™ ye PREP as « SFop erm aes prem .- | The Che Guardian ‘Cavers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Managing Editor : Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) at 165. Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.!.,-by Thomson Newspapers Ltd.” Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton * “and Souris Represented ‘nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertsing. Services: Toronto 425 University, Ave. Empire ,3-B894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver, MA 7037. Member Canadian Daily Newspaper. Publishers Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian. Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- lication of all news dispatches in. this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news published herein. All right or republication of special dispatches here- in also reserved. Subscription rate: Not over 40¢ per week by carrier. $12.00 « year by mai! on rural routes and areas not serwiced by carrier. $15.00 a year. off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year i U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth Not over 7c single copy. i Member Audit Bureau of Circulation strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1966. PAGE 4 Shameful Episode Speaking of the row that has rock- ed the Commons chantber during the past, few days, NDP Leader Tommy Douglas remarked that no. matter what happens from now on regarding the .case of Gerda Munsinger, the useftilness of Lucien Cardin as a jus- tice snjnister has ended. Certainly no commission of inquiry will meet the demands of the case if it does not ‘take'note of the behavior of the Lib- eral Cabinet in this matter, and of Mr: Cardin in particular. The minister told a press confer- ence; he first learned about the scan- dal when he was associate minister of defehse, a post he assumed in. April, 1963. Was it from the then justice minister, Mr. Favreau, that he receiv- ed word, or from whom? And why, if it! involved national security in- terests, was it allowed to lie dormant ~ for three years? If it was not worth investigating in 1963, did it suddenly become a matter of public interest when it could be used as a Liberal instrument of retaliation in a partisan vendetta? These are ugly questions; but so ‘are the accusations which gave rise to - them, and they should be inquired into with just as much thoroughness ‘as other aspects of the case:The gov- ernment, of course, will not submit to having. the inquiry broadened. in this : way But +he- public is holding its own. coufipf opinion on the matter. disgraceful scenes the House’ has ‘just witnessed, to hear the Prime Minister challenging the Opposition, saying that if you don’t like what we are doing you can vote us out and - hav@sinother election? What meaning there be to another election? two great parties fee] that wo If thy " going to the people after the display theyshave put on would bring either _of thm back with the gratitude and_ the 4pnfidence of the people, they delu themselves. With Canada’s Cenfpnnial Year only a matter of mo away, Parliament has’slither- ed i this morass of name-calling. - If ifedoes not recover itself—and quickty—then the country is seeing disisgfegration taking place before its eyes Féod Warfare Waged Last year there was an uproar “whe “news reports said the United States, was using ‘‘poison gas” against the ,Wiet Cong. U.S. Secretary of / Defense McNamara explained that the Z’ was actually a “Tiot-control age in common use by police around the world. The types of agent usedzgaused mild to severe irritation, lastiagg from 5 to 10 minutes. They did fot -kill, Mr. McNamara said. As;- Senator George Aiken commented at the time, “Ifthe report had said tear gas #as used, the world wouldn't have*#hought so much of-it.” _ Now Washington is blaming another misunderstanding over re- ports that U.S. Air Force planes are spraying chemicals on Viet Nam to kill the crops and deny: food to the Viet Cong. From universities and private citizens has come an outcry of moral indignation. In reply, Pen- tagon officials say the Spray does not spoil earth or trees for future growth, It kills crops.only for a limited time It has been used on 20,000 acres of ss cropland—1-3 of 1 per cent of all the cultivated land in South Viet Nam. Critics heatedly reply that it is morally wrong to use it, in any case. On the one hand, they argue. the United States is providing food for the Vietnamese. On the other. it is depriving them of food. What assur- ance is there, they demand, that only the Viet Cong will suffer? What about other Vietnamese living in sprayed areas? Officials say both -Viet ‘Cong and cht Sil = ile, asthe Montreal Gaz-_ : ette Sadly says, of what use was it; ami > ~ eral leadership- other residents of areas about to be , ' sprayed are warned in advance by - loudspeakers and leaflets dropped from planes. They are told to leave the area. Citizens are promised food and shelter if they do. Furthermore, they maintain that “war is war’* and that to deny food supplies to. the fare. The British used a similar sub- stance to fight Malayan Communists, they claim. In war, food is. just. as “much a weapon as rifles. Standard procedure for Americans and South Vietnameses is to hold back as much’ food as possible from the Viet Cong. Rut the critics are not appeased. — One of them—a New New York land- scape architect and Harvard graduate —was so incensed with the spraying that he went on a prolonged fast. That hasn’t brought the Pentagon to heel, though it is said to be sensitive on the subject, and-anxious to allay suspicions that the sprays:did lasting damage or caused harm to humans. N.S. Economic Goals Worth careful study by our local legislators is the first report, recently released, of the the Nova Sco’ ning Board, in which regional prob- lems very much like our own are dealt with constructively. An annual increase of 2,400 new jobs and a growth rate of new capital investment of percent are two of the objec- tives setNorth in the report, which -is to be updated hereafter at four-year intervals. Its - ¥ enemy is an accepted -part of -ware | Plan-* broad provincial: goals are | | | | j | similar to those called for on the * | OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Western Budget Examples Recomended he moonlights in the "role of Pro- | cian’s empire-building budget; ' ‘cers early provided they include | Vincial Treasurer, which is an- | the increase will predominant- | X-rays of the colon as well as national scale by the second annual -review of the Economic Council of Canada:. full employment, equitable distribution of income, high -rate of economic growth. The board agrees | with the ECC on the importance of education to achieve better economic conditions and has set up an advisory council which has made recommenda- tions. 7 The province lacks not only suf- ficient manufacturing industries but it is also short of semi-skilled and | skilled workers to fill the jobs new | industry “would create. Emphasis is placed on the fact that restrictive lending policies hurt the area more than wealthier parts of Canada and that special consideration Should be given on this account. eee Ty ,to achieve greater economic growth, _ Seconda ry, manufacturing industries. Industrial growth-centres provide the best way to encourage this develop- ment. Halifax-Dartmouth and the Sydney-Glace Bay districts are listed as centtes where industrial expansion should be emphasized in the next few years. The board calls for a total job in- crease of 13,600 by 1968, and would ’ like\to see a capital investment level of $380 million by the same year. |. What, No Applause? _. Saskatchewan's Liberal . Premier Ross Thatcher is said to have been “livid” when the news of Hazen ‘Argue’s appointment to the Senate reached him. Mr. Thatcher was in- censed at not having been consulted, or even told in advance, of Mr. Argue’s elevation. And a wyiter in the many Saskatchewan Liberals share his | feelings. They claim that the new senator—the former CCFer turned Liberal—had not done enough pen- ance to merft such an appointment. ' Also they say that if the appointment | had been announced before the recent provincial byelection. in. Bengough, . the Liberals would have been “slaugh- tered’’—instead Of winning, as a did. Nor is there any joy among West- ern Liberals over the appointment of " Harry Hays, the defeated minister of agriculture, to the Upper Chamber. It Seems they blame-him and-his-friends— | ‘for much of the party's ill fortune. in | November, on the grouind that Mr. | Hays is not a politician and does not | know how to talk to people. . elt: » fears were not unfounded. | _ What it boils down to, according to” _ this Winnipeg Liberal source. is that _ “as long.as prairie Liberals feel that they are ignored and neglected at Ottawa, and until. Ottawa gives | positive and continuing proof of a change of policy, there will Liberal resurgence on the Prairies. In fact. there is going to be no at- tempt at a resurgence or revival until there is a change in policy—and Lib- -at Ottawa. If the Lib eral national leadership were thrown ',open tomorrow, the Saskatchewan ye would not support - Mr. Pearson 'if he were running, but _ would be 100 per cent behind Robert Winters. with. Mitchell Sharp as | second choice.” = = A key factor in helping Nova Scotia | the report says, is~development—of- j | | j- | | Winnipeg Free Press reports that. be no | ! | hal leader—Hazen—Argue;— | t. -and = mail | day. 4 - Syptites et | ay Hh in} " vr a eT THE IDES OF MARCH _ Hon. Mitchell Sharp is now deeply involved in every Finance | Minister's annual problem. He is preparing his budget of federal taxes for the fiscal year start- ing on April 1. Mitch Sharp has asked Cana- dians to send him_ suggestions. “Ottawa Report’’ is pleased to help him, with very simple but constructive suggestion: ‘Go West, Mr. Sharp: visit western | Canada.to learn how provincial, Finance Ministers there can cut taxes while increasing welfare benefits." other name for Finance Minis- | ter. | PLEASE CUT TAXES | Mr. Sharp should sit at his | ‘feet and learn how - despite re-_| cord government spending one- | government spending, prosperity | had to give up my fifth higher than last year - he can still reduce the provincial income tax surcharge from 6 to | 5 per cent. Ross will also meet head-on the inequity and iniquity | of levying tax on tax; he will off-”| | set the burden of paying federal | income tax on the amount of mu- ly be spent for the benefit of the | beagle, on education, health and welfare. TO SPARK PROSPERITY Despite this huge increase in_ s0 booms in B.C. that Mr. Ben- | nett can cut taxes and yet bal-, ance his budget. He will move the 5. per’ cent Social Ser- vices Tax from restaurant meals, candy and soft drinks, newspapers and periodicals, and , school’ supplies. ’ examined. This is foolish because . ger the delay the more exten- He will also | ¥, Colorectal Cancers - By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen More than 76,000 persons de- velop cancer of the colon and rectum every year. Approxima- tely 42,000 of these men and wo- men will die, making the condi- tion second only to lung cancer (43,000) as a cause of death tics are more encouraging than they appear to be because the ans causing death. Everyone should he on alert for this malignancy cause the chance of survival is very good when detected early. The most common manifestation is a change in bowel 56 year old who had been regul- | ar all his life consulted his phy- j.sician because of constipation. This was a new experience for him. The passageway was par- tially blocked by a tumor. Other victims develop diar- rhea or pass blood or stools of a | smaller caliber. Many ariel | | constipation plus colicky abdom- | inal pain.—- signs of bowel ob- | struction. Weakness due to an- emia also suggests the possibil- ‘ity of a malignancy. , Bleeding should never be | blamed on hemorrhoids until the rectum and colon have been | fm | } examined thoroughly. ° polyps of the bowel become mal- ignant and many physicians ad. | from malignancies. These statis- | the quarters that Vice - President be- | Humphrey. Sunday signalled a | poliey shift when he suggested | habits. A | | Vise removal of these tumors as | a safety precaution.. Many wait too long before seeing their phy- sician because they are too em- barrassed to have the rectum. the ‘sive the operation and the great- er the chance. of not surviving. | It has been said that the smallest | cancer visible to the eye (\% | inch) has spent 70 per cent of its life span. By the time. symp- toms. develop it may be nearing. the 85 to 90 per cent mark Periodic examinations after 40 help to detect colorectal can- procoscopic and stool studies. | “ DAY SLEEPER | V. DeS. Writes: | on night nursing duty’: for 17 | | years but because of - ilIness 1 job. Now I cannot break myself of the hab- it of sleeping days and ‘staying Zestions on making this change | | work out? REPLY | Force yourself to stay awake during the day and if your pro- Specifically, Mr. -Sharp should | nicipal property tax by paying to |exempt from. real-property tax | blem is one of readjustment it meet his fellow-Liberal in Sask- atchewan. That sounds funny, but there are some iberals left among the Tory wheatfields of the Prairies, in addition to | former Conservative provincial | leader Hamie McDonald and former New~Democratie natio- —who~ are now of course, both sitting in the Senate - “Bs Liberals. ~~ Mitch Sharp’, should | Hon. Ross Thatcher, Liberal Premier of Saskatchewan, who was of course formerly a CCF . MP. Ross is a big man with a big mind and broad shoulders; | PUBLIC FORUM This column is open to the discussion by correspondents of questions of in terest. The Guardian does net neces sarily endorse the opinion of corres. pendents. All letters published are sub- dect to editing and condensation where Recessary. The Guardian is unable ts enter inte any correspondence regard ing letters submitted. PTO Ee TT OA eR LT TTT TEE ET I ‘CAR FERRY CROSSINGS SIR,—Several times this win- ter we have read where the car ferries ‘af Borden with very heavy ice, some cross- ings taking several hours. I won- der as one of the crew of the early twenties how many are left who made the crossing. in the winter of 1925, when we were 76 hours. going one way. We left Borden pier with passengers Saturday — morning, making good time until we near- ed Tormentine, and stuck fast. There we stayed until there was | a change of wind and we reach- ed Tormentine pier Tuesday afternoon, four days late. As one of the firemen of that time I re- call we shovelled coal and raked - fires on four-hour shifts many times on a slice of bread without butter. There was no time to zet washed or shaved and only half . enough sleep. Coal was hoisted from ‘the re- serve bunker and carted, to the stoke holes to keep the forced fires raging night and day, as the eats got low the master said as a last resort ‘Lower the ice boat and take the passen- gers ashore’. They had to walk _ over the blackened ice pans with the late Captain A.B. Paquet. go- ing ahead with a long pole. for safety, One of the crew we like tw mention was Robert McPherson, retired chief engineer. the finest man one could serve under. and that could not, be said for some of the others. The late J.L. Read was master and was very good but the stewards and the fond were rotten, especially to those of us who slaved.so hard. Any time we-visit, Borden now and see again that mighty old boat coming into the dock. we: . will recall that awful winter and several others wé served there, and wonder how the crews of today would Hke to work that’! |< way six weeks without ashore or getting a hair ett or shave. On and on, night’ and for a regular-monthly che que of ‘less. than a hind red bucks! -Forty-one years have come ~ and gone since that-winter and I have never read of any others like it; since. If any of my ole buddies .of that day are around yet and read this, it will churn their memory again © IT am; Sir. etc __ Charlottetown, — | -plates._ There too. he_will find a talk? wy were slowed. | and , getting § every home-owner a grant of $50 | or half his property tax, which- ever is less. Then Mr. Sharp should go fur- ther west, to our boomingest and most favoured province - ‘Beautiful British ~Columbia”’ it is called-on its car licence hard - working premier also the Finance ‘lio. “Credit: cere , wearing his? other hat as Minister of Finance, has in- creased his government's pro- poséd spending over last year by one-fifth, a record jump for B.C. which matches the increase in prosperous Saskatchewan. And | | Bermettland, like Thatcherland will also enjoy tax cuts. “The tremendous increase in | government ‘expenditure _ this year on behalf of the people of British Columbia is by far the ‘largest in any one year in our province's history,’’ Mr. Bennet told me. This is not a politi For A’ That handl- | all non-profit organizations work- ing for the community. — The home-owner grant, com- , parable to Ross Thatcher's new kick-back, was introduced in B.C. | by Mr. Bennett nine years ago. | This. year it will’ be increased | from $100 to $110 per home -ow- ner. The economists are advising | Mr. Sharp to cut federal taxes too, to—stimulate—the- economy | atid “to felp create jobs for our out-of-work and especially for this year’s school leavers. Dr. Firestone has urged that income | taxes should be reduced iby at | least as much as last year’ s elec- | tion-bait cut. Mr. Sharp's fede- | ral spending estimates are only | two per cent above last year; if | those two western provinces can | increase their spending by | twenty per cent and yet cut tax- es while planning a small sur- plus, surely Mr. Sharp can. give federal taxpayers some tax re- let too? Manchester Guardian sent a touching and disarming reply to Mr. Emrys Hughes, the Labor member for South Ayr- shire, who reminded the former Prime Minister in verse the oth- er day that the Wilson Govern- / ment had made good an omis- sion of the Macmillan Govern- ment by publishing a R o bert Burns commemorative stamp. sent to Mr. Macmillan went: “For a’ that, and a’ that, It’s come at last, for a’ that, You'll see him on postage stamps, Weve honored him for a’ that.” Mr. Macmillan has now. re- plied: ‘‘Many thanks for the Mr. Harold, Macmillan” has. |, poem, for which T am grateful. | I must congratulate you on your triumph over the Burns stamp. | I miss you all very much, and — | one of the things I miss most is | | is little skirmishes at question ime.’ ae Macmillan, a Scot who sat | for an English seat, and Mr. Hu- ghes, a Welshman sitting for a | Scottish seat, are both well Scotland. It appears that Mr. Macmillan as Prime Minister, would have | liked to issue a Burns stamp. but. was over-ruled by his Post: . master- General at the time, Mr. Ernest Marples, who is an_ un- Scottish as ao could be. _ Automated Potatoes? Toronto Dr. Herman Tiesson, a Uni- versity of Guelph professor, warns that tomato growers face extinction unless they automate by employing mechanical har- vesters. Increasing labor. short age-is-the- reason. why.. tomato growers will have to turn_to au- | tomatibn. aan With mechanical harvesting, one major problem ‘exists, the ability of researchers to find a variety of tomato that wil] adapt to automatic picking. The shortage of labor during the to- mato picking season in Essex County has long been a_ prob- | Jem and it is no. secret it will not improve with industry and construction paying high Waeen for manpower. Tomato varieties Fe en POLITICIAN’S NIGHTMARE In stony silence, features grim. I stood and waited, facing him (A high Court Justice of the land Who held my future in his hand) With apprehension and dismay I listened to him sternly’ say, “Nat for treason, theft or mur- der, now grown se Rut for having lunch with Gerda WALTER |) BRIEN Guilty!" a Robert Grindlay, MLA wee Telegram in Ontario, and especially Essex County, do not lend themselves to picking machines. The tas} | facing research experts is to d- velop such a variety, but t hi: will cost money and the senio: governments -must provide more \ financial assistance than at pre- sent. _ Currently, only $15,000 is beine spent annually in Ontario for such research, compared to hun- dreds of thousands in the United States. Agricultural officials at the senior. government levels should be impressed with’ the importance of this-research and the vital role it could play in our economy. GAME HAS HISTORY The English game of darts was fashionable at the 13th cen- | tury court of King Henry II. ASK FOR _MAPLE LEAF BAKERIES Hot Cross Buns 759c per doz. should be complete in a week. If -not, look for some other cause of your insomnia: ~ = JAW LOCKING FE. T. writes: Is there any way to prevent the jaws from locking when I yawn? REPLY Stifle the yawn as much as | manding Officer possible. Meanwhile, consult an érthopedic. specialist to find out whether the-capsule-surrounding— board the Algerine escort’ ve this joint can be strengthened.. HMCS New Liskeard ane at SHOULDER PROBLEM |, Jane writes: I am 15 years old and have big, square shoul- | ders for a girl. Could they ‘be made small and round through an operation? REPLY No, but don’t be concerned. soon you will grow upto your | shoulders. nie RUPTURED VEIN Mrs. E. writes: What should be done when a vein breaks and no doctor is available? REPLY | caution No Sofianing By 19 MacKenzie f Canadian Press Staff, Washington ~ £ WASHINGTON (CP) — Any]: The format has been consist- softening of United States pol- |iey toward China {s more ap- parent 'than‘real. The basic objectives remain the same: Military containment of China and continued resist- ; ance to China’s admission to the United Nations. Even a_ two-China policy ruled out despite evidence that | within a year or two China—if | outlook for colorectal cancers’ ig,,,she wishes — can get enough | much better than those develop- |-votes: to be seated in the UN. ing in the first nine leading or- This analysis is general here — despite assumptions in some “containment without necessar- | ily isolation.” A major element in American | is consistent Chinese | belligerency to such initiatives. SPURNS BRANCHES | Small olive branches have | ‘been spurned consistently in the | past. In 1958, in. what was -an American policy shift, China + rejected an offer for exchanges | of news representatives. More such American offers | have been made and probably | will. be raised again today. at the 129th meeting of Ameri- can and Chinese ambassadors at Warsaw. The ree In the first 10 months of its operation, New York City’s Am- erican Hotel lost 38,000 demi- tasse spoons, 18,000 towels, 533 silver coffee pots, 15,000 silver : Our Yesterdays | (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY -FIVE YEARS AGO (March 16, 1941) Rev. J.S. Bonnell, minister of | Fifth Avenue’ Presbyterian Church in New York, said he is going to Britain shortly to aid in | some way the start of a spiritual | | |union of English speaking na- I have been | re-| | up all night. Have you anv sug- | | vale, tions which would be headed by | Britain and the United States. The Royal Air Force and the raiders of the Nazi Reich mat- ched agressiveness during the weekend, but the recently accel- erated pace slackened off, ap- parently because of the fog. TEN YEARS AGO (March 16, -1956) It was announced that Mr J. Leo McGinn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel McGinn of. Emy- | P.E.1., and student in Sen- jor Arts at St. Dunstan's College was the year's winner of the Christ the King Cultural Founda- tion Scholarship at that institu- tion. It was reported that Com- mander John N. Kenny, Com- : -When-~a..vein_ruptures- in. the | bes, for example, cover | bleeding site with a bandage and apply pressure over the | spot with a thumb. TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— Coffee should not be drunk in: excess. = (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr. Theodore | Van Dellen, co ovsigag Trib- | une, Chicago, Mlinois.) : WAS DEPUTY AIR CHIEF | TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)—Atr The lines which Mr. Hughes | qualified to be sentimental about. Force Lt.-Gen. Chen Yu-wel, 54, 'one of the three deputy chiefs i of the Chinese Nationalist gen- | eral staff, died Monday after a | heart attack. A native of the mainland China province of Hu- nan, he was deputy commander- in-chief of the Chinese National- | ist Air Force between 1963 and 1965. iE POOH OO OOO ? Business Men’s 3 LUNCH ; Served Daily 75¢ : Dow's Restaurant @ Corner Pownal & Grafton St. < \'- © Charlottetown Tooees eee" DRY CLEANING Prompt Pick Up and Delivery Master Cleaners 122' Fitzroy oe. - Dial 4563 Poor Tit IPRUN é nel Let us design your let- terheads,. bill heads, brochures; Call us for all your printing needs. GUARDIAN-PATRIOT the | : ' and AL Home Made Bread. | ; C E N eo L ag a dad 4ue : P R i N R Y or " “832 a WE even |||. PHONE’ cases of HMCS,. was” taking | training = Queen” Charlotte,” one month's sea Halifax. : en if It's Fish and can -be caught "WE HAVE IT" Fresh Frozen Cured Fish QUEEN ST. MEAT |. MARKET 223 Queen St. ‘Dial 4-7336 | is j | the | communism took over in 1949. Toward China ent in the*sterile talks—Chinese insistence that the U.S. abandon Formosa and U-S. refusal to do 80. The US. recently offered non- reciprocal entry for ‘Chinese news representatives, plus pass- | ports for China-bound doctors, or students and writers: China | has refused entry to American doctors previously. The U.S. conviction is that any | genuine and. extensive thaw must await further develop- ments. Humphrey said Sunday in-a television interview that “‘in | the meantime we ought to main- tain as best we can a spirit of | friendship toward the Chinese people but recognizing what the regime is and making that re- gime understand they cannod achieve their purposes by mili- tary power.’ A VOLATILE “ISSUE China remains a volatile {s- sue in the U:S. But there is a public exami- nation of China in Congress and press unprecedented since President Johnson has said through aides that he welcomes this public education process about the country of 700,000,000 people. Among Us bowls and 100 bibles, among other things, according to a New York report. The director of catering for, the Waldorf- Astoria reports that | hotel's silver replacement bill for a year is $100,000 and that “If we have a banquet for 1,000 we can figure on losing 700 de- -mitasse spoons.” | The high figures may picbiaa: but the fact of ‘swiping’ (so much nicer than | stealing’) from hotels and public places of all sorts is not surprising. It is done in this country by some people who would no more admit to being thieves than they would to being murderers. There seems to ‘be a _ wide- spread feeling that visitors te hotels and restaurants are entit- - led to souvenirs, .as if ashtrays, silver or towels to take home were included in the cost a the | Koom. . Pedple whic steal from hotels are not much different from _ those who, instead of taking things, merely break them. The general lack of respect for prop- erty (other than one’s own) is appalling. It is -evident in peo- Ble who carelessly throw away | cigarette butts in buildings and in- people who take pencil or nail file and mindlessly deface a wall or door.> a People are funny, it is said. But sometimes it's hard to laugh. SSoLsoesesese, Oils Stove Fuel ‘Burner - Service A complete steck of furnace parts on hand. Your Shell Agent for Charlottetown, Parkdale, ~ Sherwood and Eastern P. EB. _J.W. Skinner | Dial 4-4044 NF NOTICE! INCREASE IN INTEREST RATES Effective_Jan uary_1, 1966 CURRENT ACCOUNT SAVINGS | @ Interest payable quarterly on minimum quarterly : Ns * @ Accounts " opened by the 20th of the month earn interest from th first of the month. @ Money can be deposit. ed or. withdrawn at any time ... in perso’ or by mail. THE : MAJOR TRUST COMPANY PRINCE EDWARD ; 57 Queen St: (the Hyndman Bldg.) Charlottetown ISLAND, CANADA Hours 9 - 5 Daily — Closed Saturday 894-4910 t4tti eek &: