This was the scene at the height of a the Saturday night in downtown Montreal in which LITTLE SANDS Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Glllls .lnd family, who were living in “have returned to their home in ' Little Sands. Their four boys are . now ’ chool. p Charlottetown for the winter, at night IRE IN two firemen were killed. The men died when the second floor Large flocks of wild geese are seen daily feeding near the shore in grain fields here. These birds come daily and, feed during the day and fly out to open water and Mrs. Mack MacLean nwall. visited relatives in MI“. Cor attending Little Sands ll Little Sands recentl y. I Lynwood Blue, Charlottetown CITY & QUEENS “WE TREAT THE SICK WELL" — Giggey’s Pharmacy. A little early for summer . . . . ‘ BUT . . . what about the “Y” . pool . . . . See our Fashioned I styled "Swim caps" today . . " Brand new for 1963 . . . . just arrived. Prices 790 to $2.98. TICKETS FOR Easter Monday ‘ Charity Ball available at Myers ' Studio, Charlottetown Hotel or by «sending remittance to Post Of- “ lice Box 142, Charlottetown, MARCH 0F DIMES Charity Ball Charlottetown Hotel. Easter {Monday April 15th, 1963. Spon- ~ sored by the Prince Edward Is- and Chapter of the Canadian - Foundation for Poliomyelitis and rehabilitation. POT'I‘ED Tulips and Hyacin- ths for Easter, $1.25 each de- livered Charlottetown . Order now! Jewell's Green- houses. York. Phone 4-7074. DR. GENCHEFF will be ab- sent from his office until May 0th. Announcements KING'S COUNTY GREY HAIR VANISRES WHEN you use Angelique Grey Hair Restorer. Regain appearance of natural beauty, colour. $1.95 at Jenkins. Reddin Bros. and Cantwell’s Pharmacies. CLYDE RIVER Pro-Festival Concert, Clyde River Hall. Tuesday, April 9th at 8 p. m. TICKETS ARE available for spring Fashion Show to be held on Wednesday April 10th. Mon- tague High School auditorium. Get your tickets from Pepler Jewellery or any member of the Retarded Childrens Association. PRINCE COUNTY I WILL BE away until April 22. For business requirements Contact Charles Bealrsto or call . . Sear, Charlottetown. col- lect. W. Boyd Beairsto. sington. CARD PARTY, Springfield Hall. Tuesday, April 9. Sponsor ed by Summerfield Credit Union. Ken- a WILL BE HELD I Queens " DI ‘ of the burning building collar» sod and buried them under the visited his home in Little Sands recentl . Silas MacNeill who has spent the winter with relatives in Chars lottetown, has returned home in Little Sands. Bruce McPherson has recently left Little Sands to work in Pic~ tan with the Northumberland Ferries Ltd. Mrs. Alex Bliue was a recent hostess to the Little Sands Wo- itute men’s . . Mrs. John H. MacDonald, Mulr- ray Harbour won the quilt made by members of Little Sands W,I. at the lottery held at a recent meeting. Miss Lila Blue was the winner wreckage. Two other trapped firemen were rescued. of a mat which was made by Institute members and In by the Little Sands Women's In- stitute Tuesday night. 'ss E. MacNeill, Little Sands is spending some time in Charlottetown. as guest E a of her niece Mrs. Alex Stewart Mr. Stewart and family. MISS Dorothy Blue who is em- ployed in Charlottetown visited her home in Little Sands over the weekend. Charlie Stewart and Lloyd Wheeler of the Northumberland Fenrles Ltd, Plctou. visited their homes in Little Sands over the week-end, OBITUA RY Inserted by wife and family as a tribute to the deceased. HERBERT C. NELSON The death occurred on March 29th. 1963, at the P.E.I_ Hospital after a lingering illness of Her- Ibert Courteny Nelson. Mr elson was born at China Point, May 25th. 1886. He had lived a number of years in Van- couver and later resided in Char- lottetown. He is survived by his widow the former Mary Elsie \"yalt of Dunstaffnage and a family of two, Elsie, Civil Service, 0t- tawa. Earl. C.N.R,, Moncton. Also a brother Ernest in Van- couver. and a sister Mrs. Com- mon of Charlottetown. Funeral services were held from the Cutcllilfe Funeral Home by the Rev. Mr. Piercey of Mil- ton. Interment was in e An glican Church Cemetery in Cherry Valley. CONSERVATIVE POST - ELECTION AND AWAITING - RETURNS RALLY ' AT THE ROLLAWAY TONIGHT AT 7.30 PM. ' Election returns will be received on televiso'n and radio for interested'voters. EVERYBODY WELCOME Conservative Association Tl Queens Vote PHONE 2-1942 INQUIRIES 0R IRANSPORIAIION I0 IHE POIIS Liberal Committee Rooms * 2-1941- PEI. Liberal Assoc. N.Y. Stocks Roll Ahead During Week NEW YORK lAPl—The stock: market rolled up it biggest ad- I vance of the year last week and I did so on the heaviestt rading since January. Stock prices surged to their highest levels of 1963, based on the popular mar- ket averages. The list backed away Tues- av from an assault on the mid: February recovery peak and t fell on news that U.S. Steel, Bethlehem and five other com- panies had. been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring to f ‘ steel products. I However, the report on the 'securities industry by the Sc— curities and Exchange Commis- ion. one of Wall Street‘s over- hanging worries, was made pub- lic Wednesday. It seemed sur- prisingly mild to those in the financial community and stocks rallied on the New York Stock Exchange. Thursday the market passed it highs for the year. aided by news that unemployment in March had its largest monthly drop in more than four years and by word of record depart- ment store sales in March. The market seemed "tired" early Friday but gathered re- newed strength and climbed to still another peak for the year_ AVERAGE JUMPS The Dow Jones industrial av- erage toooed the significant 700 level Friday for the first time in a year. For the week the Dow industrials advanced 19.91 to 702.43, highest closing level since March 30, 1962, when they stood at 706.95. The Associated Press average of 60 stock rose 5.9 to 264.1, highest since Dec. 15. 1961. whe they closed at 264.6. Turnover for the week swelled to 23,611,104 shares from 19.- 349.340 the previous week and was the largest since the week ended Jan. 19 when 23,005,760 share changed hands. The end of the 114-day New York City newspaper strike was cited as an important factor In the rise, since many investors now had back their regular sources of financial news and stock market quotations. Most active issues on the New York Stock Exchange in- cluded Chrysler, up 10% at 102% o 454 h p 31/: 49%; U.S. Smelting. off 8% 71%: and General Motors. up at 68%. ' Most active isues on the American Stock Exchange in- cluded Reinsurance Investment. at at u g up 1 11% on shares: and Canadian Javelin, up 1% at 11% Ix prices of. Refitted Ship Ready To Soil NEW YORK (CPI-The Cun- ard Steamship Company an- nounced Saturday that the Car- manla, recently refitted as a dual-purpose Atlantic liner and cruise ship. will begin her new transatlantic service 9. sailing from Rotterdam for Que- bec City and Montreal. The Carmania will be joined in the service June 4 by her sister ship, has undergone the same restyl- Slow Dresden Rebuilding Shocks Returning German By JOHN O. KOEIILER DRESDEN. East (AH—My return to my former home town. now a part of Com- munist East Germany, was my most shocking experience since the end of the Second World War. I remembered Dresden en- veloped in flames and smoke. I remembered the delayed-ac- tion bombs exploding periodi- cally. I remembered the stench of deat That was 18 years ago. Today the smoke and flame stench are gone. But otherwise. the city looks much as if thef air raids had struck only yes- (I B :1 On erday, I Fire-blackened ruins stretch for miles north and south along I the Elbe River and westward to. the foothills of the More Moun-. talns. Only a small area in the city's centre has been rebuilt. The Communist regime has put up blocks of department stores and shops around the Altmarket Square and along a nearby street. , Some prefabricated f o u r- 1 storey apartment houses have! Germany been put up among the ruins.Istruction.' The regime also has recon-l structed some of the architec-I tural masterpieces of the Baro-1 que period that gave Dresden; the nickname of “the Florence of the Elbe." TOURISTS SHOWN BEST These are places Communist guides show tourists as ex amples of Communist accom-l plishments. But tourists are not taken to the suburbs. And they have no chance to talk to the people. “The government ow s the city will be rebuilt in 1980." said a construction worker. “Nobody here believes it. The deadline is being advanced from year to year." At Postplatz Square. once the, hub of city life, people waited‘ for rickety. pro-war streetcars. Their faces reflected the same downheartedness I saw 18 years ago Their clothing was nearly as shabby as in 1945. Off Pcstplatz Square is the former Wilsdrufferstrasse. now Karl Marx Strasse and the I I l Iesage Gives Gov’t Year For Decision QUEBEC (CPl—Premier Le- sage Friday night gave the next \ federal government — which-a ever party is elected Monday—{l one year to meet Quebec'sl demand ‘ for access to more direct taxes and said that the? Liberals on the whole meet his! government's "p resent de-I mands." As he wound up his two-hour budget speech he reviewed the policies of all four parties on federal - provincial fiscal rela- tions and was particularlyl sharp with Social Credit. I warning: , “Either the central govern-1 ment, whic ever party is elected April 8, and I repeat. whichever party is elected3 April 8, within the next 12I months will have taken into .hUIId‘IhE W!“ d_0 the FESI- said: account the demands of Quebec ‘ the mEIaI‘WOI‘kmE WEEI‘IY- This . or we in Quebec will have seen " to it. during the same period. that necessary decisions in , cal matters will have been en. “And these decisions will be those dictated to us b the objective of economic, social and cultural affirmation wh‘ch SD Fi‘ I Steel Production Up During March OTTAWA (CPI —Stee1 Ingot‘ production in March rose 13.1; per cent to 670,060 tons from 592.166 in the corresponding‘ month last year, the bureau ofI statistics said Saturday. I With gains also reported in January and February, output in the first three months of the year increased 12.7 per cent 1.895.240 tons from 1,682,120 to 11‘. fig. mum 0 compared with 26,700,000 in the ‘ we have fixed for ourselves at‘ the demand of the people of1| Quebec." I Strike Threat I' g I Boosts Demand For U.S. Steel CLEVELAND (AP) — Steel; Magazine e s t i m a t c 5 sec- ond-quarter steel output will be at least 17 per cent more than _ Ithc first quarter unless quick de- I “IS $989011 Gilded With this Ivelopments on the labor front: eliminate the threat of a sum- mer strike by the United Steelworkers. Rising consumption alone will require a lO-per-cent increase in stcclmaking and in v e n t o r y would boost the industry's sec- ond-quarter output to a mini- f 31.000.000 ingot tons. the publication first quarter. sai . . Steel said: “First-half produc- tion will be at least 57,700,000 tens. perhaps as,much as 60,- 000,000. Either way. it will be up substantially from the 54,- 100,000 tons produced in the first half of 1962." Stockpiling is the big factor in the market's upsurge. Steel said. “but it’s not big enough to f explain why some mills are booking orders at 140 per cent of capacity." Steel said sales are brisk be- cause of strike hedging. seas- onal‘uptrends in some products I such as structurals and tin plate ‘ and improved business condi- tions in many steel-consuming industries. the first quarter of 1962. Pig iron output in Ma rc-h advanced 1.1 per cent to 451,746 tons from 446,985 a year earlier, Due to decreased production In the first two months of the year, production in the first quarter fell 1.6 per cent to 1.238.920 ions from 1.258.996 last year. ROYAI. SECURITIES Corporation Limited Invesllzlcn: Securities ALEX M. WILSON Manager 137 Grafton St. Dial 4-8583 Charlottetown IN monthly balance to accumulate at the coast to coast. A" r~ REASONS FOR PUTTING YOUR SAVINGS 70 EASTERN TRUST DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS Your interest is calculated on the minimum Your interest is paid half yearly, or allowed Your savings are safe -— with one of Canada’s senior trust companies, with branches from You can deposit in person —— or by mail using our special deposit-by-mail envelopes. S tart saving today! The EASTERN (nab/mm! ms 154 Richmond Street IRAIICHIJ A CROSS CA NADA same rate TRUST may pride of Communist “recon “Socialism will win." said a poster above the entrance to a grocery store I visited. No fresh fruit or vegetables were avail- able. “Peace through socialism," proclail. ed another poster near a dairy which had no milk. no _ e885. no butter. “Butter is ra- tioned to a half pound a person a week.” said the salesgirl. add- ing in a lower one of voice: "If we have it." “Through increasod produc- tivity to socialsim." said still another slogan at the butcher shop. It had sausages for sale but the only fresh meat was slewing beef, mostly fat. at 4.80 marks ($1.20) a pound. COMMUNIST PARADOX For lunch I went to a Hun- garian restaurant. across the street from the nearly empty food stores. It was like walking into paradise—another paradox of the Communist system. The restaurant, a little more than a year old. was builtin a style as modern as anything I had seen in the West, And for 12 marks ($3) I had meat salad, veal cutlet with a paprika sauce. Hungarian white wine and coffee. The meal was the best I had during a week in East Germany. en through the sea of rubble to the suburb where I grew up. The house in which I had lived was destroyed in air raids and at the site there was a big construction project. explained to the workmen I lived there 18 years ago. I asked what they were build- that 5 “An electric power station." answered one of the men. “Yeah.” s n e e r e d another. "we’ve been building it for; years." They told me construc-‘ three , tlon gan more than years ago. Up to now, only the foundations have been com- . pleted. ' NO NO I drove for 15 minutes. the Relay I satellite, Crockett and Storey Ltd. Open 8.30 am. to 9 pm. TO‘DAY . . Electon Day “PROMISE SALE" WE PROMISE YOU FREE DELIVERY! i WE PROMISE YOU WE PROMISE YOU WE PROMISE You DELIGHT YOUR FAMILY! ; WE PROMISE YOU EXCEPTIONAL VALUE! WE PROMISE YOU A SPECIAL. PRICE! ON ANYTHING WE SELL YOU DURING ELECTION DAY! [The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. April 3, 1m- 15 I Britain, U.S. Boost ExchangemOI Honors By W. B. RAGSDALE be given a castle. or even a WASHINGTON (API—Britalnmouse. But then he won't have and the United States haveito pay U.S. income taxes. el- been trading honors and gifts the!“ ever since tempers cooled from American-5 hOId ChurCh'll “1 the War of 1812. but there'sithe highest regard of any for- ncver been anything like the Ieigner since the Marquis de La- fuss over Dwight D. Eisenhowerlfayette joined them in their and Sir Winston 5. Churchill. .fight for independence from Britain piled honors on Gen. lBritain In 1776. E scnhowcr after he led the al-: And 1m“! "OW Lflfflyflit W35 lIcs to victory over Hitler's Ger- lthe last man to be voted 11-5. many in the Second World War. :cltltenship of any sort by legis- He rec-rived honorary degrees Iiat‘lve act as thanks for helping galore and was made freeman the [7.5- In an hour of CPI-Ils- of Edinburgh and the ancient: 1" December. 1734. the Mary- burc cf Maypole. lland General Assembly decreed King George VI proclaimedlthat Lafayette and “his male Eisenhower a Grand Knight offheirs forever" were to be cm- the Bath, and Scotland gavefi‘hidered "natural-born citizens" him a permanent home—a 160- I0! Maryland- ycar-old castle and 2.000 acresl The General Assembly of Vir- of shooting preserves in Ayr- ‘ginia granted Lafayette Vir- shire. :ginia citizenship in 1785. Churchill received many hon-- And When the constitution of orary degrees and other honors che United States was ratified in the U.S. When Eisenhower in 1789, Lafayette, along with became president he struck off other citizens of the original 13 especial medal to honor Brit— states. became a citizen of the aln‘s Second World War primeiUnited States. minister. 3 Now Congress has voted to make the 88-yeamld Churchill a honorary citizen of the United States—first man to be so honored. Churchill will be looking on from across the ocean Tuesday when President Kennedy signs the measure. The ceremonies will be beamed to England by This is the ANSWER N0 VOTE. N0 TAXES Apparently. all Churchill will have to show for the honor will be a certificate from the presi- dent. He won't be able to vote in U.S. elections. and he won't PACKED PUNCH The Japanees battleships Ya- mato and Musashi carnied the heaviest armaments ever put afloat—nine 18.1 - inch guns. Both were sunk in the Second by the time he was World War. TO YOUR TAX TIME PROBLEMS CUDMORE BUSINESS EOUIPMIENT 179 Grafton st. Dill 4-5681 Anywhere on RE!- FINANCE CHARGE! For First 60 days DOWN PAYMENT! Until 30 days ONE DAY ONLY ing. the announcement said. ‘ I .l. ANGUS MacLEAN and H v EATH MACQUARRIE Monday April 8th OPEN TONIGHT Tlll 9 PM. TV's will be Set up on each Floor Come in and browse around . . . WATCH THE HECTION RESULTS CROCKETT and STOREY LTD. Dedicated to Home Improvement