2 ae §., be & & Se Managing Editor Che Gerdian _ Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancex, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker Editor , ., Published every week day morning (except Sun- iu on and statutory holidays) at 165- Prince Street, f eo “'and alse the local news published , herein. “Charlottetown, P.E.1., by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. * Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. — 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- -6-5942;-Western:.Otfice 1030 West Georgia --- Street Vancouver’ MA 7037. * ¢eMember Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Ksboe siociation and The Canadian Press. The Cahadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use. for repub- litation of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters All aaioright or tepublication of special disoatches here oc. Invalso reserved. on 2 " ‘ ,1¢ o ent + “The strongest memory is weaker — =-erned in this province about the | “~"Fescheduling” of the causeway pro- “> PAGE 4 “though we wouldn't rate it as a likely) ~ __ Similar resolution would be passed in | _ Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside » monwealth, Ne* ever 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. than the weakest ink” - THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1966. Include Us Out ~ The Moncton Transcript notes with concern that there hasn’t been any public announcement on the appoint- ment_of_a person who was to head a study-on_the prospects of union be- British Com | ernment’s reply has underlined the greater freedom now vested in the Supreme. Court of determining mat- ters of this kind, as compared with only a few years ago. The wording of the order in council. ‘itself speaks volumes in. this regard. It notes that when application was made to appeal the Truscott convic- tion to the Supreme Court, it was denied, but that the court, at ‘that wo S*eeewg: | Status Of ‘Malaria ‘By Arch MacKenzie | Canadian Press Staff, Washington WASHINGTON (CP), — The. pilots can spot them ¢oming 7a, : ©, By Dr. Theodore R. Van Delley jnew turn in the air war over | and duck. ‘There -were 106 confirmed and | North Viet Nam continued Tues- But admitted American plane‘ presumptive cases of malarig day as two American Phantom | ee to April 20 from Febru- in the United States last year, jets tangled with two Commu: | ary 1965, total 215°and another | Civilians accounted for 56 cases ‘nist MiG-21s and cone kill was | 10 ave been reported in the ®e, “time, was authorized to entertain such | | _ “Had an appeal an appeal “‘on questions of law only.” . It points out that in 1961—two years after the trial—a Criminal Code |. amendment had given any person con- victed of a capital crime and senten- ced to death the right to appeal to the Supreme Court for a hearing ‘‘on any ground of law, or fact, or mixed law and fact.” By the order-in-council, the federal government has formally submitted to the Supreme Court for “hearing and consideration” this . question: by Steven Murray | Truscott been made to the Supreme ‘Court of Canada as now permitted by Section 597A of the Criminal Code of Canada, what disposition would the . court have made on‘such an appeal | tween Nova Scotia and New Bruns- | wick. Not so long ago, it recalls, studies of this particular union seem- ed to be getting off the ground, but apparently nothing has developed. However, it sees hope for “the broad- er question of Atlantic or Maritime union” in a recent statement by Leon Small, Liberal member for Charlotte in the New Brunswick legislature, whom it cites on the subject of our NB-PEI causeway in this connection. “When - this is completed,” Mr. Small. is quoted as saying, “it will indeed have the effect of making The Garden of the Gulf part of the land mass of mainland-Ganada.-With-the— island status of the province changed by the completion of the causeway, perhaps one could hope that many Islanders will change their outlook | and join their fellow Maritimers in building a strong and united prov- ince.’ That could, of course, be the case, possibility. Of course we look forward to mingling more freely-than before with our mainland neighbors, and to cooperating more effectively in everything pertaining to our mutual advantage. But we wonder how, if we. | Hind ha our identity as a pro tawa for sed a causeway ora tee service which would then cease to be an interprovincial link for which the federal government was responsible. . It. might suit Ottawa to be relieved of. ‘this obligation, but how would it af: fect us? Recently we have been much con- | ject which has resulted in deferring | work on this side until next winter in- stead of making a start this spring, "as previously announced by Federal | on a consideration of: the existing re- cord and such further evidence as the court, in its discretion, may receive and consider.” As noted by Solicitor-General. Pen- nell in the House of Commons on.. Tuesday, this is the second time the Supreme Court will hear an appeal it first decided should not be argued. before it. The first was in 1956 when the cabinet referred the conviction of Wilbert Coffin,-the Gaspe prospector found guilty of slaying three Ameri- || can hunters. But he stressed that there is “a considerable difference” ‘between the type of reference just authorized in the Truscott case: and that made in, the Coffin case a few years ago. It has gone “far beyond the Tules relating to appeals-to the Sup- reme Court of Canada,” and in effect vests the court with full discretion in _the hgatter. A discretion which would have come rather late for Truscott if he. | | weight. | disastrous STARTING THE NEW SEASON Doctors estimate that two out } of three Canadians are over- Government . officials | estimate that one in thirty of the population of India~ will die from starvation this year; the drought already | _ causing epidemics of the plague, cholera and smallpox, is* thus | adding to its toll to a country 1 had been hanged as he was sentenced | to be, back in 1959. “Footnote To History=—- Premier Castro has been making. a bellicose gesture of late, but it hasn’t attracted much attention in American newspapers. It appeared in the form | of an interview in a German maga- zine, in which the Cuban_ premier | said Cuba still has Soviet. missiles + capable-of-hitting—Miami—Beach—A~ few years ago that would have vaiodl headlines across the continent. But nobody seems to be paying much at- tention, now, to what-Fidel_says_on_|. (the missile:subject.:—-— 9s _ However, it’s worth noting what he did say for the record. “It. wasn’t me who wanted the Russian missiles in the first place,” he told the magazine. -“Tt. was Khrushchev who wanted to have them here to frighten America. Well, now, I did need his. aid and was not really in-a position to say no. But when he took them away, we felt hurt Works Minister MclIlraith. Our Island | and offended. “That’s how we are legislature protested this move ina | temperamentally, and that’s why the resolution which was passed unani- | mously. We were hoping that a | the New Brunswick house, thus mak- ing it doubly effective. But Premier Robichaud put his foot down. We. gather from the re- marks attributed to him that he was indifferent to our’ grievance—that so ~tongas the work wasn’t being held up in New Brunswick it was all right with him and with thie members of portraits of Khrushchev disappeared from al] Havana streets.” : But thinking like that must. not necessarily mean ‘the end -of friend- ship,” said Fidel. “At that time Khruschev did explain somewhat in detail why they took the missiles away. 1 could see his point ... The millions of rubles he gave me instead ~ were much more important...” Then | came the punchline: his. goyernment.and-party..That. gave. /. ~“eedent” ie _.thefederal* government to order us a taste of how we'd fare as a not- too-important part of a larger Mari- time province, in which the interests of.the-more_populous-areas—wotuld_be- given precedence. | a Our good neighbors in New Britns- wick can’t blame us, surely, if we ¢on= |! tinue to have doubts about the wisdom of embracing the -kind of | political union ‘that Mr. Robichaud has been foremost in advocating, and which in fact has been dead for the past. century .as a practical solution to our problems.. . Broadening Precedents —The-fact that-the Supreme Court of Canada has-been asked to determine if there was’ a -miscarriage-of. justice in the Steven Truscott case points up the fact that ourlaws are being slowly broadened, ‘from precedent to pre- justice in criminal cases. Opposition,. “Leader Diefenbaker maintains that ~ the fairest method would still be for new trial of the man who was convict- ed.at the age of 14, of the murder of a school-mate. Whatever- merit there is in this contention, the gov- to insure a fairer measure of “And, by the way, -we-still have Russian missiles, ~$malleronesé-But-thevalso-enable-us.. to hit the American coast.” Castro was asked why the Russians left him in the lurch when Khruschev_ where three-quarters of the pop- ulation always go to sleep hun- | gry. ; Twelve million Canadians are unhealthy through over - eating. Twelve million Indians will die | through under-eating. — —Is=it-nothing=to=you; that pass by?” asks the Bible. Is it nothing to twelve million Canadians that the food which is shortening our lives — could save the lives of twelve million Indians? CANADA‘S FOREIGN AID Oh but of course, it is some- thing to us. + contribution of $15 million in | December to_relieve the Indian famine. With-that-money—w-e sent India over five million bus- hels of wheat, along with some other agricultural surpluses we didn't need.’ The Indians would | have preferred all wheat, but we like to. keep a comfortable cus- hion of four hundred million bus- “hels” as a carry-over “‘just° in case,”’ So we sent_1 per cent_of our visible_surplus; we sent just 2 per cent of India’s need. . Three, years ago we sent $7 million of wheat to India under our Colombo Plan Aid program. Two years ago we sent $14 mil- lion. Last year we planned to send only $10 million, but boost- ed it to 25 by that special gift | in December. Our other aid ~plans to other Commonwealth countries brings our Columbo PUBLIC FORUM | This column its open to the discussion gave in to the late President Kennedy— and disbanded his missile bases in Cuba. He replied: “Listen, I, Fidel _, Castro, have made mistakes, too. But .. all of us must learn from those mistakes.” What he learned he didn’t. say. But" he brushed off the Chirfese with the unkindest.cut of —all. .“They’re -no never. fulfilled them.” Which just goes to show how hard along | days. with almost ree add ~£EDITORIAL NOTE The island city of Key. West, Fr Florida, has solved the problem of. | what to do with*abandoned automo- biles it clears ‘off the streets. It chains the car~-bodies together and dumps them in the ocean to form artificial reefs. which soon—become prime fishing spots. Fish seem to be more attracted to the old cars than to natural reefs. | better than the Yankees,” he said: ' “They made plenty of promises_but Lit is-for.an-honest-damagogue.to_get.— | terest. The Guardian does not neces- sarily endorse the opinion of corres. pondents. All letters published are sub-— ject to editing and condensation where necessary. The Guardian is unable te enter into any correspondence regard- _ ing letters submitted. © I eee TEMPERANCE EDUCATION Sir; — This being Youth Tem- | perance Education Week in this Province, our thoughts turn to | conditions, as we find them here. The fact that we spent last year nearly six million dollars \-for -aleoholie beverages, depres- ‘ses us. We see the misery, the wrecked lives, hearts, © which fails to produce. alcohol never Perhaps we done_to—curb-all__this, “may. even go so far as to quote “tdmund Burke, when he said, “Nothing more is required for the triumph of evil, good men do nothing.” not be, however, much better, if we should stop our grumb- Ying, and take a look at the brighter side of the picture? Bedeque WCTU who in a TV broadcast told of the Allied Youth Movement, and also what can be done by parents, teachers, atid studerits themselves to pro- mote total abstinence. On Sunday evening of this friends ac- | week parents, and | companied -large—numbers _o f boys and girls to the Bedeque United Baptist Church, where they received -certificates for having wtitten ‘temperante ex- aminations. As the young man whos conducted this meeting fittingly said, ‘All this did not —jirst-happen*—t-»was—the—pa-— tient work of Sunday School tea~ chers and the children them- | selves. a | So the good. work goes on throughout the land, and may |; we all lend a helping hand:7so _that alcohol. may in time he ~hanished from: our—beloved, and beautiful Island Tam, Siri ; J, H.. MacF ARLANE Bedeque, P.E_1. u vall-yes We made a special | time meal. _-We would all lose and the broken | than that , Would it | My congratulations to the | | OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Still Far Short Of The Biblical Tithe [Program up to $48.5 million. But j our Gross National Product is | over $50 billion, more than one | thousand times our Columbo Aid. | How does that stack up against |the tithe recommended in Bible? | If we gave one tithe of our | | wealth to help those in need, we would give not $48.5 million, but | $5. billion. | Now one thing Canada lacks is_a sufficiency of foreign cur- | rency; one thing few Canadians have is adequate spending. mo- ney. But one thing which comes out of our ears is food. We throw--away-or-otherwise—-waste - ;as much food as we consume; {how many plates leave the din- ‘ing tables of our restaurants licked clean? Going back to the Bible which I_quoted,. the Bible which urges |the gift of a tithe to charity, maybe we should observe the Mosaic Law and fast one day in every week. Or if not fast, at least go without say our noon- the | their own personal gesture that |}way. The government's Exter- /nal Aid Office here has receiv- | ed some donations direct from Canadians, to supplement our government aid. But there is no organization which is now at- tempting to spearhead any pri- vate drive to assist the victims of India’s famine. But, while our politicians, like the Pharisees’ walking past on the other side of the road, say “It is nothing to us’, some stu- dents have acted. While our politicians debate sex, spies and sacked CBC employees, the -members~of—the--United--Nations_, Club at Blakelock High - School in Oakville, have acted. Aided ,and encouraged by their MP, Dr. Harry Harley, they are mov- ing to urge that Canada, the i, t . Ee fs self. : richest nation: per—capita—in the vw ha gerous | for. a person who has recovered Commonwealth, should help our starvingest fellow in the Commonwealth. To fast at noon-time on Fri- days would save an average of $10 million per week;..that we | chloroquine and other +} by a high fever and °; ganisms. of which 10 were peace corps | claimed. ’ last week. | Seeker Thirty-six of the 51 | Since Saturday--when care-| American officials in- Saigon | cases in military personnel de fully --hoarded..enemy fighters have stopped. identifying the jeloped the disease in Viet Nam, and in this regard. it is not ne leeeeiie a war that is bring | | ing the diesease close to home, | Synthetic anti-malarial” droga |@ zone north of the North Viet- | | were developed after quinnine | 2amese ¢apital’ of Hanoi and | became s¢arce shortly after | the start of World War 11. They | ‘were effective as a remedy and | prophylactic. Many authorities believed that they were. supe- | rior to quinine. Twenty years a well - known problem with later we are confronted with syn- thetic drugs; malarial para. | sites are becoming resistant tp svVi- thetic anti-malarials. It Gast | necessary to again use quinine as, a prophylactic and sees, the others for treatment. Malaria is one of the woe of all human ailments. “ The {chronic ill health that appears in communities where it is rife stifles ambition and the work- ing and fighting capacity of the population... The malady has been known’ to--gradually de- stroy the virility. of whole na- tons. The farmer had little to—look forward to when his ‘Chores were done. On returning home | he developed a chill followed profuse sweating. By morning weak- ness and prostration were so great he could hardly walk. The chill was the real McCoy; with skin and uncontrollable shaking that lasted an hour. This was hausted. The mosquito transmits “the different forms of malarial or- In the quotidian type chills and fever occur. daily; whereas in the vivax form, Symptoms occur on alternate days. When there is an interval of three days between chills, the quartan type is suspected, This is not always so simple as {it sounds because mixtures oc- cur in areas where the condi- tions is epidemic. RECOGNIZES HIMSELF L. T. writes: In your article on neurotics, I found an exact description of myself. _What--is- the cure? REPLY See a psychiatrist if the con- dition interferes with . your. work, efficiency, happiness, ~ abilityto get along-with~ others If the neurotic tendencies are | not this extreme, try spending a little more time thinking about others rather than vour- from a stroke to go to the Cats- kill mountains for a _ holiday? The altitude is higher than in Brooklyn. ee | weight; our -doctors-would—be_de- lighted; and by giving that food - could afford, but higher taxes we | would not like. This might well to India, our Commonwealth | fellows would be aided. | OAKVILLE SCHOOL LEADS Some. Canadians have _made | ing on our garbage dumps. | way to aid those who now could be an appropriate’ and effective REPLY greatly. appreciated —especial- even improve their lot by liv- __Sleepers At Airp ports _ * The Times, LAP | Time was when travellers ap- | proached airports with the wary circumspection of adventurers. Frightened or fearless, they | kept their wits about them. Now | they fall asleep in the departure | lounges. This, at any rate, is the | latest reason hit upon by baffl- ed airport officials to explain | why passengers keep missing oe flights and wake up to | find themselves still on the ground instead of high in the air Commendably anxious not to- eo the responsibility on to jals have been blaming the cen- | tral heating system, which (like | so many other things in Britain) is said to be ‘‘difficult to -coor- | dinate... with the changes in the | weather.” Previous attempts to keep | passengers on their-toes have in- cluded ringing gongs before the announcements and _ installing | closed circuit télevision (not, of | course, would have been even more 80 porific—but to carry lively infor- +mation...about. departure times)... Now, presumably, passengers | will be threatened with blasts of arctic air. Pacing vigorously up will, as the Americans would say, Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY- FIVE YEARS AGO: (April 28, 1941) Threats. of ~simultaneous , enemy attacks upon Suez Gib- raltar and Singapore coinciding with' an attempted invasion of | Britain were ‘‘stern realities’, Prime Minister Mackenzie King told the Ottawa. ° - John MecVane, NBC correspon- dent in England said in a broad- | for entertainment—that | wonder why more is not being | &M¢ dowti to keep warm they and_—we- become highly motivated~ House of Commons in | ‘towards catching their aircraft. | Some Continental airports, such as Orly, appear to solve the problem by ‘having really com- prehensive, intelligible, and con- | spicuous indicator boards that | enable the passenger to be mas- . ter of his own fate. But Britain must find—her—own—unique way of doing things. ly when the weather is warmer. BOTH ARE IN LUNGS M. P. writes: Is emphysema -+-a—first—eousin--to—tuberculosis?_— REPLY No. Both are chest diseases ut_.tuberculosis represents in-. fection and emphysema,— stretching and dilatation of lung sacs along with partial ob- struction of the bronchi: _ CLEAR UP INFECTION Mrs._S._M. writes; Is it safe for a person with a kidney in- fection to go on a reducing diet? REPLY Yes, but why not do one thing at a time? After the kid- ney infection is eliminated you struck back forthe first. time |cause of the losses. The North since July 10—three~Communist | Vietnamese have radar-directed |planes have been claimed. | anti-aircraft guns and these-and | All the action materialized in |other weapons can throw up a lethal wall of fire through which. American planes must dive to south of the - Coie. border: reach bridges, roads, rail. lines, That may have signifi- | barracks, and other targets. cance, particularly if the planes |HAS 100 PLANES | prove to have come from China. U.S. intelligence says it be- state department Tues- \lieves North Viet Nam has iday stressed that in the Viet- fewer than 100 jet fighters and NMamese war no sanctuary ex- pe abot 15 of the MiG-2is ists and planes attacking from rated as equal to the American |China would invite retaliatory |F-105 Thunde hief but inferior | attack. /to~the Phantom, hottest item However, the appearance of thé- U.S. has in combat. the aircraft north of Hanoi-may Why they are being used now | simply mean that that is where-1may result froma desire to in- the bases are. flict: heavier losses on the US, | What it also means is more’ | protect certain targets or sim- difficulty for American opera- | ply reflect the fact that crews :tions where losses are rising now are trained and techniques chattering teeth, blue and: cold | followed by two hours of high fe- | ver leaving him drowsy and ex- | —}pemny—willtose—much—of+their- No, andthe change may~b-e— ~Atnerican- -ombing—now...{s.at about the same level as before ‘the Christmas bombing —lull - of-' 37 days.. The pattern is broadly ,dispersed with continuing lim- “4ts of restraint. Heavier American losses are | believed ~dwe- to ground fire. Soviet - supplied surface - to-— air missiles have been largely | jineffective because American Charles de Gaulle, as every- | one knows, has been doing ev- |erything in his power to main- tain the Frenchness of France. But we write-to warn the gen- eral that ,at lower policy levels insidious forces appear to be at twork which would subvert his entire campaign. Two recent items alerted us to the danger. ; The first suggests that from somewhere in the recesses of |the administration has come a | directive to the French border | | police to keep a sharp eye out | | for invading beatniks who, come summer, descend in swarms on | Paris’s Latin Quarter. At first glance this clever rul- | ing might seem to favor the gen- eral’s policy of keeping British, German, and other allies out of Toone ~affairs:-But-upon..closer. examination, its effect could | prove disastrous to the econ- | omy of France. For the Ameri- can téurists who flock to Paris or tin the summertime have- come 1 to “depend “upon “these~ foreign srgeeyeeeeentsreene serine teeter tetera rua —- Hamburgers In Paris? Christian Science Monitor worked—out—to—mesh—them—with— -the missile defences. One domestic-~ repercussion could..be intensification of calls for harder air strikes in the. north to get the war over | sooner. In an @lection year, with Con- | gress striving to gauge the-pub.,' Hie-mood about a—dirty and ex. |pensive war, such sentiments | may find company. beatniks to provide the. ulne,”’ Parisian atmosphere. The second item is even more” | devastating— a rapier thrust to the vitals of the French elan. And paradoxical as it may seem its source-once again— the gov- }ernment! For more than a-mor {th now French civil servants ‘have been unceremoniously re- duced’ to half-hour, sandwiched- in, American-style snack lunch ‘es! If this experiment should survive, it will put an end to the tradition- encrusted three-hour_ midday interval for leisurély | aise, Thus the very heart would be | cut out ofthe French way of life. Unless General de Gaulle quickly assesses the danger and takes appropriate countermeas- ures, -his_entire-—Gallicization campaign could end in Waterloo. | Fifty million Frenchmen sitting around lunch counters, glancing at their watches, devouring ham- | burgers and sipping soft drinks ~would “surely be the-tast-straw! Comes the year 1970 and the currency of Great Britain will have a different look. The half- _crown, the shilling, the sixpence, the three - penny piece and the standard—of_values_as_the pound . (if it is to be used as the basic money unit) is divided into one hundred parts. Britain is chang- ing over to the decimal system, the same _as.our dollar. Britain’s melange of coins has | confused generations of school- boys and foreign visitors, but it | is-imbued with_history.Britain'’s currency has its ancestry in the. Roman pound and the system created by Charlemagne for the Holy Roman Empire of A.D. 800. Britain still uses the Latin symbols L (Libra), s. (solidus), and d.(denarius) to denote pounds, shillings, and pence. Britain’s penny, once silver, is the most historic denomination still in Western use; it was in- eld Passing In Britain Fort William oo Journal — penny, made of bronze and measuring 1% inches across, is probably the largest coin of its value anywhere in the world. During the 12th and 13th cen- | turies the pen ny become _known_as:sterlingus. In All like-_ lihood the term derived from ‘Easterling’, the name medie- val Britons gave to German | traders and their money. —The-word—‘sterling”’~survives— | with great honor; it signifies the purchasing power of a British “pound, and also -describes—sily-— rware with the fineness of 925 arts of silver per thousand. One of Britain’s most famous coins has -only~recently passed into history. The bronze farth- ing, which in medieval days could buy a plump chicken, sur- ‘| vived through the 1950's as a fourth of a penny. Britain discon- tinued the farthing on December 31, 1960, since it now can’t even troduced in. 784, The present-day Pe a feather. ‘The trouble at the moment is | can eee on your ee compromise. No one has yet de- | cided whether the passenger is to be challenged or coddled. The | gentle oriental gongs and the by correspondents of questions of im | the innocent-customer the offic | stream. of well-modulated an- nouncements~~are~ enough — in themselves to produce a slight- | ly hypnotic trance. There are only two ways out of the dilemma. One is to threat- , en the passengers more roughtly | hit them with cold air, assault their senses with bells and hoot- march them to- their air- raft under army sergeants. The other way, which is infin- itely preferable, is to accept the | inevitable. Turn up the central | heating, play soft music.... and ..then carry seach happily sleeping | ers, | Cc | passenger to his machine, wak- | ening him only when the journ- | ey is over. _ LODGE TO RETURN WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House says Henry Cabot | |Lodge, U.S. ambassador to ' South Viet Nam, 1s expected to arrive. here for consultations May 7 or‘-8. Press Secretary Bill D. Moyers said Wednesday i Lodge will leave Saigon’ Satur- | | day but, before visiting Wash- ‘ington, will stop in Rome “for | a little respite’ and then spent , | a few days in Boston, his home | area. } Prey Tid a)-1 ae | so | ~east-in-London-that-King- s PER! RU WY 11 of Greece already had left Ps | Crete on his way to Britain) Es where he would set up a free | Greek government TEN YEARS AGO ab rt sppeoii Let us design your let- terheads, bill heads, ‘April 28, 1956) . ‘brochures; call us for Sir—Winstom—Churchill, des-—}>-—alt_y- or —_ printing —— _cendant of the Hudson Bay needs | Company's third governor, was ‘ ‘created the Grand Seigneur of the Company .of Adventurers of England * Trading into Hudson Bay. GUARDIAN-PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY PHONE 4-8506 The Canadian Pacitie Steain- ships’ ‘Empress of Britain’’ ar- rived af Montreal on its maiden | vowtage from Liverpool, E n g- land, ”, dients are used. Ww “ol 4 i } | | | % | | j iM é and butter. | All our bakery products are prepared fresh daily in our modern bake shops, | Prerge to our laboratory tested al sae ny the finest quality ingre- SPECIAL AT OUR LUNCH COUNTER ‘MACARONI and CHEESE DINNER Made with old English cheese, tender cooked macaroni, peas and carrots roll *WOOLWORTH’S «.... A: 0 a ee ee a 55° Dial 4-8571 h’town