FOUR SLEEK CANADIAN SHIPS Four modern anti-submarine de- first time by a Halifax pier. Theylthe Royal Canadian Navy. From‘ stroyer escorts line up for the are the first of 14 being built forltbe left to the right, the Saguenay Ottawa.‘ Assiniboiue and the St. Laurent. National Economy Badly Affected By Rail Strike By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bulging grain elevators, clogged warehouses and docks contrasted with empty mines, smelters and mills on the seventh day of the Canadian Pacific Railway strike. Latest group to be affected by the strike of 3.000 firemen which has stopped CPR services over 17,000 miles of track were the grain farmers of Saskatchewan and Manitoba. There, where more than 1,000 Prairie communities are served only by the CPR, farmers were told they can deliver no more grain to the elevators until these are emptied by shipment to Van- couver or the Lakehead. LOSS 0!‘ CASH The news meant loss of ready cash to the farmers, who norm- ally receive part payment—$l.40 a bushel for No. 1 northern wheat —upon delivery to the elevators. . At Vancouver. cargo from in- coming ships piled up on piers. Officials called the situation acute and issued an appeal to importers to clear the docks. However, in Ottawa. C. B. Ur- quhart, assistant deputy'-minister of customs, said Monday no re- pcrts have yet reached his depart- ment that imports are piling up. said, but the situation is not serious enough for his department to be informed. On the Atlantic coast, Canadian National Railways said its facil- ities are capable of handling all the extra freight in Halifax be- cause of shipping diverted from Saint John, N.B., closed by the strike. In Saint John. the common council declared a state of emer- gency and prayers were offered in Roman Catholic churches for a settlement. ASK INTERVENTION In Nova Scotia, the Annapolis Valley affiliated boards of trade. requested the‘ federal government to interven. Th Maritim prov- inces board of trade asked the Nova Scotia government to call on Ottawa for “any measure deemed necessary for bringing order out of the present chaos.” From all parts of the country came reports of layoffs and warn- ings of further layoffs if the strike is prolonged. Latest estimates put the number actually out of work, ‘ other than nearly 70,000 CPR em- ployees, at more than 5,000. Nearly 1,200 truckers and long- shoremen were out of work at ports from which shipping has been diverted, but the Canadian Trucking Association reported a One And Only. C-5 Carried . VIP’s To All Continents OTTAWA (CP) —— “Victor Char- lie 10,000” is the call-sign for one of the world's best-known aircraft the RCAF’S C-5 trasnport used for carrying prominent persons on im- portant missions. There has been and still is only one C-5. It came into serv- ice in July 1950 to fill the need for a pressurized VIP carrier. Since then it has visited all conti- nents and a good many countries loging more than 3000 hours of globe-trotting. The C-5 has lately been flying Health Minister Martin on a two- month 16-country tour of south and southeast Asia and is due back here Jan. 12. Its three major trips before the current one were an extensive tour of South America with Trade Min- ister Howe in 1953 a 24,000-mile trip around the world with Prime Minister St. Laurent in 1954 and p three-continent 12-country tour with External Affairs Minister Pearson in 1955. CARRIED ROYALTY The C-5's passenger list reads ,like an international “who’s who.” Prime ministers and presidents parliamentarians and princesses have travelled on it and on four occasions the C-5 has flown the Royal Standard. _ The C-5 is a unique aircraft in its composition. It has an en- larged DC-4 fuselage a DC - 6 undercarriage and four Pratt and Whitney engines. It is similar in appearance to the North Star but is less noisy and 30 knots faster at 18,000 feet. Although the largest aircraft in: the RCAF the C-5 carries only 27 passengers. On flights within North America she normally carries a crew of seven but on extended trips Where maintenance may be a problem as many as 16 crew are carried. The C-5 has required engine ch:-miles abroad on a couple of occasions ELITE (‘REW Only the most highly qualified air and ground crew are selected for service on the C-5 which is flown by RCAF 412 transport squadron here. Pilots must have spent at least two years in a transport squad-i Tim operating on transcoiitincn-' tal and transoccanic routes and inns‘. have logged a minimum of 3.000 hours including 1.000 on four- cnvineri aircraft to become cli- Eible for duties as first officer. To Qlla"f.\' as captain the pilot must cers are permitted to fly the air- craft. ’ DUKE WAS ALERT Nevertheless the plane has had some anxious moments. During the Duke of Edinburgh’s 1955 tour of Canada the hydraulic system failed on the approach to Vancouver. The first officer and engineer took turns manipulating the hand pump to lower the un- dercarriage and ‘flaps. They breathed a sigh of relief when the plane rolled to a stop confident their royal passenger hadn't noticed_ anything out of the ordinary. “Nicely rowed chaps" said the Duke with a grin. Though the C-5 has no regular run—-each trip is a "special”--the most frequent journey is between Ottawa and London or Paris for NATO and other conferences. In 1953 when Sir Anthony Eden went from London to Boston for an operation he was flown by the C-5 at the request of Sir Winston Churchill. Commenting on the fact that the C-5 had been sent all the way from Canada to -pick up Sir An- thony, Prime Minister St. Laur- ent said: “Why not? There isn’t another plane in the world like ours.” MORE PROPAGANDA SOUGHT LONDON (Reuters) — London businessmen Wednesday urged the government to set up a propa- ganda organization “to inform the world" of Britain’s achievements and to counter anti-British propa- ganda. The London chamber of commerce sent a resolution to Prime Minister Eden Deploring weakness in propaganda displayed by the country since the war. and particularly during the Suez crisis. 25-per-cent increase in long~dis- since the beginning of the strike. Isolated communities, particu- _larly_ in Northern Ontario and the interior of British Columbia, were beginning to get low on supplies of food and fuel. One Ontario town organized the strike’s first air lift. The residents of White River, north of Lake Su- perior, hired a plane to fly food in from Marathon, 45 miles away. A CPR spokesman said he will Investigate to see whether a spe- fial relief train will be needed for ue . At Kenora, Ont., where the Keg. watin Flour Mill shut down, put- ting 170 out of work, coal deliver,- ies were rationed to a half ton for each customer. and a dealer es- timated there was enough coal to last the rest of the wek. 20-Year Term For Rape Of Girl SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)—Vin- cent Reynolds, 30, of Saint John. Tuesday was sentenced to 20 years in Dorchester Penitentiary for the rape of a 16-year-old girl. _Mr. Justice C. J. Jones, in pas- sing one of the heaviest sentences handed down on a rape charge in many years, described Reynolds’ offence as “a glaring case." Reynolds entered a plea of guilty to the charge earlier Tuesday after a grand jury deliberated only 19 minutes before returning a true bill in circuit court, Crown Counsel B. R. Guss de- manded the maximum penalty (a life sentence plus whipping). He said Reynolds “brutally assaulted" and raped the girl and when she scramed for help “threatened her with a knife.” - Among 21 persons called for pe- tit jury duty if the case had gone to trial was a woman, the first in New Brunswick judicial history. A 1954 amendment to the jury act permitted females to serve _on New Brunswick juries. Ta kes Steps To Keep Newsprint Supply Moving ,5 TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP)— As a result of the CPR strike mu- nicipal authorities have taken steps to assure a continued flow of newsprint out of Trols-Rivieres, recognized as the newsprint cap- ital of the world. , A municipally-owned ferry serv- ice will operate on a 24-hour schedule to enable trucks to carry newsprint to a Canadian National Railways station at Ste. Angele. across the St. Lawrence River from here. Normally the ferry does not operate during the night. Trois-Rivieres is served only by the CPR and the strike. now in its sixth day, threatened to halt the movement of newsprint from its three giant mills. The mills produce more than 2,400 tons of newsprint a day. Aussies Consider Foreign Doctors SYDNEY (CP)—-The state gov- ernments of Australia are per- turbed because so many foreign doctors have been unable to gain registration in this country. State ministers of health will discuss the problem at a meeting to be held in hobart. Foreign doctors, including immi- grants. are permitted to practise in Australia only when they can show that their standards are -4 This new method of home treat- ment for saving and growing thicker hair will be demonstrated in Charlottetown, P.E.I., on Fri- day, January 11, 1957. These private individual de- monstrations will be held at the Charlottetown Hotel on Friday QNLY. January 11. LONDON, 0ntario—In an inter- view here today. William L. Keele, internationally f a m o u s trichologist and Director of the Keele Hair Experts, said. “There are 18 different scalp disorders that cause most men and women to lose hair. Using common sense, a person must realize no one tonic or so called cureall could correct all the disorders,” be ex- plained. . GUARANTEED At a meeting Monday night city council decided to appeal to lPrime Minister St. Laurent to in- ltervene and settle the strike. Traces Monarch Butterflies From Ontario To Texas TORONTO (CP)—Thirty years ago Fred Urquhart, then a youth who was fascinated by monarch -butterflies, wondered where they went in the colder months. Now Dr. Frederick A. Urquhart, head of the Royal Ontario ;\lu- seum's division of zoology and palaeontology, announces he has found the answcr. He has pmxed that the brilliant orange insects- sometimes known as King Billics come up to standards set by the .<ou2di'mi and receive a recom- mendation from the commanding‘ oi flpr The t‘,».'~‘< na\'igatm's and radio’ after William of Orange - migrate to the southern United States. His findings resulted from an ingenious system of tagging thc Iwcre tagged with the legend “re- lturn to museum Toronto." Of ‘these. Dr. Urquhart estimates he ilabcllcd 20,000 himself. I lie was assisted by mor than !300 co-operators throughou Can- lada and the United States. ' Results of the project were dis- appointing at first, with only a ‘few tagged insects being reported ‘in widely scattered parts of the 'C0nIincnl. Then in 1956 success ‘canm A monarch tagged Sept.'3 at .l\-Ioaford. Ont., was found at Gal- \'t3VT()ll. Texas, Oct. 18. and two others tagged by Dr. Urquhart at “I”-i‘ci's must have an annual pass'monai'(-h’s wings with an adlic.<i\'e his own home near Toronto also mark of 83 pm‘ com on theorc:ical§labcl which would not wash of” turnr~d lip in Texas. and practical work. Standards are so high in fact, ‘hill at the present time opl)" three captains and four first ofEi- 1938 more than 40,000 butterflics;important in agriculture. nor interfere with its flight TAGG-ED 40.000 S(‘l(‘llii':iS using Dr. Urquhart's lalicllim sysieni now may study "The Keele firm. recognizing that most people are skeptical of claims that hair can be grown on balding heads, offer a guarantee," Keele said. Once a person avails himself to the Keele treatment his skepti- cism immediately disappears. To insure this, we offer this guaran- tee. “If you are not completely satisfied with your hair progress at the end of 30 days your money will be returned." HOPELESS CASES DISCOURAGED First the Trichologist is quick to tell hopeless cases that they cannot be helped. But the “hope- less" cases are few.. Only if a man is completely. shiny bald is he in this last category. If there is fuzz. no matter how light, thin, or colorless, the Keele treatment can work wonders. A complete, private examin- ation ls given by a Tricholngist. to determine the condition of the scalp. and cause for his hair troubles. FREE I‘1XAl\ll.\'A'I‘I()i\'S This examination is very thor- Since he started the l‘eSF‘al‘Cll in thc mriicments of many insects; ough and highly technical, 11 re. lquires, 20 to 30 minutes. There is Famous Trichologisi Will Demonstrate How To Grow Thicker Hair And Guarantees It DEMONSTRATION TO BE HELD HERE The Guardian Page 11 Thursday, Jan. 10, 1957 Trail Smelter Workers Facing Early Layoffs TRAIL, B.C. ICPI Nearly 4,000 smelter workers will be laid} off here if the CPR rail strike, continues through the weekend. R. D. Perryl, general manager of Consolidated Mining and Smelt- ing Co. Ltd.. gave notice Tuesday, that most of the smelters’ 4.000% plant employees will be forced out! of work starting Thursday. E Mr. Perry said the giant lead‘ and zinc operations—biggest in the Commonwealth—will virtually grind to a halt “if the strike con- tinues through the weekend.” Trail is situated on the CPR line in the Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia, 200 miles east of Vancouver. The smelter, which employs 85 per cent of the city’s population. nor- mally receives the bulk of its ore concentrates by rail from the com- pany’s Sullivan mines, 100 miles northeast of here. The company, ,a subsidiary of the CPR, also operates a fertilizer plant at Kimberley which, with the mine there, employs another 2,000. About 200 fertilizer workers would be included in the weekend layoff, said the manager. To date, about 300 men have been made idle in the company's operations-210 at Trail and the rest at flux-making centres which have halted production due to the anticipated Trail shutdown. Already, merchants. here are reporting the poorest business in memory and Mayor R. D. Read has expressed fears the city will skid into an economic floldriim. equal to those of the British Med- ical Association. Among those who have failed to do this are some with 30 years’ practical experience and with degrees from Berlin, Leipzig and Budapest universi- ties- Some of the doctors claim that the British Medical Association is deliberately blocking their efforts to win the right to practise. no charge for this examination and no appointment is necessary. After the examination the person is told the required length of treatment and how much it. will cost. . After starting treatment the person makes regular reports to the Keele firm in London to check the progress of the home treat- ment. To spread the opportunity of normal, healthy hair to the thous- ands who are desperately looking _f0I‘ hell). lhfilebendent. Tricholog- ists are visiting various cities throughout Canada to conduct ex- aminations and start home treat- men . N0 CURE-ALL f‘We have no cure-all for slick, Shlhy baldness." Keele emphasiz- es. "If there is fuzz. the root is still capable of creating hair and we can perform what appears to be a miracle." There is one thing Keele wants to be certain every man and woman knows. If a recession ap- pears at the temples or a spot be- gins to show up on the crown of th e head, there is something wrong and it should be given immediate attention. HAIR FOR LIFETIME "If clients follow our directions during treatment, and after they finish the course. there is no reas- on why they will not have hair all the rest of their lives," Keele said: “Our firm is definitely be- hind this treatment. it all depends on the individual client's faithful observation of a fe w simple rules.” HOW'S YOUR HAIR? ‘If it worries you call Tricholo-,1 gist W. N. Crawford at The Char-1, lottetown Hotel in Cha.rIottetown,1 P.E.l. on Friday ONLY, January‘ 11. 19:37, 12 noon to 9 p.m. You do not need an appoint- ment. The examinations are priv-, ate and you will not be embar-E rassed or obligated in any way.5 Both men and women are wel-;’ come. L f~._.___am find at DOMINION. 5'4‘ I I 1-: I P ISLAND GROWN TENDER SWEET TASTY PAK PEAS- BEANS L2 2°«=-nuns. 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Florida ORANGE 2 “$2.?” 75 FRESH PORK I ISLAND GROWN ‘ CABBAGE ‘i;‘.é‘f.;" 2Ic SHOULDER ROAST FRESH OR CORNED BEEF TONGUE FRESH TASTY BEEF LIVER -8- 49: w- 39c ms. 33: All Merchandise sold at your Dominion Store is Guaranteed to Give 100% Satisfaction. i.'Ux BATH SIZE TOILET SOAP 3 BANDED ONLY BIRDS EYE PEPSODENT DENTAL CREAM 3 LARGE BANDED 49° GREEN PEAS ‘.”..:.’.?' 30c oi2AN3ERiiiicE 2 39¢ BIRD EYE‘ MIXED Garden VEGETABLE WAX BEANS 31¢: 10 OZ. C PKG. CUSTOMERS FREE PARKING AT REAR OF STORE —_ .... vvvry 20 oz. tins McCBEADY’ swnar MUSTARD I uoz. BOTTLE A FEATURE—sTOCK up on rats Low PRICE! , ROBIN HOOD FLOUR 1.69 FLORIDA WHITE GRAPEFRUIT 4 “:§.:°' 35: EVERYDAY LOW PRICES HEINZ CREAM OF . 10 OZ. EXCELLENCE Strawberry JAM ..?.".3ft 39¢ BREEZE (BLUE) SOAP POWDER 33: PERFECTION ICE CREAM , CAKE ROLL NEW JOY LIQUID SPECIAL DETERGENT :. nii§.°iii'iz 37c MIXEIDHIIICKLES 1::.°:~ 25¢ KELLOGGS CORN FLAKES 26: .__,N I55 QUEEN ST. CHARLOTTETOWN DOMINION STORES LTD.