Sale 15.00 & 20.00 Men's Dress Pants, to 10.95. Sale 3.99 &.5.95 Men's Dress and Sport Shirts, to 5.95. Sale 1.69 2 for 3.00 Boys’ Dress Pants, to 7.95. . Sale 2.49. & 3.49 Men's Suits,.2 pairs of pants, reg. 39.50. Sale 29.50 Boys' Jackets, to 7.95. Sale 2.99 & 3.99 Men’s Men’s SHORTS & TOPS WORK SOCKS 49e -39¢ Men’s Leather Palm Men’s —— ORK GLO Rubber gs VES / SHOES 49e 3.95. Sale 2.49 ‘ tie = petal pink " eanary yellow sky blue ocean green GIVE AWAY SALE eres Cea ea Trane ee ee Vaiue to 49.50. Ladies’ Spring Coats. Newest materials. 2 R | x and television advertising. mandation of the Canadlan Ae |pooed that Ge exhedute ef af. ae Wotuasday in tho réfanee sf. aoa |in eMlect, wil allow. stations fo \enly tatwee attanioht cen Onan z ulatio regulations that will go into ef-/carry longer advertising mes- and that a lower advertising col- eg ns fect next Monday, June 1. |Sages during eveniog hours, tent ™ allowed in the evening re : . The regulations contain only a| SAME AT ALL TIMES ’ _ Thours 4m. to midnight. | OTTAWA (CP)—The board of few changes a the _ Seventies content will ya me neko ee is unchanged, broad ernor: ing’ | board issued and on} between seconds on a however, allowable commer- ; ae ae which it heard representations at/minute program and seven min-|cial content from what was pro- . PF | public hearings earlier this|/utes on an hourlong broadcast, | posed in the draft regulations and fete broadcasters, has relaxed | month. : at all broadcasting periods. [from what existed before the c its regulations on radio} The board accepted @ recom-| Originally, the board hac pre-|BBG took over last autumn as is the regulatory power for all Cana- i 4|adian public end private broad- j The board, by making no fur- ; ther changes in its advertising regulations, in effect turned down e S representations from the CAB which had asked for wider BUY SAVE Tweeds, sealskin, etc. 19.99 & 24.50 Value to 49.50. One Ladies’ Suits. Wool worsted and tweeds. All‘new mater- ials. Sale $15. - $20; ‘Ladies' Car Coats. Assorted fabrics. Values ot 12.95. Sale 4.95’ & 6.95 One-rack of children's coats, Suits. Boys’ Coat Sets. 3.00 & 5.00 Just arrived. Large assort- ment of Ladies’ Cotton Dresses. Glazed cotton and Drip N' Dry. 3.95 to 6.95 PILLOW CASES STORE HOURS: FRIDAY 9 to 9:30 P.M. SATURDAY 9 to 5 P.M. THE GREENDAL CO. LTD. 0 of M0 tA choose Ballet! You can see the pastel shades you want through the dainty cellophane wrapper. And you'll discover the new Ballet Tissue combines the two most wanted features in a toilet tissue—softness and firmness, For luxury quality without a luxury price tag— SYDNEY (CP)—The Dominion Coal Company is preparing a new application to the Dominion coal board for a loan to build a wash plant at Sydney, General Man- ager H. C. M. Gordon announced Tuesday. , The application calis for a plant of coal in a 16-hour period. The first bid by the company was rejected last month by the coal board. Dosco requested $5,- 846,000 to build a plant capable of processing 22,000 (ons in & The board rejected the original loan on the grounds that the com- pany’s future market and opera- : | PICK JURY .(cP)—A salesman you can | employ---a GUARDIAN - PATRIOT WANT AD | Phone 8506 a — Flying Boxcars Not Acceptable OTTAWA (CP) — Army brass bowed to the wishes of Newfound- land militia men who refused to fly in C-119 Flying Boxcars. The resulta was higher costs and crit- icism from Auditor-General Wat- son Sellar. @ vai In the summer of 1957, the eee I ae Fe Commons pffblic accounts eom- mittee was told Wednesday, the 118 members of the 166th Field Regiment was to have been flown from St. John’s, Nfld., to the ar- tillery camp at Petawawa, Ont., for less than a week's training. E. B, Armstrong, assistant dep- uty defence minister, said the army planned to use two C-119 freight - type aircraft fitted with bucket seats. But the men re fused to fly in them and drew sympathy from their command- ing officer and the general of- ficer commanding the Eastern Command. WOULD HAVE SAVED Two Super Constellation air-a craft had to be chartered in- stead. The cost went up to $29,- 140. Mr, Sellar noted in his 195 report ‘that $7,000 would have been saved by use of the C-119s though the flight would have been less comfortable. j Dayid Walker ‘PC — Toronto Rosedale) said the cost involved, compared with average costs of transporting militia men, seemed to be “fantastic.” Art Smith (PC—Calgary. South) who flew with the RAF in the Second World War said that fly- ing at high altitudes in C-119s fit- ted with bucket seats would make it “difficult to survive, let alone enjoy ordinary comforts.” LORNE VALLEY Mr. and Mrs. Angus Nicholson and Mr. and Mrs. Roy MacLeod were visitors to Georgetown, on Sunday. Miss Joan MacGrath, Charlotte- town, spent the past week-end with her parents, Mr. and M8;. C.M. MacGrath. Mr. James Callaghan has re- turned home from the Chariotte- town Hospital. Miss Sandra Ferguson and Master Douglas Ferguson, Monta- gue, spent a recent week-end with their uncle and aunt, Mr. Russell _McAulay and Miss Marion McAulay. Mr. and Mrs. John Creed a while | day. Lorne Valley on Sunday, : us here they were guests of Mr. and | Mrs. Earle MacDona'd. 24h. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Myers with | that Lorne Valley on Sunday. | ents, Grath on May 24th. Island to spend their with relatives and friends. While | of the formers parents, Mr. and| sister | oy MacLeod. and | ville”, Mr. MacLeod: atso~ hol- and Mr. Shaw. A.M. | only Mr. Ted Mellish, Union Road, | departmental was a Sunday guest of Mr. and | powerful icebreakers and special Mrs. Munro MacGrath on May supply ships, and 20 chartered |freighters and tankers. In addi- Mr. Fred MacLeod. Bonshaw, |tion, more than 130 landing craft recently spent a few doys at his /will be used to get the“vast quan- almost OTTAWA — More than 80,000 |tons of supplies will be taken to Mr. Lioyd MacDonald was a far northern ports of call in the visitor to Montague on Friday. |department of transport’s annual ie | Arctic-——supply—operations, family of Sturgeon, motored to|department announced Wednes- year's former home in Lorne Valley. jtities of cargo ashore at points without children Dianne and Donald of ‘ave no docking or cargo hand- New Perth, visited relatives in ling facilities of any kind. | The transport department con-| unloading points are beset by Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crane |voys will operate from Quebec son Lea. Bangor, were Sun-|to Hudson Strait, Hudson Bay, - guests of a Crane's par-|Foxe Basin, Baffin Island DEW Mr. and Mrs. C.M. Mac- Line sites north of the Arctic re |Circle, and up the East coast of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Nicholson, Baffin Island to Cornwallis and Toronto, Ontario, motored to the Ellesmere Island with supplies vacation destined for the remote Canad- ion-U.S. Weather Stations. in Lorne Valley they are guests YEAR’S SUPPLY The department's most power- | Mrs. Angus Nicholson, and his ful icebreaker, C.G.S. “‘d'Iber- will leave the main north- nol- | ern convoy -at Resolute, on Corn- son’s sister, Mrs. Donald Shaw | wallis Island. sail to Eureka; 730 miles from the undertaking will be carried out by a fleet of 13 vessels, WITH THE minister of transport ,ply operations were planned are, | lis’; Capt. George Hees, right) during the|from left: Capt. M. Gagne, C.G.|‘‘Labrador”’; Capt. C.A. Caron, headquarters meeting at which|S. ‘“‘Montcaim’’; Capt. F.A. Ger- the department’s 1959 Arctic sup-| main, C.G.S. ‘Edward Cornwal- 13 VESSELS OPERATING Arctic Ports Will 80,000 Tons Of Pole, with a full year’s supplies for that weather station. Cargo for Alert, 300 miles from the Pole, will be taken: by C. G. S. “Labrador” and a_ chartered cargo vessel to Thule, Green- land, and will be flown from there to its destination at the northernmost tip of Ellesmere Island. More. than 1,050 men will be taken north, in addition to the regular crews of the ships, by air and by sea to help get ashore the shiploads of supplies, including vast quantities of bulk and drummed fuel oil, diesel oil and gasoline. Their task will not be easy, for many of the Arctic the imeluding exception drifting ice, even in August, and in the more northerly regions the shipping routes may be covered at points with icefields miles ia extent and up to 10 feet thick. The ships taking part in the transport department operations have to carry all necessary equipment for landing their car- goes. In many instances, partic- ularly where the design and equipment of barges and land- ing craft are concerned, the de- partment’s wealth of experience North about the development of hulls J. Cuthbert, C.G.S. ““d’Iberville”’; C.G.S. C.G.S. Capt. G. S. Burdock, Receive Supplies and machinery specially suited to Arctic work. LABRADOR FIRST First ship to go north will be ee “Labrador”, which leav- es Montreal on June 25. On June 27, C.G.S. “C.D. Howe’’ and the icebreaker CGS. “N.B. Me- Lean” will head northward, the former with 30 ports. of call to visit. The remaining ships will leave within the following thi weeks. Specially designed as an Arctic supply ship, and with a reinfor- ced hull to permit her to work to some extent in ice, C.G.S. “C.D. Howe” does the main freighting to Eskimo villages and trading posts of the Hudson Bay region and the Baffin coast. She= also carries misionaries, traders, R.C:M.P. officers and representatives of the federal departments of health and wel- fare and northern affairs and national resources, who adminis- ter the law, and care for health and welfare of Eskimos and other. residents of the far north. Four of the department's ships carry helicopters used in ship- to-shore operations and in ice re- connaissance. The latter job. is up operations when ice fields are |duled for Arctic voyages , just completed meetings in Ot mer plans. CBC Breaches _Copywright a or iice: Cream Corn » oz 5 for 1.00 etter buys In ) BETTER Ta Kernel Corn ic. 5 for 1.00 | \s@ aay | Diced Beets +’: 6 for 1.00 MAPLE LEAF SHANKLESS . Diced Carrots 0: 6 for 1.00 “ PICNICS 39° MAXWELL HOUSE—LARGE 6 OZ. INSTANT .|| COFFEE -::: 99° SPARE RIBS_ 5 lbs. 65c rou QUALITY BEEF SUNKIST SWEET HE MANTLE ONY aoe wine OF ||| GRAPEFRUIT @ for GO° RED BRAND BEEF—TRY IT! GRAPEFRUIT 3 SILVER | SEAL QTs. $ .00 QUALITY : SWEET DOZ. JUICY A REAL C | SUNKIST BUY Ir Congratulations TO ON THE OPENING OF ANOTHER “FINE MARKET FOR THE ISLAND CONSUMING PUBLIC, * sonyon aa is Holmon's Foodland Re alll andien all ans 7a) ola on (6) > SHOP BES 4 an AQ? TOILET TISSUE | From Big Bear Capt. J.M. Desrosiers, . C.GS. “C.D. Howe”; Capt. R. Man chand, C.G.S. “Ernest Lapointe” and Capt. W. Dufour, C.G.S., “‘N. “Saurel”; iB. MacLean”. extensive. ‘ In preparation for the northern supply project, the departmeni . of transport’s ship captains sche have to co-ordinate their tawa eum: OTTAWA (CP) — The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Wednes- day that the CBC in April, 1953, breached a copyright owned bs Circle Film Enterprises Incorpo rated of Hollywood, Calif.. by leasing a film from an American wanted at that time by police on fraud charges. A unanimous judgment signed by five judges reversed an Ex: 3 chequer Court decision dismiss ing a claim by the Circle Com pany for damages for infringe ment of copyright. However, the court ruled thai the $21,000 damages chaimed by | Circle were excessive and or dered that the CBC pay to Circle the amount of the fee i. paid to Lawrence A. Lambert, then gen- eral manager of International Religious and Educational Films of Hollywood. The CBC was unable to provide immediately the, amount it paid i Lambert. The action arose after the OBC in April, 1953, had telecast from . its Toromto and Montreal studios an English.- language religious film entitled Oalvary. The Circle I a damage actiof in the Ex chequer Court on grounds that i was ‘the owner of the copyright. It said the CBC obtained 8 copy of the film from Lambert, whom it described to the Ex chequer Court as a fugitive from justice. The company also based ita case on’ grounds that the CBC neglected the precaution of mak- ing a search of the copyright of- fice to see who was the owner of the copyright. Boy Rescued GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) A three-year-old boy was rescued from a 250 - pound bear at the city 200 Tuesday by a teen-ager Jiwho jammed a glowing cigaret against the beast’s nose. The animal qyickly released its grip on the hand of Russell Van- | Dam. | The boy had crawled under a guard rail and thrust his hand through a two - inch m screen ‘into the bear’s cage. Thomas Cole, 19, rushed to the cage, reached through the screen, and burned the bear's tender | nose. : | Russell was treated at a how ~ |pital and kept overnight for ob- servation. His condition was re- ported good Wednesday. Junior A Hockey Change Proposed DETROIT (CP)—A change in \the junior A hockey situation in |Eastern Canada was proposed |and approved at the annual con- | vention-of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association here Wednes- | day, when it was resolved that Ottawa - Hull junior Canadiens must compete in an organized |junior league within its own branch to qualify for Memorial Cop. competition. ~ The Ottawa valley and province lof Quebec likely will go, ahead ,with plans to form respective .circuits of junior A calibre. Intimation was that the Ottawa- Hull team will disband and play- ers will wind up with various re- gional teams, ! ; FAMOUS CASTLE Largest castle in the world, Windsor Castle in England has been a royal residence for nearly 900 years.