Page 2 The Monday, Fe}.-,_ _ I‘ WEATI-IQ TORONTO (C1,, , tures issued by he weather office- Mrs. G. R. Lea Heads Zion WA. Mrs. G. R. Lea, is the new president of the Women S AUX11- iary of Zion Presbyterian Church for the ensuing year. This was announced at the regular m°mh‘ ly meeting held Thursday even- l Coun. Jolinstone Pleased With Ottawa Reception . E‘ MRS. WILLIAM WOOD. trict Guider, is seen here demon- strating the correct way to pack kit, required for a 1st Class Dil- hiker. Guides from left to right are:-—Dorothy Boudreault, South- port Company; Daphne Arm- strong, 1st and 3rd. St. Peter’s Girl Guide Patrol Leaders Hold Conference In CI1’town A very successful conference and training was held at Zion Lower Hall on Saturday after- noon and evening. In ‘spite of the CITY IIIIII stormy weather, there were 41 girls from Charlottetown, Morell and Souris. The session opened with a talk on “What Guiding CENTRAL _l_ KNIGHTS of_ Columl .18 pre- lenten- Dance, Rollaway, Feb, 13. WALLPAPER, room lotsplialf price. Firestone Home and Auto. WE TREAT the sick well. Gig- gey’s Pharmacy, open 8:30 am. to 8 p.m. THERE WILL be a meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Main Brace, Club tonight at 7:30 at the club rooms. JUST ARRIVED kiddie’s and ;, Junior Misses Tweed Corduroy ‘ and wool Tartan slims. 7 -to 16. Holmes and Bradley. , . BALANCE ‘OF Winter Snow I I‘ suits, pram suits, coats and dres- ses. Clearing at 1-3 off. Holmes and Bradley. MUSIC FESTIVAL Broadcast, Tuesday morning, Feb. 11, 10.30 o’clock. C.F.C.Y. by Mrs. Lorne Callbeck. Provincial ‘ Convener Membership. - ' ATTENTION LADIES! Stand-' ard First Aid Course begins Tues-' day, February 11th, 7.30 p.m. Red Cross Headquarters, 62 Prince Street. Everybody welcome, free instruction. LAST ADULT POLIO Im-_ munization Clinic ..for Charlotte- town at Salvation Army Citadel, Great George Street, Monday, February 10th, 4 p.m. ‘thigough to 9 p.m. No first given. All adults due for second inocula- tion urgedgto attend. THREE FIREVALARMS —City firemen were out on three short calls Sunday afternoon: two separate oil burner. flare-ups were dealt with on Sydney Street; and a short circuit in the alarm system called them to DeBlois Brothers warehouse. ‘ FUNERAL SATURDAY -—The 1: funeral of the late Aeneas Mac- Eachern was held Saturday mornmg from the residence of his sister, Mrs. Rlaymond Trainor, Canavoy, to St. An- drews Church where Requiem High Mass was celebrated by a his pastor, Rev. George‘ Mac- Cormack, who also conducted the service at the grave. Pall- bearers were Ray Farquliarson, Lloyd McE)wen, Robert John- ston, ‘Joseph MacDonald, Vic- tor MaicPhee. Angus Mac- Phee. Interment was in The Church Cemetery. The funeral was largely attended. ’ POLICE COURT — A city re- sident, and a resident of Rocky Point each were sentenced to 20 days in Queens Count Jail in City Police Court Sati ay morning when found guilt of being drunk and incapable. Mag- istrate K. M. Martin presided. Two other city residents charged with the same offence were dealt with as follows: one was lined $10 and costs or five days and the other given a 10-day suspended sentence. Another city resident charged with being drunk and disorderly was re- manded one week, and a resid- ent of Covehead Road was find $10 and costs for failing to stop at a rec‘. ti'a*"ic light. FUNERAL SUNDAY The funeral of the late Mrs. Alexan- der Horton was held from the MacLean Funeral Home yester- rlay afternoon. Service was con- ducted by Rev. J. H. Bishop. Iri- terment was in Birch Hill Ceme- tcry. Pallbearers were: Percy Lund, Steven lvlurnaghan, Ralph I-1-srton, Henry Jones, Norman Rankin. Fred Robertson. N.D. MacLEAN FUNERAL DIRECTOR 15 King Square Charlottetown DIAL 5549 ATTENTION LIBERAL voters Ward. 5 West Brighton A and B polls. A meeting will be held in H.L. Sear Company office at 7 p.m. tomorrow night to select delegates for the Liberal Conven- tion to be held February 18. FUNERAL SATURDAY.’-— The funeral of the _la-te Miss Selina M. Robinson, R.N., was held Saturday afternoon from the, IvIacLean Funeral‘ -Home. Ser- vice was conducted by Rev. Canon J. T. Ibbott. Interment was in ‘Sherwood Cemetery. Pallbearers were: Hon. George D. DeBlois, Major T. Mac- Nutt, Victor Pur-die_ James Has- lam, Edward Miller, Elmer Bul- man. FUNERAL AT LOT 65 —— The funeral of the late William E. Costello was held Saturday morning from The Charlottetown Funeral Home to St. Ann's Cliuiisli, Lot C5, where Re- quiem HighiM.is.s was celebrat- ed by Rev. Charles MacCa-r- thy, P.P., whh also conducted the service at the grave. The pallbearers were Mathias Flood, James Cudmore, John Cusack, Cedric Alairibett, Thomas Car- ragher, Amos Callaghan. In- terment was in the C Church ‘Cemetery. The funeral was largely attended. , J ‘ "FUNERAL THURSDAY —— The funeral of the late Mrs. Daniel A. MacNeill was held Thursday‘ afternoon with a short service at the Cutcliffe Funeral Home followed by a service in the Church of Scotland at Birch Hill. The service at the Funeral Home was conducted by ‘Rev. Harvey Bishop. The service at the church and grave were conducted ‘by Rev. D. Mac- Donald. The flower bearers were Daniel Acorn. Delburn Munn, Georg-e Myers_ Harry Weather- bie, Colins Wood, Arnold Mac- Neill. The pallbearers were Wil- lard Brehiauit, Clhairles Duffy, chell, Fred Mossman, Warren Acorn. Interment was in the Church Cemetery. The funeral was largely attended. ' PERSONALS Mrs. J .H. Blanchard, Charlotte- town, is leaving today for Detroit, Mich. for a visit to relatives and friends. On her return trip she will stop at Montreal to visit her daughter Beatrice, Mrs. Dr. Jean‘ Marie Beauregard, at Notre «Dame de Grace. Mr. and Mrs. Napoleon H. Gal- lant of Charlottetown left this morning for Detroit. Mich., where they will attend the golden wedding of Mrs. Gallant’s bro- ther and sister-in-lay, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Doiron. On their return at the end of the month they will visit relatives and friends in Toronto and Mon- treal. BIRTHS MAYNE —_- At The P. E. I.‘ Hos- pital on Saturday, February 8, to Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Mayne, Charlottetown, a son. SMITH — At The P.E.I. Hos- pital on February 9, 1958, to Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Smith (Nee Joan Bernard), Hunter ‘River, a daughter, Fay Jo Ann. 7 lbs. 15 oz. DEATHS MCDONALD — At her home at Mt. Stewart on Sunday, Feb- ruary »9, Mrs. Fred McDonald in her 86th year. Her remains will be transferred from The Hennessey Funeral‘ Home this afternoon at 3 o’clock to the res- idence of her daughter, Mrs. Dr. J . D. Reddin, Mt. Stewart, from where the funeral will be held on Wednesday morning at 9:15 to St. Andrew’s Church for Solemn Requiem High Mass at 9:30 o’clock. Interment in the Church Cemetery. Please omit flowers. SPENCER —— At the P.E.I. Hos- pital on Feb. 8, 1958, Thomas Spencer of 276 Fitzroy St.‘ in his 61st year. Remains are . ‘ ‘ ’ C l tt t Martin Jackman’ Robert Mm ads will be held in har o e_ own and St. James’, Charlottetown; Virginia Boudreault, Southport Company; Lynn Manning, 1st and 3rd. St. Peter’s and St. Means", given by Mrs. Harry Cudmore, Provincial Commis- sioner, followed by a short ques- tion period. Mrs. W. Wood, Dis- trict Guider, instructed the girls in outdoor activities and a first P. W. College I Miss Gail Johnston of Charlotte- town has been chosen by the stu- College at the 1958 student’s sum- mer seminar of the World Univer- sity Service in Yugoslavia, it was learned last night. Miss Johnston, a third year stu- dent at P.W.C., is taking an arts course. She is a daughter of Mr. dents to represent Prince of Wales . James’; Patricia McCabe, 4th Charlottetown Basilica Company; Diane Eldenshaw, Morell Com- pany. class hike. Then came games, ideas for “Thinking Day”, a quiz, supper: and the session ended with camp -fire. CIi’town Girl To Represent At Yugoslavia and Mrs. Lester E. Johnston, Mt. Edward Road. She is now the representative - elect of the local college for the world seminar. The appointment has to be confirmed by the nation- al organization but it is anticipat- ed that the choice of the college concerned will be accepted and confirmed. Average I975 WASHINGTON ‘ )—By 1975 the United States can be earning $7,100 a fa.mily\if it protects its competitive economy with “un- ending vigilance” the Committee for Economic Development said Saturday. _ The 7,100 average, in dollars, with the buying power of 1956 money, is “not an imagined Utopia, it is a practical goal for practical men," said the privat- ely-supporzted research commit- tee of 150 U. S. businessmen and ed-ucati-onists. It compares today's aver- age of 5,300 a family, after pay- ment of taxes. The foreseeable rise, said CED; is more than the average family now spends for both food and clothing. It can be attained, the report said, by ublic‘ and pnivate pol- ioeis wiiic nierely maintain the growth rate at which the U. S. economy has ex-pand.:l since 1880. Total output has risen about a spendable income averaging- Income.In U. S. May Be $7,100 Per Family three per cent _a year, output a man has risen two per cent a year. CHIEF HAZARDS Some tendencies now are vis- ible or imaginable, the report said,~ which could Lalet the growth. It named inflation, over- regulation, burdenso:‘.1ie tax rates and failure to raise the standards of education as among the chief hazards. The committee normally de- votes its reports to indiv-idual is- sues like taxes, defence, tariffs and other specific national prob- lems. The, s t u die s -frequently have had some influence in Con- gress and the executive branch. “There are plenty of examples in history of thriving societ-i-es where the dyu-amism gradually burned out,” CED said. “It is quite possible to see sev-‘ eral tendencies, somealready ev- ident and others easily imagin- -able, that could stop our long trend of growth." Students To Meet Here) Next Year The Maritime Conference of the World University Service of Can- next year and it will be.staged by Prince of Wales College and St. Dunstan’s College, it wfls learn- ed here last night. Attending this year’s conference at Halifax over the weekend were Professor Bruce Hodgins, Frank Burke, Gail Johnston and Boyd White from Prince of Wales Col- lege and Ed LeClair, chairman of the W.U.S.C. committee at St. Dunstan’s The conference includes repre- sentatives of the faculty and stut- dents from Maritime universities It met in Halifax on Friday and continued through Sunday. The conference was sponsored by Dalhousie University and St. Mary’s University. De Havilland Profits Down TORONTO (CP)—De Havilla-nd Aircraft of 'Ca.n:.da Ltd. reports net profit of $778,408 for the year ended Sept. 30, 1957, compared with $1,999,153 for the previous year. The net profit was $15.56 a share in 1957 compared with $62.47 in 1956. . P. C. Ganratt, vice-president and general manager, said the decline w-as about 61 per cent. neral Home where flunemal service will be held Tuesday afternoon, service starting at 2 o’clock. Interment in The People’s Cemetery. TEREBENIC — At Kinkora on Saturday Feb. 8, Michael Tere- benic, in his 35th year. The remains are resting at The Monaghan Funeral Home from where the funeral will be held this (Monday) Morning Feb- ruary 10, to St. Malachy’s Church, Kinkora for Requiem Mass at 9 a.m. Interment in the Church Cemetery. EIUNN - At 207 King St., on Sunday afternoon February 8, 1958, William Arthur Munn. age two months, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Munn Funeral from the residence of Mrs. Bert Begg, 182 King St., this (Monday) afternoon, ser- vice commencing at 2 o'clock. Int.etrm.e.nt' in the People’s: resting at The Cutcliffe Fu- Ccm etc-ry. =Finds Message in A Bottle A William MacMillan of East Lake recently picked up a bottle con- taining a news bulletin from the. Motor Ships Seven Seas‘of the Hamburg line. The bulletin is in German and it has despatches from the Associated Press and several other news agencies. The’ bottle also contained a berthing card. ‘ » Describing himself as a beach comber, Mr. MacMil1an says he learned this hobby as a boy from his father Daniel A. MacMillan. After every storm he patrols the coast for miles east and west of his area. In his time he has found boats and engines, dories, lumber and many other articles of value cast up by the seas. When it was possible to find the owner, the articles were returned. Mr. MacMil-Ian is a fisherman in sea _*n, in the off season he is the assistant lighthouse keeper at East Point. N. B. Man Heads Ford Overseas TORONTO (CP)—Paul R. Gillis of Toronto has been named gen- eral manager and John W. McIn- tyre of Windsor, Ont., assistant to the vice-president in the overseas division of the Ford Motor Com- pany of Canada L:‘., it was an- nounced Saturday. , Mr. Gillis, a native of Saint John, N.B., was formerly general - In 3 I1 H E e r of the company’s Mercury - Lincoln - Meteor sales - division. Mr. Mclntyre was assistant gen- eral manager of the company’s Windsor oanufacturing division. ( STARTED YOUNG _Mazo de la Roche wrote her first short story when she was The Canada goose is seen sea- sonally from Atlantic to Pacific and from Mexico to the Arctic. DIAMON run If BLU mfitvi W/” IN ALL PRICE RANGES LAY-AWAY AND TERMS MAY an ARRANGED. PATTERSON'S JEWELLERY 113 Kent ‘St. Dial 6723 Highly pleased with the recep- tion accorded the brief present- ed last week to the Prime Min- ister by the Federation of May- ors and Municipalities, Coun- cillor E. W. Johnstone returned last night to Charlottetown where he as one of the participants in the campaign for the Mayoraity in next Wednesday’s election. Councillor Johnstone attended the meeting of the federation’s national executive in Montreal last week. From there they went to Ottawa where they presented _ their brief to Right ‘Honorable John Diefenbaker in his East Block office. The consensus of those who had been in similar delegations in other years said that the reception was the warm- est and the most sympathetic they had ever received, he re- ported on his arrival here. ‘ The chairman of finance in the Council here said that the Prime Minister showed a keen aware- ness of the plight of the II‘lllIIll- palities. He told us, Council‘or Johnstone reported last night, that he had discussed municipal problems at length with Hon. Michael Starr his Minister of Labor, who had first hand knowledge of the problems from ‘By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor Canada’s level of benefits for both old age security and old age assistance is relatively higher than in the United States, says W. M. Anderson, president of North American Life Assurance Company. _ Mr. Anderson's comment is contained in a 20-page examina- tion of old age benefits in Canada and the United States, which was presented to the company’s re- cent annual meeting. » ‘ In his d-iscussion, the phrase “old age security” refers to ben- efits which come automatically—, such as Canada’s ‘old age. pen- sion at age 70-and the phrase “old age assistance” to benefits given in cases of obvious need or following ,a means test. Comparing the systems of the two countries. Mr. A n d e r s o 11 says: “Using the age 65-and-over as a base, in Canada, under the present’ system, 64 per cent are entitled to old age security and are currently receiving benefits. In the United States, 58 per cent are currently receiving old age security benefits or benefits un- der that parallel programs for the civil service and railroads. INCLUDES '71 PER CENT “Additionally in Canada, seven per cent of the old age popula- tion is receiving old age assist- ance, but not old age security; in the U. S. this percentage is 13 per cent, so that the two groups together constitute 71 per cent of the old age population in both countries. . ’ , “The remaining 29 per cent in Canada will be eligible for old age security at age 70; in the U. S.-13» per cent will be eligible for old age security at age 72 or upon prior retirement — but 16 per cent will not be -eligible for old age security and their only prospective recourse is old age assistance. This la-tter situation is also true for most of the 13 per cent now in receipt of old age assistance in the U. S. “Thus the Canadian system ex- tends to all the current old-age population, while many in the U. S. will never be eligible for benefits.” , Mr. Anderson says that in com- paring benefit levels, he believes the best yardstick is the per-cap- ita level of consumer spending, which is about 36 per cent higher in the U. S. than in Canada. He added: CANADIAN LEVEL HIGHER “Our current old age security program is providing benefits equal to about 56 per cent of per capita consumer spending. In the U. S. the average level is about 42 per cent. “While the average is 47 per cent for retired single workers, it is only 38 per cent fpr retired marnied couples and widows. Of course, the American s y s t e in with its graded benefits provides a broad range of benefit- levels which currently extend from a low of 19 per cent of per capita consumer spending f or married couples to a high of 82 per cent for retired single workers. “Significantly, . the maximum benefit levels for married -cou- ples and widows are 61 per cent i: promptly l; to 30 I his experience as a former mayor of Oshawa. As a result of those discussions, the Prime Minister told the delegation he ielt that something had to be done to ease ' the burden on the municipalities. The chairman of finance said he was particularly interested in the part of the brief which asked that the proportion of grant to the provinces that goes to the municipalities be on a uniform basis in every province. “I feel” Councillor Johnstone observed, “that the agreement between the Federal‘ government and the provinces should specify in each case the proportion, or the amount that will be made avail- able to the municipalities." P. M. IN FULL ACCORD Councillor Johnstone said that he found the Prime Minister was in full accord with such an idea and promised, if returned to power, that he would call a Dom- inion-Provincial - Municipal con- ference that would be either on a formal or an in7ormal basis. Regarding all of the specific requests in the briefs, including such as assistance for education mittment other than that he would and exemption from sales tax on all municipal purchases, the SaysOldAge Benefits In Canada Top Those In U.S. —-only slightly above the 56-per- cent level which obtains for all beneficiaries in Canada. “In the area of old; age assist- ance on a means-test basis, the Canadian structure is currently providing average benefits of 52 per cent of per capita consumer spending while in the U. S. the average is 46 per cent.” Mr. Anderson said that while the U. S. benefits are-weighted in favor of people of lower pa-st earnings, this principle-because of the nature of the program- will not come into -play for many years, with the result that at present higher - income married contributors retiring under the system. are becoming entitled to benefits much greater in value than the contributions they have made. I- DON’T HELP NEEDY .“As well as this,’.’ Mr. Ander- son said, “successive revisions in Prime Minister made no com- give them ‘most serious consid- eration. ’ of particular interest to Coun- cillor Johnstone was therriatter of taxes to the municipalities on railway-owned l31”0l3€}‘tY- T I1 1 5 presents a problem inasmuch as C r 0 w n corporations a r e, 111 theory at least, free of govern- ment interference. They are not dictated to on matters of. 901103’ by the government. While the Prime Minister recognizes the in- justice of railways having dil- ferent scales. of taxation in dif- ferent localities, . the g0V°1‘n' ment’s hands are tied. it Was PX‘ plained, unless P0110)’ affectmg the situation is changed at some future date. . It would mean a matter of something like $12,009 I4’ Char‘ lottetown said Councillor Johns- tone who explained that, clear of the hotel here, the railway Days at the rate of 1.6 per cent on their own assessment whereas the city tax rate is 2.75_per cent. _ In some municipalities in other areas in Canada the railway pays the equivalent of the full tax rate, Councillor Johnstone ob- served. the system which seem to occur in each election year are usually of such a character that they produce bigger windfalls for the high - income contributors than the lower ones.” . Mr. Anderson said that while making comparisons in favor of the Canadian system, he did not wish to disparage what has been done in_ the U. S., where/prob- lems and feasible courses of ac- tion are materially different from Canada's. , ‘ In addition, ‘the vast complex- ity of the U. S. system was such that conclusions could not be ar- rived at easily. “However,” he added, “we in Canada should be extremly hes- itant about importing any feature of the American system unless and until we are completely sat- isfied that, lifted out of context, it will have a similar effect in Canada as in the U. S. and will i_n.fact do what we want it to do.” Fort Williarnf Rink Is Winner NORANDA, Que. (CP) -— Fort William Collegiate defeated Mich- ipicoten High School of Wawa 8-3 Saturday to win the northern On- tario schoolboy curling crown and move into’ the Canadian cham- pionships at Charlottetown Feb. 17 to three straight wins in two days and 14 consecutive victories. Tod, curling for eight years, was run- ner-up in the Northwestern On- tario‘ Curling Association school- boy competition the last three years. Delaney Winsi. Wanamaker NEW. YORK (AP) — Ron Delany. still refusing to fight a fast pace, won the Wanamaker Mile Saturday night in the Mill- nose games in 4:04.6 overcoming land’s Burr Grim. To the capacity crowd of more than 15,000 that jammed Madison Square Garden, Grim w-as the star. Round and -round they went with Grim inthe lead trying to pull Delany out. The tall Maryland runner kept it up for as long as he could be- fore he “died” a lit".e p-ast the three-quarter mark. George King of the New York Athletic Club MORE AND The _ WHEN IT COMES I MORE rou<s RENDEZVOIIS TO FINE FOOD COME TO CH'TOWN PC has made loans 1 for? genera ' Since Dad’s day HFC has been making prompt loans, in privacy, to people who need money for all kinds of good reasons. At House- hold you can borrow up to $1 ,000, get one-day service and take up ‘tins months to repay on the — terms you choose. Borrow confidently from HF C ‘I50 Great George Street Ho‘usE’Hoiu-- EiNA‘NcE A A ne 7395 . o o o c e . . Telephone 8517 CHARLOTTETOWN , wound up second about 30 yards Tom Tod, 18, skipped his rink- a 25-yard lead built up by Mary-, -back of Delany. Jim Beatty, a soldier, was third and Phil Cole-- man of Chicago -fourth. iNor.tIi Sydney _ Sclrio-ol boys Win YARMOUTH, N.S. ’CP) North Sydney won the Nova Scotia high school bonspiel here Saturday by defeating Lunen- burg 11-6. Lunenburg conceded‘- in the 10th end. Fifteen teams competed. North Sydney, who won the title last year, now advances to the Dominion schoolboy bon- spiel at Charlottetown Feb. 17. STRUCK BY PUCK I I MONTREAL (CP) -— R.-iehardl (Dicky) Beanie, 13, struckon the forehead by a flying hockey puck last Tuesday. Saturc-7 was re- ported l"‘.COIlSC:I‘0llS and in critical condition. The boy -.1psed into un- consciousness after being struck in a school shinny game. School- mates said he was in goal -and slipped just as the puck was fired. It struck him above the left eye. AIRMAN HONORED . A globe, with air routes traced in precious stones, has been set up in Sydney in memory of Sir Charles Kingsford,-Smith, pioneer aviator. ‘ ‘ wmooun-anon ‘E *@’ZZA'7e$°$ INSTALLATION Authorized Dealer “THERMOPANE” Car Glass Supplied and installed CARSON so BIRT 67 King St. Phone 8043’ . If You Need WATER YOU NEED US. DOUGLAS BROS. & JONES no. Well Drilling and Water Systems DIAL 6565 ‘mg in the Ladies Parlor. 1958 include: _ Kay, 1st. Vice-president; _ D. K. MacLeod, 2nd. vice-presid- ent; secretary; treasurer. mittees were read and discussed and final arrangements were made for the Valentine Tea. speaker and Kavfi _ teresting talk on education_ with particular reference to Educational Conference to be held 17th. extended to Mrs. those present. Mizpah benediction. ‘has made in a short time since Other officers aPP0ini3d f°T Mrs. Hugh Mac- Mrs. Elmer . Sutherland, Mrs. James Power, Mrs. Reports of the various coni- Mrs. J. P. Lantz was the guest an very in- the in Ottawa on February A hearty vote of thanks was Lantz by After some further business the meeting closed with the s.°u. u. Band Entertains At The Orphanage Proof of the rapid strides it its establishment, was given last night by the St. Dunstans Col- lege band at a Sundayeveninfl entertainment for the children at- St. Vincent’s Orphanage-_ The 21-piece band is directed by Lloyd Ward of Charlottetown and the boys are assisted by their faculty moderator. Rev. James Kelly. The program consisted of a march, “Project”? Waltz: “Nora’s Dream”; Novelty, «“_Aint We Got Fun”; March, “Mister Joe”; overture, “Zenith”; Sere- nade, “Little Grey ”Church”; overture, “Storm K1118 ; march- “Military Escort". , Interspersed among the band numbers were various musical features that added to the enjoy- ment of the program. They W91‘ piano solos “The R0b1n’S~R€" turn” and “Autumn Leaves" by Joe ‘Gallant. A novelty song was rendered by an octet from the band ‘con- sisting oi J. Smitli, K. Blanch- ard, Mr. Ward, Rev. J. Kelly. C. Byrne, B. Cleary. D. Clough. Dawson ..... _ _ Vancouver Victonia . . , Sydney . . . Yarmouth St. John‘s .... .. office here says c ally pushing $130.. 1 regions. However,‘ expected to mod ably by the time eastern regions, Edward Island an ericton 5 and zero and 10 aboy High tide the Romans -2, Saint John .. Moncton Halifax CPI-A HALIFAX ( Forecasts: . Northern Nova: t) it wick: Variable cloudmu , tod st_3:11 a.m,ay’ At Rustioo at sets at 5.33 pan, ‘ ROMAN At Ischia, in ples, tourists o spring water and effective . sion,” which niighfi crease the chain: war." ‘ ‘, t The federation as an organizafio terrelations of affairs.” Paul M. 9 of chemistry at ’ sity. is chairman of WASHINGTON (AP) —- . The erican Scientists Saturday urged that all studies of space [vehicles and long-range missiles be open so that the results will be “the common property of mankin ."‘ The scientists also advocated: 1. An international agreement to stop further testing of nuclear the United Nations. 2. Establishment of ii perma- nent »UN police force “as a safe See U! Best Results fl . of-.VEl0PIN V" I t ' , DIVING‘ “Call, Write or Phone" Mnrnns STUDIOS - Charlottetown CANARIES NEED... FRENCH’S - Canary Seed 35° 14 OZ. PACKAGE For And Prompt Courteous Service J . Blanchard. committee; Want Data On _ ’ ,- Space Vehicles _ I /Made Public council of the Federation of Am- , WINTER I weapons, monitored by amutual ’ ; inspection system set up under _ EXTRACT I of Cod Liver Coiiipoiuf lt'sTonictimo.\‘lii_ita's¢'mIt5 and colds are iust.¢roii.nW corner. Help YOU: IIIIIIIY I better health this'wluIII,'lWIltl up their resistance to ¢,0l|l‘-of give them Wcinpoli ‘W1 regularly. . . mm MIIYI , 3 it is ounces“: $l-5°. 34 ounces - 52.7 5 ECONOMY SILL » SAVES YOU - A mmmwm-I Get WAMPOLE Extract lfllls REDDIN , BROS. ‘cm ui.t7E0F?\’:£.& Arm ‘sis :.>< Ac ic."Erow~» MONTHLY IN CLUB ROOM MAIN BRACE NAVAL VETERANS?“ MONDAY, 10th FEB., 1958 BUSINESS _ NEW PROJECTS L. ANDERSON, S°°'°“-"" MEETING, AT 8 o'cLooi: " J When BLADDER IRRITATION MAKES YOU NERVOUS 'I‘oRONTo——Specia.l: Thanks to new scientific laboratory formulation, thou.’ sands of men and women now escape feeling old, tired, irritable and depressed ‘from losing sleep and worrying about Bladder Weak_ness’—-too frequent, burning and itching urination. Bed Wet. ting. Getting Up Nights-or Strong Cloudy Urine. due to common Kidney or Bladder Irrltations, which often resuu; in secondary Backache, Headache, Rheu. matic Pains and Nervousness. In such cases New Improved CYSTEX usually gives quick, calming relief by combating rritattng germs in acid urine; and by relaxing, analgesic pain relief. Over a billion CYSTEX tablets used-proves safety and success for young and u1(1_ Get Laboratory Tested and Certified CYSTEX at druggist today. See how WINNER OF much better you feel tomorrow. Atkinson's Annive_rS’<1’YL Sale SWIFTS PREMIUM HAM WAS R. A. DUNCAN 217 Grafton Street /I sAruRi>AY'5 132 Richmondgisli .