Changed , 3, suinonn scoussotr Press (3 WI" Wm. ' o:rrAwA (CI? - Caaadas gm , growth in lNl.IItl'lIl tilt- ure ,5 changed the character of ,. expanding international trade. some products which once ,,,,,;,..1 high as important exports mg imports now are far down in we list. And some which barclv counted in the lms have moved ,,,,,d11y toward the front. Tgke cattle. silver. cheese nod .29 they ranked among the It gain; export products. -I-alt 3!!!! they were far down In the III!- Undressed fur slrinsraniuid lath; nmanufactured IllVel'- 3331? Ind awe and cheese were lower than 40th. M. skim, for example. Back in ' 41' ..i......ic;....e.i.i..o... Picture. In .. Trade Meanwhile, iron oreand oil, which rankodlswsrthanioth the industrial structure could be obtained from some of these other than goth "'”"" Oyprusl mum cnmaeatotiuuo. I frosnfla. - no 1 wane wlssatdsop::tsthird ammo-3-s&n;t.punym " from first.NiobalbsoaInstbo -Mlggilmnmigrrlg-rm mu. most important export item rm "9 CW0! '""'”l"'.f,F””””'””'” UWhll0.mon ””""'"""" """""""”"" ur'aucusaonu-sun-oemu. Wheat flour slipped to ma com um , to Illlcelntbsworld Anions imports. non-farm nia- 0, ,Mc”',d,d,M'. "' N” I" '" rhlror!-rdPIrlIlWlHl'h' Thcnowliatislhaadedbybm No. 1 spot was the years while FM” 5.”, Gm.” mm” I'll-0'”-llllll NW N" W INN" Greek Irlny colonel who is the third. Tractors and sort: nputoa chieftaln of Greek Cypriot climb-d to mouth plaoo mm rebels mm to overthrow sm- 1'Ith and internal combustion en- his rule and unite Cyprus with glues and parts to eighth mun Greece. The British offer a re. aotn. Aircraft and parts fifth position from one of ii WESTERN GUARDIAN TTENTION FARMERS now bugmg and cleaning Timothy I9? .. my plant In Kensin8l0ll- 3- - Johnston. KensIn8t0l'l- ULAR BARN Dance. Wil- uglacousim, Baltic. September nth. Canteen service. dlllcllli mm. 9 to 12.30. Admission 50 cents -ro the public th;ltHlsu'lllsno 10.3.-"la responsible for any debts contracted by my wire Marlon Taylor. Glendon Tay- lor. p” ALBERTON 511,5 Mubel Fielding. Alberton. 1, visiting her brother and sister- h,,p,w, Lt.-Col. and Mrs. P.S. Fiel- ding, Charlottetown. liirs. Rhodes Ashley, Cascumpec spent the weekend with her sister- lnqaw, Mrs. .l.R. Bonymln. Alber- ton. tin of the official board ofAi:l;8'lPt;: PgSt0YIl charge ofhgllig lied Church of Can a. linthe Alberton Church hall Friday Igvening, the request of Rev. My?- my Gardner for n choose of gas- toral ' " was .- W win. regret. Subject to approvrl 01 the church c'ourts. ReV- Ml'- Gl1'd' on as or-: urc . - - - llzlsigrnl relations committee com- prised of Mr. Russell Lcard. Mr. I Elmer Wallace, Mrs. A.C. Gfeeen and Mr. Reginald Travers. WI! appointed. Tignish Pastor Bids Farewell - , In Two languages On the Sunday priorto his leav- ing St. Simon and St. Jude diari- gsii, Tlgnlsh. Rev. Dennis Ga ant was remembered by the Dll'llll0'l' ers. all of who greatly resret Ms leaving. .1 to him. one in the French i lglguage by Mr. Alban Arsenallltt and one in Enzlllll by M13 30! llandrahan. A well filled nurse was Ipresentcd to him on liollllf 01 1'33 parishoners by Ml'- Tara" G"' in. Father Gallant thanks the 900- pie for their kindness and thoillllfr tuinesl to ll durinl the 11'! years he had been in the Illl'Illl- For the past five years Flthlt Gallant had laboured in the Ills- ish, and the fruits of his work ll plsln to see. lie had the llllritual welfare of the people always up- permost in his thoughts. and GI- pecisily the youth of the parish. As he goes to New York to take a special course in Gregorian Mu- sic for the coming year. he III! the good wbbnhwmpmers 01 the Tignish poop - The following In the English NI- ess: l Dear Rev. Father Gallant: Five years ago you came to our I larish newly ordainned, an "Alt- ar Christus". consecrated to God's 2 work in the salvation of souls. That you prepared well for, and seriously considered your vocat- ion, has been roven in your so- tours: in our t. Your constant eiiort to further the cause of the christian Edllcflun, by your tim- ely sermons. your visits to our schools. your exllortations to the youth of our phrish. to take ad- vantage of the facilities provided by our higher-grade schools. should continue to bear fruit for many years to come. we have come to admire your straight forward attitude in re- gard to any matter which would seem contrarlwisa to the teach- lnss of our religion. we must roa- llze that there can be no appease- ment of false philosophies and moreover. no eomprolsilsl with Professional Cards I Chartered 1At:::ntanis Canadihn a....3'”o'l1'.....' INSURANCE I , 'i.'l..'!':.t9'-'-”!'l so-mo-st. I l "Op'f'omatslst I. Parkman h;:L::n::-r:w&1sx.no. I ll'. ME lonmmno. s 5 'twrJs'oo-ussso MONTREAL (OP)-McGlll ni- versity researchers are making headway against the allergy in- volved in hay fever and asthma. A team of 14 young scientist. headed by a medical doctor and a pliysial chemist. is hard at work on the causes of'tlic allergic sea lion that makes autumn wee s in misery to thousands every year. Continuous research is under way in the university's Donner Building for medical re- search. Already a dozen papers have been published on the project. and scientists all over the world are calling for results. . Researchers are backed by funds from Canadian and U. S. health authorities, and grants is from a number of pharmaceutical Mrs. Felix Gaudet Elected President Of M. A. Alumnae The annual meeting oi the Mar- ian Academy Alumnae was held in the Parish Hall on September 2. 1956. There was a fair attend- ance. The meetlng was honored by e VI of the newly appoint- ed Mother Superior. Mother Sant Jean-do Lorraine. and three other sisters of the convent. The President. Mrs. Jerry Rich- ard, presided. she noted that Sister Saint Mary Sextus. who has been prime organizer and leader of this assoclati since its first re- union in 1934 has been changed this year. Her presence will be greatly missed among us. The year was a very successful one from a financial standpoint. A lottery sponsored by the alumnae to help a nomination netted 3112-00 The drawing for the prize: of the lottery was the hlnhllilhl 01 tho meetinlv The winners were: lst. prize; Mrs. Reggie Gaudet. st. Nlcholos: 2nd prise Junior Laugh- iin. Miscouohe, 8rd prize Mrs. Lapel-ls. Worcester. Mass. Gerald Steele gave an interest- ing talk on the advantages of I Catht;l(i!c education. The officers ap i Two well worded addressee VICE point for, the cumin! year are as follows: President: Mrs. Felix Gaudet. Honorary Preaiduit: Rev Mother Superior. Secretary: Mrs. Sylvera Gaudet. Treasurer: Miss Eleanor Desltoches. evil. Your work to teach the chil- dren to sing the Divine Praises lnamannerdeartothebeart our Holy Father. has become our special pride, and won the admir- ation of the whole ocese. In your organlzaton of the L'av.-ordaire society. and in your treatment of the altar and choir boys. you have provan to our youag people, that goodness. chris- tian livlng and enjoyment of life, are far from being lncompa”" . Your work with our dramatic club has given our people on in- centive to. continue, for they have been shown that talent a. bounds. if efforts are made to de- velop it. - Your resourcefulness on the un- forscen breakdown in health of our beloved pastor, and your self- iessness inngarding his wellfare. won our hsartiest co-operation; that you have come to love our parisb and its people, has been well shown by the manner in which you have thrown yourself. heart and soul. into the work at hand. even though surmising that y&iartimewlthusmightbellm- Today. we regret that we must bid you farewell, you are goin , let us hope. to prepare yourse for further work in our diocese, from which we may share future benefits. May we be remembered in your gayers and masses, as you will in ours. .Parishoners of st. Simon and St. Jude Parish, Tignisb. Learn canon AND sons: man in nova may as CAPITAL sumtszasma A love story that touches the heart and that will leave most of samasc' liopaandcol .withI.eslie came and Jobmaoae of the Hay Fever Still Holds Out Against Intense Research . 05 Summerside. while he was train- l-'0 panics. we ntory sion. Dr. Bram Rose. associate prrr lessor of medicine at Meant i-esident of the Canadian Ac only of Allergy, mugged tug re. search in 1953. He soon saw the problem was too complex to be studied by the medical field alone, and enlisted the help of Sehon. a Physical a They aided equipment of great pr - e H E E C E if-E TRENTON, 0nt.. -A Four Can- adian - built F-86 Sabre jets fly of il0.0o0 for Graver cap- The roster included is other EOKA leaders on whose heads the Britons put a price of 9.5.000 each and in lesser lieutenants for whom rewards up to 5,000 are offered. A list published last February named only 19 EOKA "hard core" men, including Grivas. AIR DISPLAY ll practicing for the international from the R. C. A. F's No. I Fighter Air Display at the Canadian Nat- Operational Unit stationed at Chat- Among those on the L5.000 list is 24-year-old Makos Drakos. re- ported to be Grivas' righthand man and No. 2 in the EOKA com- mend. The Britons also nlfcred re- wards for the recovery of grms, r ranging from 5:10 for a sporting in the display. from Manchester University. T the two head a regent-ch highly-trained men in both phys- iological and biological science, many of them MtcGiIl's department of biochem- ry. RELEASE IIISTAMINE Allergy symptoms occur when allergens, entering the body, re- lease a substance called his- tamine; a powerful agent for- mally held in suspension by body cells. Anti-histamine compounds are frequently used to relieve symptoms. The McGlll research- ers' aim is to discover just how the allergy reaction is produced. why some people are immune to 3, and what can be found to stop Already the McGili team has demonstrated the presence of specific antibodies in the blood of individuals allergic to ragweed pollen. and has isolated the aller- gens in the pollen itself. But there is no final solution yet. Some sufferers get relief by taking skin injections to dc-sen- sitize -the blood to specific allow gens. Others dose themselves with a variety of drugs to relieve the worst of the symptoms. The best medical advice is still to meet the problem by avoiding it. Don't go near that ragweed. .g..jmm....,j....., Former Airman Returns With His Family llfriends in Summcrslds are ex- tending a welcome to Alex-t(Bllll Kerr forms-ly of Galston. Scotland and now of Halifax, who with his wife, mother and sister are spend- ing a few days in Summerslde, the guests of Rev. and Mrs. J. Donlld Maclfny. Many in summersids will recall the story of how seriously ill Bill Kerr was at R.C.A.1l'. Station. big here under the NATO Plan about four years ago. At that time he underwent an operation for ap- pendecetis after which yua tonitla set in and for a time it was feared that he would not live. His mother and father were flown from Scotland to Montreal and an R.C.A.F. plane was did- patcbed from Summerside to bring them to their son's bedside. Hap- pily he recovered after days of patient nursing and medical care- Perhaps it was the excellent nurs- ing that broughti him through but in any event he later married his nurse the former Rowena Mercc and they, with their fourteen- month-oid baby have returned to renew old friendships in Sununsro side with his mother and sister Margaret. In Halifax he is employed with the Cossar Company as an elect rical engineer. Pictured above is Leslie Hunter of Dundas who has been the cf- flclent and hard working Prasid ent of the Provincial Plowing Match since its formation in the autumn of lsil. Throughout thou years Leslie has worked with an energetic and capable group of directors work and planning has been a bi fhctor in stinking the Dundee Po Match the malt trallsn government. tlel of Australia was chalfmlrl of don Suez conference to Cairo to the ocmmission sent by tho I-Oll- present views of the conference on future control of the canal. slot: with Nasser Sunday Milit- Mrs. Ann Riley of Shuwville Que.. and Spencer Church of Cala- SOMETHING IN COMMON” mon. They're both 106. The still spry centena inns met before the 100th anniversary Shawville fair. bogle, 0nt.. have something in com opened by Mrs. Riley. (CP Photo) LONDON (AP)-President Nas- ser of Egypt said Sunday night any , to impose "collective domlngtlon" on the Sues Canal would signal "incalculable strife." lie made the statement in a note to the five-nation Measles com- mission. The text of the note was re- leased here along with other con- farence documents by the Aus- Prime Minister Robert a. Men- The talks closed without agree- ment after a final 25-minute ses- niflcent specta c it is today. untheroooforwovlnsdapne poses in an sppnreot d?IV9t0,0l' teadthelr co-existence eu:::IlI E 3 .-.-3' Vatican Paper Says Reds Are Attempting To Use The Pope VATICAN CITY (AP-I.'0ssc- apostolic nuncio in late Auaust to deliver a copy of a disarmament appeal by the supreme Soviet. l'll8'l' NCONTACT "the first official Soviet conta " Nasser reaffirmed that his po- Nasser Calls Control Plan For Suez Canal "Provocative" pr. Alex in formation over Trenton, Ont.. lonal Exhibition. The Sabra are ham, Ont. The F416 is the fastest (CP Photo). .e. of I A ” " ' Predicts Global 0 mum. a Climate Control WASHINGTON (AP)-A mem- ber of the Atomic Energy Com- mission predicted Sunday that na- tlons within a few decades will achieve global climate control, raising the prospect of weather warfare. Commissslone John von Neu- man said man's knowledge is "rapidly approaching a level that will make possible, in a few decades, intervention in atmo- spheric and climatic matters." He did not indicate what form climate control methods might take but said once they are devel- oped. "they will be exploited." ROYAL BORDEN Mon - Tues 1:15-9:15 Matinee Tues 3:15 Randolph Scott in real sea sdven. ture with Charles Laughton as- "CAPTAIN KIDD" In Technicolor. cnssno Mon. - Tues. 7:15-0:15 Burt Lancaste , Anna Magnare in Hal Wallis production of Ten- nesee Williams- "THE ROSE TATTOO" Bank drawing Monday, Wed- nesday and Friday worth &l.00. MONDAY AND TUESDAY-SEPT. 10-I1 "TIII-I QUIET MAN" in Technicolor Starring John Wayne and Maureen Oil-Iara Shorts and Canteen Service-8:46 p.m. COMING WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY "IIER TWELVE MEN" in Technicolor Starring Greer Genoa and Robert Ryan gun to 5:100 for a Bren gun or mortar. The 85 men on the wanted CAPITO TONIGHT 7:15-9:15 V , nil: Lovs sroltv ' ' or GABY...and , i the American boy. to live .a - Tfetimel Brifisltlssuo Revised List ' allofthasnaratbougIttolialt;- lwingoutinthernusdmointaias aionl the north coast and In central Cyprus. ' Meanwhile. Bishop Yennsdios or salami: said in -a statement printed in the Greek - language newspaper Eleftberia: . "The presence in Cyprus of for- eign troops for serving aims alien to the desires of the. Cypriot people is condemned by them. We consider that this action by the British proves that Britain is not seriously concerned in finding I olutlon to satisfy the desires of minstion, and so the gap betweh the British government and Cypriot peopiebecomes wlder.',--E A British soldier was woundj! Sunday by a bomb explosion -H." Geiilng Up'..lI!lgi r.g..;.lr.j;"'" e-.-,;;----' c u ur c, K”: and. can of energy no lo '3 bladder tron II I OYITEX. nick- complsts aattsgclhd at mwiumk-pg: " I3n sol on the south Cyprus Pug snluiou p ter are generally believed to be Ell-lyu "m.'s&- . the hard core of EOKA. Most or l."e";lie -John , ...SlllllllI.'lllllillllliE-lllilElll ,. . tllklllc L .. SUMMERSIDE TUESDAY 3:30--7:15--9:15 if Kerri IIQllVUAVftIuuQ A Lllflm Mill OMMIIATIOII PRESENTATION Today 8:30-7:15-9:10 Tuesday 7:15 - 9:10 licy was to maintain free through the canal without discrim- ination. He said the ill-nation plan to put the canal under interna- tional control was intended to take the waterway "out of Egypt's hands" and added: ''It would be difficult to imagine anything more provocative to the people of Egypt than this." The published note disclosed he said "it would be not the end of trouble but the beginning of trouble." He insisted the "Government of Egypt is fully entitled to national- ize" the canal. "Whatever the system of oper- ating of the canal is going to bc." he said, ”it will depend on the close. full and willing coopera- tion of the people of Egypt. among whom and through whose country thecanalruns.... 1: STAR lT,E -- DRIVE-IN THEATPE SJMMEP:-E POTATO FARMERS We have a number of new and used 22 inch, 24 inch and 26 inch potato diggers on hand both power and ground driven. Pickers also available. DAWSON'S SERVICE STATION CRAPAUD F. i w Wanted Men.Ol the Cypriot people for self d:'.er- ' the recreation beach near -' coast A PHONE 17 ' Radio Moscow described this as EGMONT BAY 8. MT. CARMEL EXHIBITION AT ABRAMS VILLAGE on wronssoav, sepremasn mi. Tln Public ls cordlely Invited. lrcahrilag-Ovaries-lafresbssseatsaadbaliclau Msdsorvadoayoud. NEorl usrn CARS AND TRUCKS AT SPECIAL PRICES (Left) 1950 Ford Sedan. Maroom. with IIUIIOCCOCCUCUCCIIC origin) was Ford Sedan. lack ssss.oo USED PASSENGH CARS SKIING I08 S1000 OI KOBE RAVI A EDIT DAY f.IlJAIAN'l'Q. FOIDMOIIAICOIIIALI WILLET MO'l'-ORSLID.