm be of lasting benefit to de-: It was the Lhird: time in ‘as —s_ingle plane, flights —- were enders of the United States and many years that N.ORAD'rhas flown. !itiire.,;t_han 800 AD particri :anad,_ says en,‘ matched its intricate defences uflitg; nwvg,-9,_-':atgt;ve, ; 'nt'.smwdrg:s serhmm com]-nande;-.15-chief of éagainst‘ a simulated aggressor electronic déteétlpn C _ __ps‘~'qn.‘.'-took blfl. he North American Air e. employing fleet bombers ‘and the Distant -Eurlgvwamin ,-Al_iie.‘. -Mi pm-e Command.. ‘mythical intercontlnentlal ballis- ..and-t.he,C_anadl‘an-operat .-in -Y,/‘l. you More than Lilli aircraft car- tit‘ missile ‘ ’ ' Canada Andi‘-‘the Pine-tried of RCAF intercep.or raw estimates were -that; mercial flights in the lines, United S_tates.were cancelled or ; lems inent. 'ilelaypdi‘aloug_ with 130 in Can- -ada -a_hd 31 of foreign airlines. Paints Benefits .. 4.:-otguwing Britain In ECM ‘ . I-‘ v . _L?¢V.DPNj‘_R€|1t.¢i'§? -~ Prime‘. Macmillan w as answering M'1_nIsta_r. Macmillan here gfhe fionirnoiivqealtli would bene- iflt if,_ ritain. were "more and more’ at centre’ of world affairs -'.~mber‘of the European Coirulpon Market. ’ ' of both the US. and Canada. ted; including five‘ questions in a radio interview about the prospects for ,Comi-noowealth prime ministers‘ conference opening here Mon- ‘_ day. He said “Britain. by entering urope . . . will give the thing that most of all affects the Commonwealth: The power to take some part—and I hope a ;leading part—Int he great prob-' of the world which still' centre in the sensitive areas of Europe. Russia and so forth." [*1 MR. HEATH. Miicqimniiir Parliainentary Assistant to the Minister of External Affairs will speak over crcY- TELEVISION I I rooms PM. TO 6.15 PM. " inunsniy, gm. sin: . A sp9_Eiiij"n:ln._salsi; ._ men at ‘S -V... ... -‘-s. '9. Special Téleevisidngg people still preach: Macmillan- “Some isolationlsm here." and what was the result? Four. years of the most terrible war. in my youth." . STAYED OUT AGAIN “Well, then we rather kept. out a second time. And what: happened? Six years of terrible. war. Twice Europe has tornf herself apart. and who's been brought in? The Commonwealth. ‘ , “From all over the distant. (parts of the world, they have; Icome to help. But thcy’ve had‘ no say. And we’ve not had events. 1 think it's to iiiei benefit of the Commonwealth that we should more and, decisions." Macmillan said Common-| wealth life depends on British’ power. This would be strength-V ened by joining the Common} Market. . He said that if he thought the market were going to be selfishf and inward-looking. then Britain‘ would not want to join. fin.’ Next to your own special skill, the most important ingredient in your pickles is the vinegar you use. the best! Use Canada Vinegar for guaranteed madeinyourownregion.'_- I _ 4’ \VHlTl—APPL£p_lDlR‘—MIIi;T V I. -, _in suits. Bombs and Ja_rs}_. ‘ I purity . . . full-bodied strength. . . . aged-in-woiid ‘ H flavour. Ganada‘Vinega_ri costs less, too _i__t’s -... ifgghjgiiihan ever! * . The pains and the pride you take in pickling ' ' v v p -i& ‘ . 5‘; flznuuan-é ' ti-un- said. “We were isolated in 1914: ‘ sufficient ally in the questions‘ which brought about those greatv ' t l 1 If wo ‘West Germany and France can 1 P ‘ hat ‘ Canadian-U.S. E ephemeral. i to anything @112 fiuarrlfgettt me £ECOND sncrsou Charlottetown, Thurs. Sept. 6, 1982. Page 9 l imore at the centre of these‘ Over 500 persons took ad- vantage of the fine weather last Sunday afternoon to en- joy an outing and a country lawn dinner served at Crom- well, formerly the Goff estate. I COUNTRY LAWN BA.RBECUE HELD cellcnce of the meal which combined with pi:-turcsque surroundings made an enjoy- able event for the closing of . the summer season. Mr. Dor- ! near Cardigan. Many compli- - ments were extended to th e host, R. J. Dorgan for the ex- gan has also begun restora- tion of the estate and it is ex- pcctcd "Cromwell" will soon become a well known tourist. ' attraction. Mr. l)or;:au also stated that lhl‘0ll.'Zll the experi- ence gained from this first venture he hopes to be able to hold several such events dur- ing the summer months. He was assisted by ladies of the community. M a j o r Ramsay and son Wayne as well as sev- .OFFSET SEEN TO COMMON MARKET 1 l By HAROLD MORRISON WASHINGTON ICPl -— Two of Canada's leading industrial- ists havc d ' Elimina- tion of tariffs between Canada and the United States to offset the impact of Europe's Com- mon Market and help speed Canada‘s economic growth. “blood enemies" get tog e l h e r. “then heaven knows the people of the friend- liest two nations in the world should be able to work out some plan to get together." said Wil- iliam E. Williams. president of ;Procter and Gamble of Canada. J Douglas W. Ambridgc. prcsi- {dciit of Abitibi Power and Pa- Company Limited. addcd fears the Canadian manu- facturers would suffcr from any economic union largulv ghost tears- :l‘hcy don't amount ‘are instancc. take our own Amhridize addc in _ "For K industry." the two copyrizzht interviews. recorded at Toronto and car- ried in the current issue of U.S. News and World Report an Amcricaii weekly magazine. INDUSTRY SHELTERED ‘‘If we tore up the tariffs on paper. all kinds of paper. 9- tween Canada and the U.S.. it is quite true that the American paper industry would be able to put paper into Canada. It is equally true that we could ship paper into the U.S. and com- pete very easily with the Amer- ican industry which has been shcltcrcd by this great big tar- iff wall on fine papers." Ambridgzo said he would like to go farther than a Canadian- U.S. customs union. He would like to see it develop into a ‘\'orth American common mar- ket with Mexico brought in as wcl. ' sugges e. “would also be a magnet which mizht draw all the South Amer- ican statcs evcntually into a western hemisphere Commo Tariff Elimination Urged Between Canada And U.S. Market. instead of following Cuba into exile. for instance.“ Canada would benefit because ."we would have access to a tremendous market." Ambridge added. “We are quite capable of competing in almost any- thing there is in the U.S.. but the existence of a tariff keeps lmvn." Williams said Canada would 5 ’Il —. have an advantage in ll customs‘ union with the U.S. because of lower ian ' rates combined with higher labor of- ficicncy. CITES DETERRI-INT “Thc only thing that doters Canadian industry from doing better than it does is the age- old problem of small popula- tion. limited markcts and small runs. . . There is no reason win’. given a market 180000.000 people. Canadian industry couldn't do well." Williams dded. eral of the students from class- es at Georgetown High School. "This came out in a Regina newspaper in 1947. I thought it _was the smartest thing I ever read on the subject. It said. in effect. if we're not smart enough to have an open border with a market of 180000.000 people. and if we can't "make a [living out of those 180000.000 lpeople. then we don't deserve ;to survive as a nation." I Williams maintained that the ‘natural lines of communication 3 in North America run north and - south "and the politicians have made them run east and west." 3 Neither Williams nor Am- bridge favored following eco- nomic union by political union. Execution Held In Gas Chamber SAN QUENTIN. Calif (AP) Lawrence Garner was executed Tuesday In the. California gas chamber for a double killing that ended a wedding party of criminals. During his last. days of life. Garner tried vainly to be granted a one-hour meeting with his wife in prison. then settled r a 15-minute good-bye over the telephone. Garner was condemned for shooting down In the San Ber- nardino desert Richard Lea Nowlen. 30. an escaped convict who was on his way to be mar- ried in Las Vegas. Nev., and tha bride-to-be. Mrs. Hurley Skeno. 28. divorced Los Angcles nar- cotics paroles. I I Sizes 6 to 18 Disc. From Girls‘ DRESSES ‘C: .5? =' _ Boys‘ ,’ SPORT COATS Sizes 6 to 16 Reg. to $ 15.95 DISC -88 Sizes 3 to 14X Disc. Price From STAR CLOTHING'S .. lfififillfl DISC. PRICE VINYL Garment Bags 99‘ I DISC. PRICE MEN'S QUALITY SPORT GOAT Harris Twceds. Chinillas, 100"; wools all to go at this low. low price. Why pay more . . . I30 ‘sure and get yours early. Sizes 35 16. 14.88 l EB LADIES’ CANVAS SHOES Fair 50° TOWELS “".L;..¥“” 88c pr. MEN'S TIES mas. mo en. 89: STAR CLOTHING ltd. ‘I02 Queen Street Charlottetown t I I I r i 9'35"? is‘-"Tii 5 ~'E§;s.<.2 l as