gut; dim-ly married couple. in-. nu mc 9" Mrs. Laken Lewis. A large crowd attended and they received many beautiful gifts. also money. Monday, June 10. 1957 The Guardian Page 3 Submarine Sled Alds 5fudy OI Facts OI Lake Trout Life trunauaadnadinaalthamla-dd.Union.weuraeeat utes. meeting adjourned. Mr. and Mn. Go.-do. Weekend visitors here included: York. garbara Dunsford. Marjorie p The C. G. l. 1'. held a banquet perguson. Audrey Thompson, s.d.ptn York Hall on Saturday, June Pledgedlq To Abolish All I ' . le Macfadygn, 341-. Ind M". Rem, V lst for their mothers. This was ro ean ra e arrlers - M M-mm -- -- - - - u Canadian Press Staff Writer "sum. lake chains in. Pom the scripture Plunge ds- Mn N?” Robmson and Mr. and I ..... ...:s:.m ”.l?1”"'"::. ”' ”"":.':.': ...... ..'::-'-”.:::'.":'" "..2:::::..'.".' ";:'"'""'":.':..”:.:.'..”:.2:'.':r... 5:21:-..i1:.::”t:l::.: CHANGE 9' "ME PRESTON GROVEB Cheap German automobiles and expected to include all the III I e ove e of W ' - 3” "'89 V0 ' 0 I pAlTlS (AP)-Six European na- chemicals can sweep into the Western European nations. 2:: P: instill! the lob from a :33; "Emu, Lcwirubgeglmgz e2'gv:l;:lJ.I;.inrec::vte:, E very :1";-9 gligdiln of Mr. WOOD ISLANDS-CABIBOUG FEKRIES guns have declared their intention French market. Cheap Italian What is the difference betweu - or hm mm”. on um: I. ion um” helfin mllEch?:;'.':"; Miss Sue Jones. Hazelbrook. was to abolish Ill trade' and travel barriers between their borders. Their aim: More production and more trade among themselves. mm-g trade abroad-and a richer me tar their people. treagh mvsnizs for I. an a into exc new ven- mregwls signed March 25 by the m countries France. 1181?. gmuany, Luxclibourg. The Netb- erlands and BOIKIIIHL while the treaty is concerned rtrtctly with trade and commerce, the European statesmen who put it across hope to see it take on . political complexion. its main moving spirit. Paul-Henri Spank of Belgium. sees In it the seed of a united Europa. sc0PE FBIGHTENING The thing in so ennunous in its possibilities that some of the Peo- ple who helped bring the treaty into being are bocolshg. a little frightened of it. . some industrialists and many farmers in each of the countries are against the plan, fearful It will confront them with competi- llun such as they never dreamed of before. That is exactly what the treaty is intended to do. By terms of this treaty all pro- tct-live tariffs and protective quo- ta. among the six countries dis- appear. Many a backward Indus- tyy in France, Germany and Italy woolens will dominate the German market. Some industries can be saved by new capital which will permit modernization. Some can't- EUBOPE NEEDS BOLDNESS Spank Insists that without such a bold move as this. ,Europe will continue the decline begun after the war. At present, he said, no one of the six countries can buy or make the big machinery needed for large scale automobile produc- tion, or for production of big air planes. With their strength pooled, all that ran he changed. Already the same six are working out a treaty for ommon development and use of atomic energy. Introduction of the common market tariffs is not to be a sud- den thing. The tariff cuts are spared over a period of 12 to 15 years within the common market area. But another important thing is that all six countries will impose uniform tariff barriers outside countries. That starts right away, on Jan. I. 1958. BRITISH ALTERNATIVE This has alreany frightened many exporters in Britain and other Western European countries not incsuded in the area of the common market. These six countries are working out a supplementary 'r c. a Will be crowded to the wall. so-called free trade area. This is against ' his as a supplement? in the common market. all countries progressively cut out ta'iffs on goods shipped to another. Then they agree on one common tariff schedule for all out- side countries. AT LEAST IO OTIIIIS The free trade area would in- clude the six common market countries plus Britain. Ireland, Norway, Denmark. Sweden. Swit- zerland. Austria, Portugal. Greece and Turkey. Spain and Yugoslavia rn ht eventilally join the plan- ach country in this expanded area - except the six "common market" countries - reserved the rllht to fix its own tariffs to pro tect its own industry. But It agrees with other countries in the nreatogetridofasrnanytariffa as possible, to eliminate as many restrictive quotas as possible and . Put as many articles as pos- slhle on tho "112." o; pg . (N111 ii at. Once the treaty is In efbct all other countries will have to trade with the six country common man. ket almost as if it were one coun- try. There is talk of eventually do- veloplng a common currency for the urea. but that is believed far off. Even Air Is More Bracing In Reiuvenated West Berlin BERLIN (CPl - Belelllue :6 West Berlin. as breezy and daunt- less as ever. is rapidly felainlnl its old as one of Europe's greatest cities. some rate it the most exciting capital on the con- tlpcnt. ahead even of Paris. .lt's only half a city, a pinprick of liberty in a Communist limbo, t it looks brlshter every day. fying' economic laws and a crazy political setup, this thriving island It!) miles inside the Iron qlrtain is still the spiritual cap- tsl of free Germany. once more the Kurfuersten- dimm sparkles. reborn as Champs Elysees of Berlin. Bold and original architectural develop- ments are seen in universities. de- partment stores and office bulld- mgs, built in the last few months a years. NIEW CONGRESS An sl'reating-- example is the new Congress Ball. now ncnrins completion. Fun-lovlng Berliners. Intrigued by its unusual shave. call It- the "pregnant oyster" or ”prashed flying saucer." .Germans elsewhere yearn for the yeuty atmosphere of Berna. where even the air is more brac- is'g"l'llgetOIoraiflhaveto work all the way." said a union leader in Colollle. recalling exub- elaut pre-Hitler days when Ber- lin ranked with Paris as an intel- let-tunl centre and names like Prltz Lang and Ernst Lubttxch ably lost to Germany for ever. The contrast between the two Berlins could hardly be more pointed. SHARP CONTRAST The Eastern sector is still deso- late and abounding in ruins. though there is excellent opera- and theatre. Even the showplace that was Stalinallee. the broad avenue with the Moscow - style apartments, looks shoddy and scaffolding outside the walls be trays premature repairs. caused by defects in workmanship or materials. There's a different contrast be- tween West Berlin and Bonn. the provisional capital. Bonn is a sleepy. artificial university town In a clammv corner of the Rhine- land, as different from metropol- itan Berlin as Prussia is from Bavaria. Officials can hardly wait to move to Berlin. but that Ils impossible as long as the city; remains under four-power occu-I pation. - I Pushing Buttons I I Splits Train: - By WILLIAM rdttlus I NEW YORK (AP) - Peter Smith is an ordinary guy who. on any given day. has considerable power. Pete presses but.ons. p And when Pete presses a button. dotninaleu llr. . dustry. Now Berlin is wide open again. Al'night the city exudes a brassy. lulte-box gslety. Nightclubs. cater- log for a var1ety of tastes. stay open till daybreak. Sane special- lu in political cabaret as sharp as anything In Euro . AIR-LIFT RECALL D The spirit of Berlin seems as Illpudetlt and lndustructlble as in he slices up a freight train as ill Iii were a hunk of bologna. divvy-I ing up the pieces - you call them cars - along any number of 63, ldifferent railroad tracks. r Peter works at the control panel in the hump tower of the Nev York Cenirals new freight classi fication yard at Buffalo. Frcight cars to be classified ar pushed to the crest of the hum the hard days of the air-life. when housewives got up at 2 am to is their washing in the few post- nidnight hours when electric cur- rgnt was available. Berliners still have a reputation for being tschlagfertlg" quick with a blow, or reply. A road worker. questioned shout the destination of an auto- bahn on which construction had Mu started, flashed back: "Stet- l'n." Stettin Is In Polish territory far behind the Iron Curtain. prob - On Advanced llegistry Report The advanced Registry Board' lsr Swine has issued a report which shows the following P. E. End owned sows recently quali- . name of owner in brackets. I followed by score. Jiunpdale Patsy IK (Willard B. directed by radio and color-ligh. signals. RAILROAD ltEVOLUTl0N As the cars pass the hump. Pete pushes his buttom. That sets switches all along the line. send- ing one car down one route of: tracks. a second another route. a third still another route. Pete is the centre of a railroad revolution. The railroads are rushing into automation and mechanization. They are cxperimenting and adopting new. novel techniques. I. gigantic of on to maintain or expand earnings. to keep from sinking into the red. to meet com- petition from other types of trans- portation. Out of it have come some in teresting developments: The Santa Fe has installed sev eral hundred miles of continuous welded rail. Each rail is one quar ter mile long. It is transported to the site on railroad flat cars.p when the train goes around a bend. the rail lust bends with the every mean! of transport. sum the camel. Buses. jeq.-pg, gun cars and planes were among the methods used. A number of Can- dllln Wives. living in Israel. made their way across the desert to par- ticipate. said reports macmn; army sources in Iondon. Njmgg were not given. Interest in the Canadian election Nfnlllled hill! in Britain. with nearly all weekly magazines and Slmdly IWWIPI - publkhing fea- ture articles on aspects of the campaign. NEW APPOINTMENT LONDON (CP)-The Queen has approved appointment of Earl Alexander, former governor-gory era! of Canada. as lord lieutenant F0? the County of London succeed- ing Viscount Alanbrookn. who ro- signed. A lo-foot Plastic sled called a submarine glider or ”subaled" BOW Permits a marine scientist to cntlae leisurely over spawning bodaandpauutorsgooatoog when he chooses. The subsled which made its Ntrth American debut in the prov- ince earlier this month. is adapted from a European invention. It in the latest scientific device which the biological bureau of the pro- vincial game and fisheries depart- ment has adopted. FIOGMAN "DRIVER" The "driver" will be Dr. Gus- tave Prevost. bureau Ilrector. who lies on the 75-pound sled in frogman attire and is towed be- hind I boat. Motors can be at- tached to the sled and may be later. Relulation of compressed air tanks permits the sled to cruise IL any desired depth or hover, With it a biologist can cover far more territory than he could by swimming. Dr. Prevoat. charged with guid. ing the inspection. study. increase and protection of the province's flab life. already knows a thing or two about what goes on at the bottom of a lake. There was the case of the van-' lshing lake trout in the Lauren- tians. a general phenomenon with one lake Indicating that the de- cline had been mysteriously ar- rested. Using frogman equipment. Dr. Prevost detected that lake trout, which spawn in rocks. were be- ing gobbled up at the egg stage by coarse fish. The lake rocks were too round and smooth to of- fer protective nooks for the eggs. In the lake where the trout were surviving. he found. the spawning bed was in the crushed granite of a railway fill where protective pockets abounded. MISSING TROUT Dr. Prevost, who has six hatch- erles turning out so.ooo.ooo game- flsh fingerllnga a year. isn't al- ways able to find the underwater answers. Still missing are some African trout imported and re- leased a few years ago. Quebec boasts about t0.000.00o lakes. most accessible by air alone. and an angling industry worth 7s,ooo.ooo a year. About 60 cents out of every 100 of this goes Into fish and lake work. a figure which Quebec anglers' orghnlza- tlons have called ”notbing - I l I I flab minnow halt." 4 He said it would tape "millions' of dollars" to restore angling in such areas. Meanwhile. the hu- reau's big tank is an "inventory of natural resources" pinning down populations of the fish, their anemia; and the plants. Insects and other factors affecting their llow existence. l pends on such things. says the bu- I resu headquarters at the Univer- sity of Montreal employs I chem- ist. an ecologist. lake survey ex-1 pert and a parasitologlst among others. HAMPTON l Mrs. C. E. Shaw has re-occup-F led her summer residence at De-j sable for the summer months and 1 is receiving a cordial welcome to1 this community by her neighbors and friends. I Wide sympathy is being extend- ; ed to the immediate relatives all the late Mr. Ewen Cameron whose death occurred at the P. E. 1. Hospital on May 80. Work is progressing on the base- ment and the building of the dwel- ling house of Mr. Douglas Mac-I Klnnon, facing the T. C- Highway. ; in full view of Westmoreland Riv- Myers- Profound sympathy is being ex- tended to the Principal of Bon- shaw school reported having been seriously injured quite recently in a car accident. Best wishes of . her many friends are being extend- ed for an early recovery follow- ing treatment being received at the P. E. 1. Hospital. Mr. John Rogerson presided at the annual school meeting held in the school on June 4, with eight- een ratepayers present. The aud- itors report showed a substantial surplus. The auditor was re-elect- ed for the ensuing term. Follow- ing increased amounts voted for running expenses. Mr. Elmer in- man was -reelected trustee for the next term of office. Following discussion re renovat- ions and improvements to school property and decision to place these matters in the care of the Mud! mos-st: Hampstead Kay I 3, in UK (John H. Clark) ll-IN-I); Col- 'Iv"W-'w Lady 25! llohn 8. Col- I'l'l'l1It 9-Ins-1; Mung: ill tC.R. WI! THU: Ilty Lady IK lCoI. I'.I. Andrew) ll-I3-I8; "my Jena no lC.R. wuss- ) 8-IQ-CI; E Y Doris I. ll. Andrew) it 11-02: loa- ale Dwhua MK (Jan 1'. Molt- '7 It I I 3 . I HOT-BOX DETECTOR The Chespeake and Ohio is test- Lllglnelectronics” i tospot ovcheated Journal boxes on rail- road cars. Detector units. equipped with Infra-red lenses. parallel the tracks. When a hotbox goes by., the detector Hashes a wamlng and ' the train is stopped. ; The Northern Pacific Is install-N ing a all)-mile transcontinental dial telephone system. the longest vntun of its type in the country. The New Haven later this year VI lltall a new electronic ticket system. T he tlcluet Begin Counting Overseas Vote Eirlii 3:2? TO THE PHONE FOR TRANSPORTATION POLLS MONDAY 3433 - 3919 viii: LIBERAL Kat the home of Mr, Successful lake restocking de- Gordon Crockett. his home inlFreeetown after spend- ing some time in York. lmhy Milllr are glad to see her lback In York. She will finish the term t ' has been a patient in the P. E. 1. hospital. June 2. Quite a number of young People united with the church dur. ing this service. Mrs. Veron Rodd of Charlotte- n. was a recent visitor to York? and Mrs. Mr. J. B. Lewis has returned to The many friends of Miss Dor- r. . in York School. She a recent visitor to Y k, h of Mr. and Mrs. Lltfyld lie:sE:.en A shower was held in York Hall l on Friday evening-May 30, for the B0 GIVE SURPLUS T0 BIRDS l WASHINGTON tsp: .. A con. Efessmall proposed Thursday that. SUYPII-ls grain be used to feed wild- life. Representative John C. watts 'D9m- K.V.t introduced a bllll which would direct the commodity grain corporation to turn over to the interior department surplus corn. wheat and other grains. STANDIN GREMINDEH BIGGLESWADE, England ICP) plvlisses Donald Crockett a nd Frankie Lewis. York, were recent. M, l Visitors to Charlottetow Mr. Harry Kellly. teacher of York school. has returned to work. :after convalescing at his home in Stanhope. . Miss Margaret Coffin R.N- Char- I0flEl0Wn. was the guest of Miss ,M"m3 1-CWIS. R. N. at her home in York. Rev. and Mrs. Moase and two children. Hunter River. were the guests of Rev. and Mrs. Sproule. York Manse. on Monday. Mayl 27t.i. Mr. Paul Sproule. R. C. A .F.,l is spending his holidays with his V. - H M g M I parents. ev J, M, f.f..”.'l3.. .'.??.5L':...!:'...l'.vr.".”:r..”..".. Sproule. York and Mrs. 4 Mr- Raymond Watts. Hallfax,l pspentdhe weekend in York. with his wife and family. Mr. and Mrs. David MacDon-I A plaque SIX feet by four feet is to be erected in the market square I of lllls Bedfordshire communltyf by local Boy Scouts to commem-I crate the centenary of Lord; Baden-Powell's birth. I MON UMENTS VERE BECK & SON MONTAGUE and CHARLOTTETOWN Skilled Memorial Calume- alnce 1870 ELECTION DAY Monday. June 10th The one o'clock -trip from each terminal will be held until 3 p.m. NOTE: MONDAY ONLY CO - OP REFRIGERATORS Pro Stock Taking Sale - -'53””3"J5E”El'L"ELcE- . DISCOUNTS ON HOME FREER5. L - .VYAi”E!5.1""LM'E!iEE-- M Have you seen our hay eseulntor. Avail- able in 16 ft. lengths with 4 and 8 ft. ex- E”l1'";.. - Another Cnrlond -ALgricuFur;'LFn; ggllitlrljvini tomorrow. ' ..j. Producers Co-op Ass'n Ltd. 58 FITZROY STREET Air Conditioning l Frigidaire Commer to fight increasing daily savings are of In shrinkage. savin No obligation. it m LOWER PRICES FOR BETTER MEAT... dollars saved invthe first cost of your refrigeration equipment. Let us show you the Frigidaire Refrigeration Security Analysis. cial Refrigeration equipment has helped many a market meat costs. Modcrn merchandising mcthodsxlow how prune importance. Savings in waste eliminati . savings gs in operational costs. are more valuable than a few I It's FREE! Call today. ay save YOU money. Commercial Refrigeration WALK-IN REFRIGERATORS AND MILK COOLERS ALSO SOME USED EQUIPMENT AT BARGAIN PRICES Free Estimates and Inf or-motion phone or call PALMER ELECTRIC LTD.- DIAL 8543 ' 8544 96-1 00 FITZROY ST. QUEEN'S comm vorrns I REMEMBER ; TO MARK YOUR BALLET FOR - I TWO ; CANDIDATES 5 ggancs IS A DIIAI. CONITITLICY VOTE FOR MATHESON AND MILLER ms. Hm TWO on ma utter VOTE LIBERAL II-dllblasnsou-tyuscns-octet. STAY BEST FOR CANADA -- BEST FOR YOU 5VOTE LI AT MATHESON, NEIL A. SOUTIIPOIIT NEWSPAPERMAN MILLER, CECIL A. MacLEOD, MURDOCH NEW Lounox FABME MacLEA MCCQUARRIE, HEATH vrcroius rourrcas. scmms-r THE TOP N, J. ANGUS BEA'ION'S MILLS FARIIIII - BERAL lasertedbytheQueen'sCmatyI.DcIAm&&