VANCOUVER. B. C. — First baby ‘born in North Vancouver, B.C. in 1957 is Teresa Cates cele- 9o Canadlans Diedln Holiday Road Accidents By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ninety Canadians died in road accidents in the 81/2-day Christ- mas to New Year’s holidays. The Canadian Highway Saf ty Confer- ence had precited 3 persons would be killed in traffic acci- dents during the holiday period. At least 13 were killed as the country moved into the new year. Four others died from miscellan- eous causes to bring the New Year’s accidental fality list to 17. An Ontario woman was struck by a train as she walked the ,tracks; a man was burned to death in British Columbia and in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick a youngster and a youth were ac- cidentally shot td death. A Canadian Press survey showed Ontario had five dead from 6 p.m. local time Tuesday to midnight Wednesday, British Columbia and Nova Scotia threé rwo Fmsrs -R '57 brating her first birthday New Year’s Day. Not to be outdone is minature SPUTNIK depicting first each and Manitoba and New Brunswick one each._ katchewan,,Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland. 45 XMAS DEATHS Of the 90 persons who died on the roads during the holiday per- iod, 42 were killed during the Christmas holiday. and another 35 up to Tuesday evening. Quebec led all other provinces during the two holidays with 3 road deaths; Ontario had 27, Nova Scotia and Alberta eight each, British Columbia seven. New Brunswick four, Manitoba two and Saskatchewan one. Last year,80 Canadians died in traffic during the two holidays and 87 the year before. The unusually low traffic deaths during the New "Year’s celebra- tions left police throughout the each; Alberta and Quebec two country puzzled. They reported No deaths were reported in Sas-A satellite launched into space this (AP Wirephoto) year. I few arrests for driving after drinking. -and credited the low numberhof arrests to stepped-up warnings, poor weather, and plain common sense on the part of most- motorists. In Toronto police breathed a sigh of relief as no major vio- lence or crime in the city was reported at New Years’ Eve after a record crime wave in Decem- ber. ‘Only 12 motoristsl were charged‘ with impaired driving. N0 MONTREAL ARRESTS Both Montreal and Winnipeg re- ported no arrests of drinking driv- ers but the Edmonton pblice in- vestigated more than 40 a cidentt and 20 charges were laid or im- paired driving. In Toronto, the aftermath of the Christmas holiday caught up with impaired drivers as‘ six" of them were given fines Thursday rang- ing from $75 to $125. New Cardigan Post Office Is Asked By P. The district meeting for Card- Igan 3rd district and George- town 5th district was held in the Cardigan Hall on Monday, December 30th. There was a large attendance with all polls' well represented. The meeting was under the chairmanship of Daniel Mac- lean of De Gros Marsh, presid- ent of Georgetown district, and Douglas MacGowan of Monta- gue, president of Cardigan dis- trict. After the readng of the min- utes the 1'o‘l1owi’ng resolmton committee was appointed C. A. Shaw, L. S. Hunter, A. H. Stewart, H. C. Allen. The first speaker was Walte Shaw, leader of the Conservative party, who thanked his suppor- . ters in the last general election, and also extended thanks for - their support at the leadership convention. He spoke on the mounting problems of our peo- ple, especially the farmers, due to the inertness of our local government. He stressed the need of being well orgaized in the event of an early election. John A. MacDonald, Federal Member for Kings, was the EASTERN GUARDIAN . MEETING OF LADIES Auxil- iary Kings County Hospital. Fri- day, January 3rd, 8.00 p.m. at Nurses Residence. ANYONE wishing to make con- tribution to the Duncan and Ma - Phee families of Heatherdae who lost all their possessions by fire, please leave donations with Gordon Matheson at Hooley’s Store, MacGowan‘s Ltd., Kilmuir or Cooper’s store. Bellevue. PERSONALS Miss Evelyn Gillis left by plane Friday for Halifax, after spend- "mg an enjoyable holiday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gillis, Forest Hill. Able Seaman Keith Peardon, RC. l\'.. Halifax, spent his Christmas leave at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stan- ford Pea:-don. Montague. Wayne Johnston and friend.‘ l\lou(-ton. N. B., were recent guests of Wayne's grandfather, Fred Webster, Montague. Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Pater- son, llavelock, N. B., accompani- ed by their daughters, were l1oli- da.\‘ ,4-um-sis of .\'ltr.<. l‘atcrson's Parents. Mr. and Mrs. R. K.‘ Clements, Montague. C. District , next speaker, and swelt on the many accomplishments of the Conservative party in the short time since attaining office in. June. He said even seasoned‘ politicians are amazed at the amount of work accomplished in Parliament and the number of promises fulfilled. TEAM WORK ' He thanked his supporters for their successful efforts and stres- sed the team work existing be- tween the four representatives at Ottawa which makesfor bet- ter relations. Charles MacQuaid; Leo Rossiter and Dingwell Morell also spoke briefly. The resolutons committee ‘brought in a large number of resolutions (which were dealt with individually by the -meet- ing and Leslie ‘Hunter spoke on several of the resolutions. The condolence of -. the meeting was extended to the families of the la-te Andrew MacDonald, D1‘- W. J. P. Maclvfillan and Frank MacPhee, who worked untiring- in: foreground fire tear gas at twolhostages captive ly in the interests of the party CARDIGAN POST OFFICE One of the most important re- solutions discussed was the erection of a new Post Office building in Cardigan. It was the unanmous voice of the meeting that the Federal authorities'be urged to take the necessary steps in this project. The Car- digan Post Office is the dis- tributing centre for nine rural routes in addition to Cardigan itself, and the need for better facilities’ is long past due. With the urgent need, it is hoped that priority will be given this pro- ject. ‘ I The following slate of officers were duly nominated: Cardigan district No. 3: pre- sident, Thomas Curran; vice preseident, Raymond Acorn; secretary, L.. C. Allen; provin- cial representative. C. A. Shaw; county representatv Douglas MacGowan. . Georgetown District No.. 5: presdent, Daniel MacLean; sec- retary, Nelson« Hansen; county \ representative, J . Raymond Mac- Donald, District representative, A. H. Stewart. _ . Douglas Ma.cGowan' thanked his supporters for their help during his term of office. gency the U.S. GUNMEN SURRENDER I INGLEWOOD. Calif. — Police barricaded gunmen who held six.hours. Gui1i11ei1a1‘e in small booth;Both gunmen su1‘1'endcred several for severallat center of picture behind canlmmutes later. _<. By DAVE MCINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer 3 OTTAWA (CPJ—-American re- strictions on imports of Canadian ‘ ;OIl may in the long run have an ‘adverse effect on Canada-United‘ ‘States defence cooperation, in-: formants said Thursday. g Authorities stressed that Can-, ada does not intend to take a, ‘dog-in-the-manger attitude toward! ‘the U.S. on_ defence. But they! rt-.;:‘°§::;;‘;.g. ‘:;“‘*.:::.°.=*.:‘l .cur s a a1 -‘ tdian ygoods, especially‘ primaryl I-products, tends to build up a cli- [mate of resentment in the gov- ternment against U.S. requests for such defence items as aircraft and missile bases in Canada. The’ U.S. decision to restrict Canadian oil imports was an-, nounced less than a week after the end of the NATO summit . ',meeting in Paris where Prime _ .Minister Diefenbaker said, thereisignificant fact that any further.and at Fort Churchill, Man., on was a “flowering” of the con-irestrictions on Canadian imports§Hudson Bay cept of economic collaborationtinto the U.S. would make further American planes which refuel among the 15 alliance membersfdefence co-operation more diffi- strategic bombers in flight. NOT JUSTIFIED 3 American reasoning behind the! exploration and development in‘ the U.S. is discouraged by oil im- ports and that in a war emer-y from its foreign il‘ sources. Finance Minister Fleming said {the U.S. has a special responsibil-|fence collaboration. US Oil Restrictions May Hit Defence Co-operation Christmas Eve the Canadian gov-=ity not to damage Canadian ex- crnment “cannot accept the view that there is any justification for U.S. from Canada, either on economic or on defence grounds." Mr. Diefenbaker and Mr. Flem- ing have both previously linked Canada - U.S. defence and eco- nomic or on defence grounds.” ':‘7.1e prime minis" ' said in a speech at Hanover, N.H., Sept. 7: “We are co-operating on de- fence measures—why not to a greater degree in economic mat- ii. 132"’ . PEARSON AGREES Mr. Diefenbaker was echoing a statement made July 13 at San Francisco by former external af- fairs minister Lester B. Pearson, now a contender for the Liberal party leadership. Mr. Pearson said then: “It is, I think, a simple though cult.” In a speech at New York Nov. oil import restriction is that oil‘1, Mr. Fleming referred to unif- economic curbs by refusing to ication of North American air de- fences and said: “. . . . In the face of the large uld be cut off3advantages which the U.S. de- and that Canada may be tempted xrives from its trade with Canada, limitations on oil coming; port opportunities and to adopt an understanding attitude in cases where Canadian policies touch: gparticular U.S. interests advers-‘ iely. . . ’ ‘FARMERS HURT “Our Canadian farmers have been hurt by U.S. restrictions of imports of Canadian wheat, flour, rye, cheddar cheese, dried skim- med milk, dried buttermilk, flax- seed and linseed oil. It is not long ago that the U.S. restricted also imports of our barley, barley malt and oats. Now we are faced with the threat of increased U.S. tariffs against our zinc and lead." The American restrictions on Canadian oil imports come at a time when the U.S_. is planning ,anti-aircraft missile bases in Can- lada and is already building ‘longer runways at Frobisher Bay and Baffin Island in the Arctic, ’to accommodate Officials sfid it is not likely Canada will retaliate against U.S. undertake joint defence plans with the U.S. But they said ne- _gotiations may be more difficult ,to exact a price for continued de- Lt.- Gen. Simonds Agrees U. S. View Hampers Defence 4* TORONTO (CP)-—Lt.-Gen. Guy Simonds, former chief of the army general staff said Monday he agreed that United States se- curity measures prevented an in- tegrated system for defence re- search, development and some production between Canada and -the U.S. , In an interview, Gen. Simonds said this situation existed not only between Canada and -the U.S. but also between the U.S. and all countries of the North Atlantic - Treaty Organization. “This has been obvious in the development of atomic weapons,” Gen. Simonds said. The original charge on which Gen. Simonds commented was made by Group Capt. C. B. Lim- brick,‘ in an article in the current issue of the Canadian trade mag-‘ azine, Aircr-aft. Group Capt. Lim- brick retired last year as RCAF director of guided missiles and special weapons and of radio war- fare. . “U.S. security policy has been extremely effective in preventing these (integration) efforts from being successful,” the article said. _ Gen. Simonds also commented on statements by Group Capt. Limbrick that “many millions of dollars worth” of U.S. - m de equipment “is being used in an- ada by U.S. and Canadian forces that could have been produced here at home." PUSHED INTO BUYING ' The general said: “At the ti-me of the Korean crisis, we were stampeded into large purchases of U.S. equipment on the argu- ment of the value of standardiza- tion. ‘ “These measures in total obvi- ously made us more and more dependent on the decisions taken in Washington and less capable of making ‘independent decisions of our own. q “Commercial ‘considerations in the U.S. made it from their (the U.S.) P°lnt of view very much more desirable that the U.S. should be the suppliers of mili- tary equipment than we should supply ourselves. “These large-scale purchases havepcontinued since the Korean crisis.” Lane's Bakeries Hold Special Sales -Dinner For the first time in the030 year history of La-ne’s Bakeries Limited, the Executive and Staff met together under the same roof ’ for a Special Sales Dinner. This dinner took place in the Ballroom of the Brunswick Hotel. The rea- son this had never been done be- fore can be easily appreciated when one realizes that their pro- duc-ts cover such a large area. Lane’s Bakeries’ products are delivered daily throughout the Province of New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island, New Car- lisle in Quebec, Amherst and Springhill in Nova Scotia. To ac- complish this task’ and ensure ‘the freshness of their products — so necessary in the bakery business —- Lane’s employ an active sales force of ‘6 Sales Supervisors and 66 Driver-Salesmen. EFFECTIVE FORCE Indeed Lane's Bakeries Sales force is said to be one of the most effective Sales organizations in Eastern Canada! So much that Mr. Francis Lane, the Managing Director has been approached by several National brand name or- ganizations for information as to how he gathered together. such able men and managed to retain: their loyalty over the years. We can only offer the opinion that good men will always be at- the time of the launching of the traeted to an organization that is efficient from the top and offers’ its man a fair reward for a fair day’s work. Certainly the men at- tending this Dinner had the vis- ible stamp of enthusiasm and. rumbustious self confidence, and there was no doubt about their- overwhelming loyalty to their very successful business. Among those present were Mr. Francis Lane, Managing Direc- tor; Judge W. F. Lane, Director; Mr‘. Kempster, Chief Accountant; Mr. Bruce Parsons, Advertising Manager, the Moncton Times Transcript; Mr. Bruce Masters, Sales Manager of CKOW-TV; Earl Ross, Sports Editor CKCW- TV; Mr. F.,L. Wallace, Manag- ing Director of Wallace Adver- tising Limited, Halifax. Moscow Reports On Sputnik I LONDON (AP)-Moscow Rad-io said Monday night that Sputnik I has lost two-thirds of its height but still has sevbral more days of life. “According to the results ‘of t-he latest observations, the orbit of the first satellite has noticeably r e d u c e d and approached the earth,” Moscow announced. “The maximum height of the orbit above the surface of the earth at its apogee now is about 320 kilometres (.18 miles) instead of 50 kilometres (50 miles) at _ mer president, treasurer. first satellite. “The period of its revolution -has been somewhat reduced—to 90 minutes—and is decreasing rapidly. “It i-s expected that the first satellite will enter the dense lay- ers of the atmosphere and cease to exist in the first days of Janu- ary." The first Soviet satellite has been whizjing around in the outer atmosphere since Oct. 4. The Moscow broadcast, said Sputnik I will'have encircled-the earth 1,336 %'mes by 3 a.m. today. Sputnik will have completed 815 revol- utions by that same time, Mos- cow said. , The rocket which carried the first Sputnik disappeared Dec. 1. Soviet Communist party chief Ni- ki:ta"Khrushchev said the rocket fell on Alaska and he demanded‘ the rocket’s return from the United States. , American officials .denied that the rocket fell in Alaska. British PM Drafts Note To BuIganin' LONDON '(AP)—Prime Minis- ter Macmillan has drafted a note to Nikolai Bulganin leaving the door open for a summit confer- ence on cold war issues. govern- ment officials said Monday night. ‘Macm'i.llan’s proposed answer to the Soviet premier’s_letter of Dec. 11 insists, however‘, that any such top-level meeting must be prepared with care and promise real results. Accordingly, informants said, Macmillan will say the West would be willing to start with an early conference of foreign min- isters. Their prime task would be to .-revive East-West disarmament negotiations — currently stalled within the United Nations-and possibly to prepare the ground for a later meeting of government chiefs. . The British leader's draft note is‘being submitted at once to the United States and France and will be laid before the ermanent council of the Atlanti Pact in Paris Jan. 8. The purpose is‘ to ensure that all the allied powers who received letters from‘ Bul- ganin can reply in a similar vein. ‘ Heads Lord Nelson Hotel- HALIFAX (CP)—Gerald Kowal of Chicago and Miami was elec- ted presidenf of the Lord Nelson Hotel Company, Limited during a - shareholders’ meeting here Mon- day. Mr. Kowal succeeds his father, the late Isadore Kowal. Also elec- ted to the board were Mrs. Isa- dore;Kowal, a director, and Meyer Kowal, a second son of the for- R Company Secretary Ian Mac- Keigan of Halifax said the first contract leading to construction of a 130-room addition will be let early next month. The addition’ will also house a 1,000-seat con- vention hall, an 800-place dining room and other facilities. The Lord Nelson, with 174 rooms, is the city’s largest hotel. J OPEN SPACES The federal district of Rio de Janeiro, capital of Brazil, has forest land.and farms among its 450 square miles. ’ - Program Held At Dundas Home The annual Sunday School Christmas Tree was held at the -home of the MacLeod sisters, Dundas. The large gathering en- joyed a very pleasing evening. The programme consisted of singing, recitations and action songs by the children, followed by “Christmas Blessings". A ser- ies of coloured slides depicting the story of the Nativity were shown by Rev. W.G. Hill, the Pastor. The slides with carols brought forth, a hearty response from all. At the close of the programme the children received their gifts from the tree. Then light refresh- ments were served. . C. G. I.~T. Visits Sick, Shut-ins On Christmas Eve the C. G. I. T. group of Murray Harbour visit- ed the sick and shut-ins of the community singing to them the traditional Christmas Carols. Carolling is an old and beautiful custom. Those who were favoured with this thoughtful gesture, on the part of this enthusiastic group of girls, enjoyed the carols very much. ’ ELLIOTVALE SCHOOL The following is the report of Elliotvale School for November and December: Grade X. — 1. Eileen Walsh; 2. Helen Gill; 3. Margaret Gill.- Grade IX. — 1. Genevieve Car- michael; 2. Duncan Carmichael. Grade VII. -— 1. Bernice Walsh; 2. Joseph Gill; 3. Michael Magen- ms. Grade VI. —— 1. Daniel Car- michael. Grade V. — 1. Ann Walsh; 2. Hilda Carmichael; 3. Louis Walsh; 4. Regina Gill. Grade IV 1.Marie Walsh Grade III 1. Juliana Carmich- ael; 2. Clarence Ryan; Grade II Sr.\ 1. Theresa Gill; 2. Sheila Gill; 3. Edward Gill 4. Albert Walsh; Grade 11 Jr., 1. Cecelia Walsh; 2. Leo Magennis. ’ , Grade I Sr. 1. Geraldine Gill Grade I Jr. 1. Ivan Walsh 2. Kenneth Walsh 3. George Gill; Teacher: Adele Kelly. Voice Hopes For Expansion In, I , N. S. Steel Plants ‘SYDNEY (CP) — Union and management voiced hope for im- provement a-nd expansion in the Nova Scotia steel industry during 1958 in yearend messages issued Tuesday night. Crawford Gordon Jr., president of A. V. Roe Canada Ltd., said it is hoped 1958 will be “a reason- ably good” year for the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation and “associated compania.” Roe won control of DOSCO in 1957. “The pace of business activity in the steel industry is somewhat slower than it was at the begin- ning of 1957," Mr. Gordon said. “We nevertheless expect 1958 will be a reasonably good one . . .” Local 1064, United Steelworkers of America (CLC), said in a statement the -union looks_ for “a much n e e d e d expansion" of DOSCO steel facilities here dur- ing the year. , ~ “It is our sincere ‘wish that they (Roe) will make this operation what it should be, the biggest producer. in Canada . . .” the 4,500-member local said-. $50,000 Are :- Given Away‘ . LAS VEGAS,‘Nev. (AP) —Two thousand women received a total of $50,000 in silver dollars mo- ments after the stroke of mid- night Wednesday inthe Sands Hotel’s annual new year’: giving. ” ’ Jack Entr-atter, Sands vice- president, said each woman in the dining room and casinos was gis/en a velvet satin bag contain- ing 25 newly minted silver dol- laiis. Twelve teams of guards and ho el officials made the distribu- tion, in about eight minutes while everybody was singin g Auld Lang Syne. British Firm To Build ‘CP Liner LONDON (AP)~A British ship- building firm said Thursday it has signed a $23,000,000 contract with Canadian Pacific Steam- ships to build a 27,500-ton trans- atlantic passenger liner.‘ Vickers - Armstnongs said the liner will be the largest in the Canadian Pacific fleet. It will carry 200 first class and 875 tour- ist passengers. It is to make its maiden voyage from Liverpool, England, to Montreal in thd spring of 1961. «was SE -- Col JOHN WAYNE - JEFFR See six year search by Wayne Don Murray. (AP Wirephoto) ARCHERS” EY HUNTER - VERA MILES Greatest of all western shows—settings in Utah and Arizona. abducted by Comanches— who burn their homes and kill their elders. See suspenseful ending, Coming Mon. - Tue. “BUS STOP” with Marilyn Monroe and Theatre MONTAGIJE Jan. 3-4 Fri. 8:00 p.m. Sat. 8 & 10 p.m. Adm.. 40 - 55 O!‘ and Hunter for two white girls 9 4 l ‘Friday, Jan_ 3, 1958 The Guardian Page 5 INTERPRETING THE NEWS . By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Prss Staff Writer Some NATO officers feel the North Atlantic alliance has just defeated a case of jitters as dangerous as the paralysis of will suffered when Hitler invaded the Rhineland in 1936. ‘ Then the democracies faltered, and war came three years later. posite c o u r s e. Despite Nikita Khrushchev’s missile - brandish- ing, despite deep—set doubts and‘ fears in its own camp, NATO is going to put the nuclear ‘deter- rent in Europe. Those who applaud this deci- sion,'taken at NATO’s summit meeting in Paris, say the really important.fact is a tendency to- ward appeasement amounting to a nuclear-age neurosis—has been resisted. NATO’s nuclear armament will be a gradual process. The ballis- tic missiles are not perfected and the nuclear warheads are not available in quantity. The build- up may take five years or_ more, and while it goes, on there will be renewed talks with ‘-Russia. Conflicting views are offered on rival military strength. An au- thoritative Canadian opinion is that the democracies still lead, but that the Russians are “catch- ing up ast.” Some feel the bal- ance s already tilted in Rus- sia's favor, others that the Amer- ican threat of massive retaliation has been greatly attenuated by Soviet advances in long-range rocketry. \ I A 1 t h o u g,h all 15 countries 21 - Year — O-Id Princess May Be Interested LONDON (Reuters) — British newspapers have linked the name of Princess Alexandra romantic- ally with that of. the 23-year-ol Marquess of Hamilton. Rumors of a romance, repeated during the last -three years, have been denied by the marquess‘= family on several occasions. .,The marquess, a , Grenadier Guards officer and agricultural ‘student, has been described as the “oldest and’ closest boy frien " of the 21-year-old princess. It has also been said that he “get more_ than his fair share of have attended. - 4 Princess Alexandra, in turn,¢ has been an occasional visitor to the marquess' parents, the Duke and Duchess of Abercorn, at their Northern Ireland home. She attended the marquess' 21st birthday with her brother, the Duke of Kent, and remained at Barons Courts, his. family home, for- 10 days after the cele- brations. . Graham ' Missionaries ist Billy Graham told! a national student convention Tuesday night that the present generation may be the last before the coming of; Christ. ’ Appealing for more. students to become missionaries, he said: “‘I have a feeling in my heart that you and I may be the ones that God has- called to evangelize the world in the last generation before the coming of Christ. “I do not see how the world Today, NATO has taken the op- . dances” at "the many balls they I - URBANA, Ill. (AP)—Evangel-' Appeasement Trend Has Been Resisted By NATO agreed on the arms-and-talks pro- gedure, there were significant ngjsgivings. The desirability of n gotiations as opposed to purely military measures was stressed in varying degrees by Canada Norway, Denmark, Britain and Germany. MAD BUTCHER The German contribution may’ have been decisive. Chancellor Adenauer has been NATO’s invet- erate Gibraltar, a diehard oppo- nent of concessions to Russia. When he went to the speaker’: rostrum at the summit meeting, his_ collapsed cheekbones giving him the air of a battered and in- . finitely worldly-wise Red Indian chief, he electrified delegates by relaxing his a d a m a n t stand against negotiation. _ In so doing, the 81 - year - old chancellor perversely became the‘ hero of left-wing and liberal-in- te11ectii_al_opinion, which has re- coiled in horror against the nu- clear race and sought almost any way out. The most trenchant ex- pression of this mood came from The New Statesman, a left-wing London weekly, which saw Euro- pean citizens as -“sheep in a pen, waiting‘ for the mad butcher." A complaint against the sum- mit decisions is that it betrays a blinkered obsession with nuclear weapons. In this view, it obviates the lastvpossibility of an “un- nuc1ear” Europe and Scandinavia standing nqitral between the two big powers. It is seen as the last act in an unfolding drama of mass suicide, the final stage which precludes negotiations. AUTOMATIC WAR The Paris newspaper L’Ex- press, in an article The War Which Starts Itself, visualizes European missile bases being triggered off automatically by some mechanical device, without the intervention of human intelli- gence. S u p p o s e the machine makes a mistake and confuses meteors with enemy rockets Such a terrifying vista probably occurred to allied military plan- ners, Presumably they fear fu- ture space - age ifnponderables less than present domination and so the rocket race continues. I FOR SALE I New house, 30 ft. by 24 ft. Two bedrooms, bath- room, four closets, hall,‘ living room and kitchen. Wired. Apply— 3 KING’S. LUMBER MILL, Montague. v. I Mayfair‘ Theatre (Murray River) ’ ‘I Friday and Saturday , i (Jain. 3-4) ”Ma & Pa Kettle At The Fair” Starringz, Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride. ' SHOW TIME 7:30 p.m. Please notecha e in showtime. can continue at its present pace much longer." II QIMRING RED’ 3. cosmbuuc JANET mix ' vrscaivxcpiaoir ‘ TODAY - SAT. CAPITOL Pvhicifin ON*1V'O. *ViVi}iN KELION, BLAINE "Shows 3:30 - '7 - II.I5 TYPIIIIIIN From TRINIDAD With ‘ All The Great « \ ,' R, pom STARS!//, ‘Q \ 1 AN ALLIED Asmsn 0 vlcruri , / ‘ L,,3_~_A . MIDNIGHT SHOW - TONIGHT P.M. HerblIlfffRIES lonnrun‘ Z , EASYTIIIDE-R3 ~ 0; PJIARMNNE Fame- DUKE of IRON ‘ LIIDY T