stiffer Penalties For (iriinc GOIILOS» llrgeii by MP o'I'I‘AWA, (CF) —An Opposition member who helped convince Par- liament of the need for it ban on crime comic: now wants stiffer penalties against their publishers, and against publishers of obscene material. A Davie Fulton, Progressive Con- _w~v;,t,lve member for Kamloops, Thursday night proposed in the Commons a maximmum $25,000 nfie for the corporations which publish crime comics, or a .fl\'I’.-)'€ll'.‘ year term if the pub.isher is an individual. The present m_a)tirnum penalty of two years applies to both pub- lishers and distributors and Mr Fulton's proposed amendment said this should be continued for whole- salers and retailers. He made his proposal as an amendment to the Criminal Code, now before the Commons for re- vision. Justice Minister Garson opposed ‘he amendment. on grounds that the Law now provides an unlimited fine for corporations. MI. Fulton replied that a $25,000 fine has never been imposed. Fine Up To Court: The minister agreed, but said it L1 up to the courts to decide the amount of the fine. Provincial at- tomeys-generatl could appeal the sentence if they thought it insuffic- icn.t. The amendment was supported by Rev. E. G. Haiiscll «5C-Mac- leod. Mr. Fulton was instrumental in having Parliament in 1949 ban the sale and distribution of crime com- l(‘§. They are defined as piibiic-.i- tions devoting all or most of their space to crime pictures. Thursday night he t"lC‘S(‘l'll)f‘d rrime comics and obscene litera- ture as a "lethal and ghastly form nf perversion." And said publish- ers bear the prime responsibility. Distributors often coii'd no! (in an adequate job of t‘l‘llS0l'lll‘,1 .ln‘ material that passed through their‘ hands. he said, but they should not be relieved of responsibility. "These men are going to place in the hands of children thing,.. which will corrupt their minds." Crime Comics Return He said the 1940 law resulted in crime comics disappearing from newsstands for it time. But they now had returned. An estimated 5.000.000 8. month were distributed. Printers and publisliers t‘0lll|‘l TV Blroatlcaspler Mr. Harold Sampel (above) has hccn employed as sportscaster with the new television station CilS.l (TV), Saint John, N. B. H0 is the son of Mrs. Russell Siimpel and the late Russell Sampel of this City. His grand- mother, Mrs. Brenton L. Wood rcsidcs at 17 Felling Street. FRENCH STRIKE CALLED PARIS. tAPi-—’I'he Communist.- dominated Confederation Generate du Travail, l7'rance‘s largest labor union, called today for a one-day general strike April 28 to bolster its demands for an increase in the llililolllli minimum wage scale. The basic minimum now is 20,000 francs 1557i it month. The CGT wants this raised to slightly more than 25,000 francs. l jbecausc of their enormous profits. , Fred 5. Zaplitny (CCF-Dauphin) lsaid it is not fair to place respons- ibility on magazine distributor: Sand retailers for supervision of the contents of crime comics. It should be placed on publishers. Mr. Hansell said laws banning obscene publication should apply to radio and television. Television was a. powerful moulder of public morale and should be interpreted as a medium of pubication to bring it within existing laws. laugh at the D1'(‘S('llt court fines Difference it Between A“ And II-Bonds WASHINGTON. (AP) — What‘: the difference between a hydrogen bomb and the "old - fashioned" atomic bomb?- It's easier to understand if you remember that actually they're both A-bombs. The basic differ- once is that the ‘‘old'' type, first exploded in 1945. makes use of splitting atoms, while the newer one fuse; or puts atoms together in new combinations. Either way there's a tremendous release of energy—but much more so with the hydrogen bomb, It’; more accurate to call the older weapon II fission bomb, rather than just an "atomic" bomb, and the new type a fusion bomb instead of a “hydrogen" bomb. What the fluion bomb does. es- sentially, is split atoms of uranium a very heavy material. The fusion bomb, on the other hand, gets its deadly effect by converting atoms of hydrogen, which is extremely light, into atoms of helium. one more thing: It takes a fis- sion bomb to set off, or "trigger," a fusion bomb. CANADA PROVINCE OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND IN THE PROBATE COURT 'l‘he 15th day of March A.D. 1954. ll: Re Estate of IDA MURRAY MacLELLAN late of Cardigan in King: County in the said Province, Widow, deceased. tes- tate To the Sheriff of the County of Prince County or any Constable or literate person within said County GREETING: WHEREAS upon reading the petition on file of Ernest H. Strong of Summerside in Prince County aforesaid, Barrister-ab Law, the sole Executor of the above named Estate. praying that a citation may be issued for the purpose hereinafter set. forth: You are therefore hereby required to cite all persons interested in the said'Estate to be and appear before the Judge present at a Probate Court to be held in_ the Court House in ‘Summerside in Prince County in the said Prov- lnce, on Thursday the mth day of April next coming. at the hour of New Machine Eliminates Need For Messenger MON'I'R.EAL (CPi~A miniature facsimile machine which eliminates messenger pick-up and delivery be- tween business offices and tele- graphic transmission centres, was used Thursday for the firpt time in Canada. The inaugural operation centred at the Anglo-American Telegraph Company's Montreal office. K. Bruce Mitchell, vice-president of Western Un-ion Telegraph Com- pany's international communica- tions, pushed the “send" button. The machine, called desk-fax and weighing 18 pounds, works this way 2 The message, type- written or in longhand, is placed on the metal cylinder of the ma- chine in a business office. A but- ton is pushed and the message, exactly as written, is scanned by an electronic eye and transmitted to the telegraph office in much the same iasliion as ll wirephoto. The telegraph office then handles the message in the normal way for its deiitination. Incoming messages are handled similarly from the receiving tranI5— ion o'clock fore-noon cf the same day to shew cause if nny they can mission centre to busines offices. The inaugural messafl WIS cabled to London why the Accounts of the said Es- tate should not be passed and the Estate closed as prayed for in said petition and on motion of Ernest H Strung Esquire, lroctor for said Petitioner. AND IT IS HEREBY ORDER- ED that a true copy hereof be forthwith published in some news- paper published in Charlottetown in Queens County in the said Province once in each week for at least four consecutive weeks from me date hereof and that a true copy hereof be forthwith posted in the following public places re- spectively, namely, in the hall of the Court House in Summerside in Prince County aforesaid, at or near the store of .1. A. McDonald and Company Limited at Card- igan aforesaid and at or near the Post Office in Cardigan aforesaid so that all persons interested In the said Estate as aforesaid may have due notice thereof. WITNESS His Honour Harold Leonard Palmer, Judge of the said Queens County, the day and year first above written. By the Court. ISgd.) Frances B. Yinnlcomba. (l..S,) Registrar. WE GUARANTEE THE MATERIAL TO CONTAIN CROW PI-owse Brothers mm VEHICLE SOLIDS OF THIS 35% OR MON! "WALLKYD". DIAM .i’l", W .,y;-. i.. -i odorless alkyd WALL EIIAMELS A REVOLUTIONARY OEVELOPMENT IN WALL PAINT FORMULATION! NEW ALKYO-BASE WALL ENAMELS ARE A OINOII TO APPLY...ROLL REAOlLY...BRUSN FREELT. . .DRY RAP|OLY...WASH EASILY... KEEP THEIR VELVETT BEAUTY FOR YEARS. Dccoratone and C-D wall paints in flat, offer: - They dry in 1 jiffy fumes. Crown Diamond Products Are Sold By: satin and gloss are now made with Walikyd; This odorless alkyd is similar to that used in producing wear - and - water resistant finishes for cars, stoves and refrigerators. Here are some unique advantages C-D Decoratone and wall enamels definitely - They go an easily with brush or roller -I They clean like magic Also, C-D Decoratone and wall enamels work on any surface . . . "cover" better . . . and are free from pungent "wet paint" C-D Decoriitone wall enamels are available in a range of 288 beautiful. lasting colors. OND PAINT CO. LIMITED Charlottetown P.l-1.1. Iiicppc House to Expand Facilities MONTREAL, tC.P> —— Dieppe House. I "living memorial" to men who died in the first big at- tack on Hitler's Atlantic fortress. announced Thursday it will ex- pend its facilities for the care of epileptics. The institution, unique in North America, was found in 1946 by the late George A. Savoy. a manu- facturer, in memory of his son, Poul. and other Canadians killed in the Die-ppe raid of Aug. 19, 1942. Dieppe House was built at near- by St. Hilalre, it building with- out inside doors or siai.r\\1.iys, and now has 82 patients. The u.not'l.ho- dox design is to protect patients who may have an epileptic attack at any time. Ramps take the place of stairways. John Savoy, brother of Maj. Paul Savoy, who was killed at Dleppe, Thursday announced a campaign for $75,000 to build a new wing and increase the capac- ity of the hospital by 50 per cent. He said there is no similar in- stitute in North America, and en- quiries from Europe indicate the hospital may be the only one of its kind in the world. JAPANESE BOATS S—E_IZED TOKYO, (APi~A Soviet patrol craft captured two Japanese fish- ing boat: off the eastern tip of the northern island of Hokaido to- day, Kyodo news agency said. The Russians have seized six boats in the area since March 15, Kyodo reported, and are still holding four, plus 25 sailors. mou wa'rnarai.E The Alexandra falls on I-fay river in northern British Columbia have a. drop of 150 feet. Bullet Prices in The U. S. A. iliip Sharply WASHINGTON, (AP) — The price of butter in the United States dropped abruptly Thursday and store owners began marking down a ho-t of fiIllP." items rang- ing from l‘()SflllllE jewelry to mink cozits. Just what effect this would have on buying, it was too soon to tell. But there was no immed- iate rush of customers to take ad- .\'i.ninge of price Cuts lfroni lower price ‘Uiriry farmers and ,taxes. 1 Both the price support, drop- inrdered by Agriculture Secretary flizra Bt=nsnn- and the excise tax Ir»-tlunt-l.ions -voted by (Tnngrcss in the tune of $999,000,000 \\‘f‘llL in- ‘to effect 'l‘hiirsd:iy. Butter prices reacted quickest. Almost everywhere in the country they dropped from between five and 10 cents a pound. in Kansas (‘lly the pl‘lf't" dropped generally to 67 from 75 cents a pound. Dairy farm:-rs generally were jittery over the outcome of Ben- son's cut in price supports—from 90 to 75 per cent of parity. Many were uncertain whether they fac- ed A sizable-"slash in their in- come or whether--as Benson has supports to lower excise re.-'ultiiIg. f0rPi'?aSl~salP§ will be higher and their long-term position more, secure. ‘ .___.____-____ l TOKYO, ram —-Police arrested} 320 persons today in one of the' biggest crack-downs against ter- rorist suspects since the war. The targets apparently were a mixture of criminal and political trouble- makers. Police said five Japanese swords and three daggers were Err the hnest cup or coffee you money can buy. get Chase 82 Sanbom in this 1-lb. Vacuum-Pack tin at your grocer‘: special price this weeltl Served with distinction in finest hotels, Chase & Sanborn is vacuum-packed to bring all its costly fragrance and exquisite flavor to your table. seized. Enjoy it today -11! the flavor your cup can hold. Aazwzmeeyoimiégw w.xinesdi=.;L April 7. 1954 West Germany‘; Far East Exports Up BONN, Germany, (Reuters) West Germany announced Friday a 50-percent increase between 1950 and 1953 in her exports to the Far East, including communist China. As a result of imports amount- ing to $25,033,000 last year, Coni- munist China rose from lltli to fifth place in the list of far east- ern buyers of West German goods. China bought mainly iron goods, ma.chlner,\', electrical goods, preclsions and optical ll"iSl.l'lllllf_‘llLS“ and phnrmacetitical protiucts, the survey said. West German imports from Com-’: munist China also rose by 80 per’ cent last year to $33.?.'i9,000. V l STEEL ;E:K The United States rcsrlir~d A rc- cord steel production of 111500.000 tons in 1953. Make Your Purchase At Island Book Room I Gt. George St. ' l high; ‘die Guardian Page 18 Business Reports MCKENZIE ISLAND, Ont., (OP) McKenzie Lake Gold Mine: Ltd., had a net profit in N55 of s2.3,(iH9 compared with net loss of $14,869 in 1952. Working capital was $714,973 against 719,878. H. G. Young, president. said a federal subsidy of tif71,m2 was a ltromcndous help to the luccess of the _veai"s operation, TORONTO, ICPI Canadian General Electric net income for 1953 was $11,014,537. compared ,with $112,952 in 1952. H. M. Turner, resident. noted that sales were at ecord level for the eighth consecutive year, at :"03.i47,666. compared with 0154,- ¢._’07 in 1952. Marvens CILIIT Ind CIIIISI Look for Manon’: Seal of Quality