unmmmmh.nn¢ «soon indent—A wound-1x“ Province. about 10, l-dmsneiicoptersimmthagmdusouthdharethaatha state- has arrived h tamhoeucnmeorau.s.ndl- Nam. The hetlrop’copters. flown by 11.5. mam reported Monday to pilots. to arrive in South Viet ts Soc Trnng m Ba lXam. DON’T FORGET !! ! Archer & MacDonald lid. "Second Anniversary" SALE ends Saturday, April 215i g: ‘3 enjoy the "aste of en’s, a KINGSBORO Mr and Mn. John DlXOII and son George. East Baltic. were . irecent business visitors to: Charlottetown. Little Miss Bernadine Hol- land, daughter of Mr and Mrs Gearie " " ‘ Elmira, has on tered the Provincial Sanltonum, Charlottetown. for treatment. m1. Ida W. who hasI been I pendin g the winter. medical checkup. in Charlottetown, visit-l ed for a few days With friends. months in Kingsboro, Mr. Charles Chlng, lied Pointy left recently to spend a holldayl.l in Ontario where he will visit1 points of interest. Mr. and Mrs Clarence Rose and daughter Heather. were re- cent VlSilOi’l to Charlottetown' who leather mdsrwd a Messrs. Angus hit-Innis. Lake-v ville and Frank Gulls. Elmira. were recent visitors to Kaalng- ton. Mrs. Percy lacDuald. , '1 DIN WARD Kingsboro, visited recently with OTTAWA (CF) —- A force ol.‘ .her brother, Mr. Ernest Stewartéulm amnion will go-lngiuty returning officers Ind Nu‘ who has entered the P.E.i. H09} into actim across Canada April l pital. Charlottetown. tor treat“. to begin the preparation oil ment. voters’ lists for the June ll lTo Start Rounds April 30 yin the huge 90b. Besides “in Mrs. Alvin MacDonald. South WRIGHT'S For young women who Spring of Wright'Hrings you a rain- bow of colorho parade of styles. BPINDRIF‘I‘ - BUTTERNU‘I‘ - BONE - WATERMELON FAMOUS MAKES CLARK! - WHITE CROSS - FLANGE! - DCROGGTNI Widths AA - B - D 6.95 to 16.95 WRIGHT SHOE CO. “A” QUEEN 51. m“ 4-9521 (-9521 Lake. was a recent Sunday vis- ltor to Bear River. the guest of her brotherimlaw and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph MacKin- nun. ‘ Point. was a recent busin-a visitor to Charlottetown. Little was Lorraine Boartiaa. Souria. ia viaiting with her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Ira. Staffer Boertim. Kingsboro. Mr. Nelson Stewart. led II. federal general eiectioa. Nomination day for candidates in most of the II constituencies will be Monday. June 4. Hot in 21 large. scattered ridinga aom~ inatlons will be Tuesday, May Caste aaid'l‘oesdayhiaoi flee is “set and ready to go' .the iobolsettingup ST. lOUIS ‘ Ira. Simon Lnttreli is I M- ‘ tient in the Prince County Hoe- ; pita! where aha underwent sun ‘ I"!- Mrs. Henry P. Bernard is convaleacing at her home in st. Louis after being ill in the Wes- tern Hospital. Alberton. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hachie have returned to Halifax. n.s., after a tow days in St. Louis where they visited Mrs. Em- manuel Arsenault in the Wes- tern Hospital. . wmmo Q m'runns Q APPLIANCE suns AND scnvrcr: ; Q CALL TODAY ron "El ESTIMAI'I Newson ecrrie julQIeth. mum ‘ act for as: returning officers to advise the central of- fice hero of revised boundaries for polling districts and divis- ions within their onstituencies, Castanauay and his staff have not yet begun formal election arrangements. That will come immediately after he gets word that Governor—General Vanier has granted Mr. Dleienbnker dissolution of Parliament and issued the necessary writ. Gen. .Vanler is in Quebec City until April 25. Upward: of 140.000 paid elec- toral workers will be involved ' MEIICAI. PHARMACY ‘ hero to serve you hour of the day or night. must CALI. 4-6623 for 24 hour service ME CAL PHARMACY ll Career at Pewaal and ‘flrst time in Canadian m?! .flahernscn.militiatraineesand N?- adtothelslaadmlloadaymd enumeratnrs. about some MP in] clerks are needed. Advance polls pose a HI ’0. for the election force. For lb. anybody who has reason to be- lieve he will he absent from his home aren on election day can vote in advance. Previously. advance poll!“ privileges were restricted to tn- vellera. employees. the RCMP. EAST BALTIC his. James Gibson and at. James oi Inch. n.n.. m are the guests of lira. (Elude parents. Rev. and Mrs. Alas- andsr McKay of [slalom Mrs. Gerald Mills and In. leueth Owen have returned to their homes in Malpoque after spending a few days visitinl with relatives in Charlottetown. Mrs. names Tuplin. Bandit:- was a visitor to ltustico (I Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Coolie and two daughters. Geltrnde Id Judith. who have been residing in Kensington during the winter months. have moved back to their home in Baltic. Mr. and Mrs. George M, Kmalngton, have as their guest Mrs. Brandcr’a mother, Ill-l. Theren Mathews. Baltic. Mrs. Bessie Folland. Hamil- ton. has been spendlnl some time in Toronto, Ont.. being called there due to the death of her sister. Miss Joyce Harrington. swing Valley. spent the weekend with Miss Paulina Hunter. Indian River. Mr. and Mrs. James Cousins and daughter Natalie of Baltic have taken up residence in Ken- m at. Ch'towa‘J w."~mlh_~~~uh*mdflh~hu GOODSPEEDS iP.E.i.l LIMITED ‘ C W singtoo for the summer moons. 167,000 Enumeraiors Slated mom»! 10 room Impact On Economy Expected Greatest BylALHlCAIlION om-thwnm 111ng anerawhlch willaea the merit of the building of the causeway Tuesday. They agree it will prove a highway to pru- ty. The vast reunification of the pm "I almost impossibiatogrsspallat oncebeeause they range all the way from farming end flahlng in the tourist may while alwaYl molvinr around the transportation issue. Itisthelatterwhlcbmaksaflaefotmdatlmon which all other Island industries will build. Continuous communication with the main- lendbyrondhasbeenthedrem of Islanders for 75 years—and lack of it the greatat draw- back to development. both economically and cut. turn lly. 75ml! DREAM Ol' ISLAND Probably the greatest single impetus to the economy here as a result of the causeway» will be an influx of tourists which may easily reach a figure of 1,000,000 a year. Andtheywlllnotwaitforcompletionofitto start pouring in. The magnitude of the project alone will fire the imagination of travellers and they will start coming simply to watch the ro- gressandexcialmoverthetrulyvastousn ties of material being poured into the sea. Their coming can easily be the result of the extra effort which the Island must now put forth in doing the greatest public relations job Eastern Canada has ever seen. One of the reasons, observers believe, for concentrating on the tourist industry is that re- sults are immediate in bringing into the province a large return for a relatively small expenditure. A by-product of tourist vacations is frequently the realization by the returning vlsltor that the area is now wide open for industrialization through removal of the trnnsportntitm barrier. "MOVE ELAN!) AREA!) 50 YEARS” Jmt what it means to people here to have that barrier removed is stated by Keith Mec- Klnnon, one of the Island's leading figures in highway transponntion circles. Mr. MacKlnnon said "It will move the island ahead 50 years." He added that it means “we will now be in a competitive position with other producing areas in Canada and as a result the Island economy will improve by an inestlmable amount”. Gordon Shaw. president of the P.E.I. Tourist Association, predicted the tourist business would “dwble overnight". labor in the province would benefit neatly as a prime requisite for taking care of the expected vast flow of visitors will be a rapidly accelerated building program for accom- modstions: HACHHONI EXPANSION ls ANTICIPATED These will be the obvious and even flam- boyant results of the causeway. but there will also be the more solid and far reaching effect on the primary industries of farming and fishing. And here too a great expansion may be enti- clpated in the businemes which have been the backbone of Island economy since the earliest colonial times. Agriculturists were enthusiastic as they look- ed forward to the time when transportation of their farm products will no longer be tied to the whims of unpredictable weather. When sudden changes piling up huge banks of ice will not effect rail or road movement; nor when break- down in the world's best ferries came con- stemstlon. SP PRODUCE ’10 MARKET! For years formers across the province have anxiously watched each spring the daily reports of the losing battles fought with ice. On the out- come of those battles depended the arrival before it was too late of badly needed fertilizer or ob- tslrlng a supply of refrigerator cars to ship potatoes and turnips to waiting marina acro- the nation. Last year, for example. there were grave fears expressed for the future of several valuable aaed markets whorl it was thought the Island seed that had been promised would not arer in time for early plantings. . As well the strawberry growers. who export truckloads of the (amass Island delicacy to ready mainland markets. are ting the day when the speed of their deliveries MmrUdferryschedules. “no 3 be 1 EASTEREEEF ,“ AT "5 VERY BEST I anhukhu-smmamm m-mhaalaaa-filay coo-arm..- Minn-lulu“. Ches' Meat Market DIAL H3" I'm-ads i,