-..:A -mom I - - - l.T.-GOV. TAKES Top. Lieut. Governor T. W. L. the R.C.A.F'. Band, Summerside. Pi-owse is shown taking the salute is shown passing the saluting base. from the 5 signals Reg't during Accompanying the Lieiit. Gover- the march past at the garrison nor at the base are left. to right. i-liiircb parade yesterday. Bottom. ,u H'H,;,l, m 1. -..r- L W. Matheson, Brig. G.G.K. Peakc. land James Fiilloi-tiiii, ('iiy Clerk, l dcr. A. Walthen Gaudet. Canon J..llC(ll'Tllll('lntllliE i)lil('Fl'. ll. M. C. s. W-C Alan MacMillan. Premier A. Ibbott. St. Paul's Anglican Church i Queen Clini-lniis. ri,t,,.,iy Mayo, .:. ..-..a..;;' 3. D.S.0.. E.D.. tlarrison Comman- Trias Chemical To Break Strike BRISBANE. Australia (Reuters A Queensland sheep rancher he started a ”ehemical warfare” to,shcep or wool. sheep shearcrs spraying. the wool can be stripperiima-V9" "l "ll-S beat a strike of lnlonvaia its sixth month in Que-.ns-l mechanically by "rubber fingers" town. l..0. Elaley. owner of the Bold more station near Yelarbon,tspi-ending Queensland. and his manager. E. G. Hill. I former chemist, A .. ..a PARADISE” I ('umiii;iiirici' .l.N. Kenny. 1000 landings a mouth take place there. it has rightly been called, "The Aerial Crossroad of the World.” ti. Newfoundland bccamc 'i pro- vince of Canarlzi in lil-itl. if has seven renrrseiitritives in the House of Commons. CYPRUS The island Ill ('ypriis is a Bri- tish Crown (Ttiloiiy. Britain has oc- cupied the island since 1878. in 1914. it was formally annexed. Not since ancient times has Cyprus been a Greek territory. Higlity per cent of Cyprus's 500. (ifltl persons are of Greek descent: the rest of the pripiilation is Turk- isli. The spiritual and political leader of the Greeks. A.-"' ' , Makarios. has been leading an in- tensive fight for self-govern- meni for Cyprus and eventual union with Greece. The Greek government. naturally. are in fa- vour of such a union and have backed the movement headed by this will be the co. cludlng issue p! widening Educational llorizons tor itie year 1955-56. Let us cause T i a moment and look back over the year. Has there hcvii any sign of professional :I'ilHIh in our Federation”! Yes. l ttiirik this has been a year Of i-rat aiiakeiiing among our tea- rtici-s They are becoming aware of the fact that if progress in educ- allftll IS to be made. the initiative fllllsl he t:Z;en by our professional 0l'l18l1lLaIl0n. There is little point in bemoan- iii: the fact that education in Pr-iire Edward island is not what it .litiul(l be unless stiiiieiliiiig is fIttlll' about it. Everyone. I hope, i-rnlizes that. because the heart of the school is the teacher. any vilccl to promote the cause of edu- ration is useless and ineffective llitiie role of the teacher is ne- glct-icri or underestimated. Teachers are not trio happy ntioiii the lack of prestige that scciiis to surround the teaching profession; but what gives honour and respect to any profession? is it not the standard of academic and professional qualifications that its members have? Entrance to teaching in Prince lldward island has been subject- ed to such a lowering of entrance rNlllil”Cmi!l1i.S that today just about anyone who cares to may take on ihc job of teaching. This unhappy situation was brought about through an effort to staff the schools-and Prince Edward Is- land is not unique in this-every province in Canada tried the ex- periment at one time with the disastrous result that teaching no longer held out a challenge to our young and ambitious students. Teaching was by-passed as a job fit only for the unambitious. and vi today we find the teacher short- iicc our most serious problem. Teaclicrs feel that this is one of Ill? contributing causes for the lack of prestige in our profession. Mi orcanization can hope to rise veitv high professionally unless the entrance requirements to that pro- ti-ssioii are high. With this thought in mind. the Teacher's Forlorn- Imn liave taken the st; i that the iiiiniinuin entrance to Teacher trainiiig should be Grade Xii. Act- lgovernnicnt. Britain proposed that "it: on this premise ntir Fcdcra-ptliey control the islands foreign Iirin advocated. and the Depnrt- policy. defence. and internal sc- ment of Education has agreed to, curity. l-Iverylhiuc else would he the holding of a Summer School under (Typrlot rule. There would in (lhariottetoi this-year where he an elected legislature. but felt teachers may have the opportun- that the time for the exercise of "3" to improve their academic self-determination has not arrived. tiniidiniz. To these proposals Archbishop inother sign of awakened inter. Makarios would not agree. Vio- Put on the Part of our tencliers lr,-nee continued Finally the Bri- Ila! been the holding of Workshops tiiih arrested Archbishop Maker- '" the ten Locals Ilirttll'1ll0Ili the his mid depoi-tori liiiu to the Scy- lsaiiri At these Workshops dis- t-lielics, ii group of tiny islands in "l"i'"liS ircrc held on such topics the Indian Ocean This move is the need for higher standards brought quick and violent reac- lni; tcacliers: professional growth: iloiis against the British. Even in the Archbishop. The government of Turkey. fearing for the Turkish minority. has opposed the revolt. Two major facts have made Britain oppose the demands of the Greek Cypriots: 1. The islands position in the Medtterrnnisn. Cyprus is only 50 miles from Turkey: 650 miles from the nearest point in Greece. It is of great importance in the defence of the Middle East. it is to the Turks that NATO looks for the de- fence of the Turkish Straits and the successful bottling up of the Russian submarines. Any pol- itical settlement in Cyprus that seriously reduced the island's use- fulness or availability as a head- quarters. or that ai'ennted Turkey. would be militarily indefensible. 1. Prestige. The Greeks on Cy- prus have used terrorist tactics against the British and have kil- led many British srildirrs. British anger has innuuieri and with it. the determination to hold on to Cyprus and avoid another humil- ating retreat in the Middle East. For months the British tried to negotiate with Archbishop Makar- ins. in February the British For- eign Secretary went to Cyprus in I"-'l"llCl' certifii-nun". public r4-lg.iBritain lllp Lahoritcs undcr Earl tioiis higher remuneration: the Attlee criticized the Government. llrlcils of the child in the rural in March the Archbishop of s't"tl”l. educational fine -e. ffzintcrliury made a pica to the it indeed. our teachers are Eden Government to assure Arch- ttn lllt' march. Let us join forces bishop Makarios that his exile llllll them to improve education would end when peace. is restored "” "'9 Isl ' - on the isitiiiri Dr Fisher outlined . , I To ioint )li'lll frir settlement. "I" T -..WH)llNDLANIl aiml-Ixllcris Ishuultl draw up a I "lie first Atlantic t-able lillltl neu i'llllRlllllIlIIlI for t'.Vl7Tl'-r llilllil-ll at lieai't's Content. -lulv ?7, could he tlisciissed with Makarios ":6" p and others. ' Qt” "K3 lllsh hill. verlouking 2. Britain. Greece. Turlw! t-Jollnsharbor. Guglielmo Mar- should call on all Cyprus for a Will received the first wireless truce; "'9-"site to be transmitted across 3. Makarlos should be told his "I? Atlsntit: at St. John's. Dee- banishment is tcmlmfhry And Will :';''l9" I2. 1901 Sincc that day end when order is restored in the "5 Slit has been known as 'x'lg. island. k Hill. and .1 momm-lam has Meanwliile thr rioting continues '"" "8N!i to cnmmemornie the and an i-ct no salisi.Vtiil1 Willi" """ -Whievcnacnt min ii.i-. hm-ii amved at ' I woi-lri'ii first lT8llS-allan. 51', l,,ui'RF.Ntit: SEAW-W lit flrzht left Lester's Field. June Some facts and figures. 4.1919. Aleoclr and Brown landid it will add about a,ooo miles of "R"f"ld but day-successful. mi l1PPiacentls Bay. August It. Chu;.ohmT- -0 Minister Winston Room” and U.S. President FED. hm, ill met on the decks iii a ,g,,mml 'l'l- ("id Kltlnell the famous: Chm" noun as the Atlantic "coast line" to the North Ameri- can continent. It will allow vessels more than 700 feet long. with about 75 ft. beam and 25 ft. draft. to pass Orom the Atlantic to the GFNII I-NKN through slant lotion. At present. sliip-z must he no longer than 25ft ft with 4.1 it beam and 14 it dralt. . in gel timiiigii old locks like those I Wm-foundland lg 1. sum; aim-l the Sniilanges Canal. E?" 1;-Ibrcdnr by um 51 '34 pm. ii gulll tiring new industries in 1'' "Evan miles in width. towns iiioiig the waterwor- w- of world's most fam- it will generate three times the . ” Tilt. Gander Held. l'-i o- electrical output of Colorado Riv- UnIiIn&tIa lr'a Hoover Dsmm offer the island much wider seli- Bi IWIDENIING EDUCATIONAL HORlZONS,'P'"it changes in highways and railroads. the build- ing of new bridges. It will cost about a billion dol- iars. Choose the answer or answers which correctly complete the fol- lowing statements: 1. The United States Secretary of State is: lat iiarnld Sltissen. tbt .lnhn Foster Dulles; to) Richard Nixon; tdl Sam Rayburn. 2. The biggest island in Eiiropc is: tat lrcland; tbl Sardinia; tc) Sicily; tdl Great Britain. 3. Nearly a 1000 years ago, Great Britain was under the rule of the: tat Roman Empire; tbt Persian Empire: (ct Ottoman Empire: tdt Charlcmagiit-'s Empire. 4. Among the lands that have won independence from Great Bri- tain is: tat Viei Nam; ibt Libya: tct Burma: tdt Indonesia 5. The statement of Prime Min- ister Edcn's and president Eisen- hower's agrecmenl on certain filmi- ameutals of action is called" tat NATO: fbt The Declaration of Washington; (ct SEATO: Idi Ban- dung Pact. 6. After the conference in the U.S.A. between Eden and Eisen- hower. there still remain things about which the two lands are in disagreement. Among them is tat British restricitions on trade with China: tbl Britain's postponciiicnt of its attempts to bring Comnitin- ist China into the U.N.: tcl help to Nationalist China defend small islands near the Chinese mainland; tdt The export of Ma- layan rubber to Communist China. 7. Baloons launched by the US. government are: tat Weather bal- loons: tbt Spy balloons; lf'l Prop- aganda balloons; tdt Advertise- ment balloons. 9l;6T Bql III TIOM oI.lf!ld 1S.ll.t( 'n Winter Olympics was won by: fat Russia: tht Canada; let U S.A: dt Britain. it l"r:iiice's view pr:-iiiicr is fill Georges Cairoiix. tlil Reno (ioty; tct Guy Mollett; tdi Pierre Men- dos-Fratice. ltl. Riissia's progriini for build- ing up production is called: tat The Five-Year Plan: thl Opera- tion ilnotsirap; tci The Point lt'niir l'r0El'&lnl. id) The (loniiiiunist otr. 1i. Both the US. and liilisllvl offering loans which would be used in bulldingzltat Movie Theatres in Cairo: tbl A big dam on the Nile at Aswan; ict Housing Units; (rit Atomic energy plants. 12. The Communist party of Rus- sia includes: tat All Russians; ilii Only the men active in the iznrcrnment, tct Only people in .sought the friendship of Egypt by- thc so-culled working class: Irlt "'4-lvovtaauiiiana.1sueo.ta"a: numiiivoivoanuioaund Only about six million ritivcns l Prince Edward islnml Teachers Federation. Estelle iiowness. Gen-l oral secretary. its Prince st.. Char-I lottetnwn l Sees Outlook For I Jobs Tougher l OTTAWA If'Pt - Many in oils in industry Innis made it iii:-inns-l iiigly riifrir-iilt in obtain good l'IlW. says, the Roiinriei. official monthly: RCAF publication. The statement is made in an article urging that the many air- men whose three-year air force- engagcme..' expires this year slslnl on again. "You will hair in find a irtx gnod job indeed tin riviiian lilr . in order in live on the :raI.- lot which yml have licrti ariiisltiiiiwl In the RCAF." says the article "Will the job you are content- plating provide you with good married quartlrl and free school- ing? Furthermore. will it offer mariage and subsistence allow- ances. as well as separated from ily allowances? We Wlllllfl :iigKP5l that the answer is no . "A vrry rnngorvatirr csfitiinll” shows that. in parallel in rlW.V' street the life win new EU l"B'l'l'Z as an airman. you would have to earn at least 350 per month. or 4.200 a year That is. you would have to malre more than voung graduate engineers. doctors. law- yn sad school teachers. whoas starting salaries are met; svr L00 a pan" Appeal Laws OTTAWA t('Pl The goveriiiiieni Tuesday gave notice of legislation to have more than one judgr. of the Supreme ('ni.irt of Canada hear appliciitioiis for leave to appeal in capital Htscs. The step is believed front the wise ni Willirl t'(ll'fll'l. (iaslie. Que, priispector hanged Feb. It) for the murder of one of tlirrir Amcir-em hear hunters in lfl5.'l. A l'FNnllltl0n placed on Tuesday's Comnious order paper by Justice Minister Carson proposes amend- moms in sections of the Supreme COIll'I Art and the (Ttiiiiiial Code tloaliiig iiitli zipplicaliiiiis for leave in :ippe.'iI in i';ipit..'il cases. It also pi-nprises the establisliment of the office of deputy registrar of the Siiprctiic Court. At present. appliciilioiis for leave to nlilical nitirdcr convictions are lieziri-ti in clianihers by one Sit- prenic (iourt judge. it is under- stood the government. proposes to have three iudizcs hear such appli- cations in future. to stem THINK FOUR DEAD Pl'ilN('l'I ALBERT. Sask. ((7Pi RCMP said l-'riday two persons and possibly two more have been rirowncd in a fishing mishap in Stony Narrows in Lac la Rouge area. 120 miles north of Prince iillicrt. Names were withheld. Po- lIt'0 said two bodies have been found and it is possible that there were two others in the party. LONG COASTS (';iii.-iria's mainland has a total rrias-tline of 14,820 miles- on east, not-it. and west. ! gMCUllAll' BATTLEp ON Pia;-l-to 36th Annual Report of BEHIND! Q . . . . ..i Y! . mi .. rcm:':duEro:i”d:heeTihl:y'Mayor of Blind cheitiiral spray. The inventors claim the breaks the wool fibre at skin level and does not damage either the! A few days after fitted to a runway. The though shearers' strike has been lie was Sit eastern ftralia since an arbitration courtl havei reduced the men's wages. M0lldl!.V. June. it I956 The Guardian. Page 11 i'He;lgned-from-llieTma,vorsl-tvjdss V micnt-into-oiic7f.Ca-ii(ada'-I lat'.l;Il than four months ago. l llljoiiim nrmlucerl. 31,”,-ii nH'p'n- 0,” ((.,,,J; Mr. Herthclot Wll born in Hon- Lotiis Bertiiolot. uho um: ll tiivies 50." Minest N Y' 3"”. """'"I '” hmlming Uranium this community. ltbtl miles west oil I” , Sudbury, in 1904. a ioiiiti he lost both legal bush work...-I .and was diabetic. died Saturday.l Wm. River, Ont. Dies si-znvici-:s iron MICMIIEII g OTTAWA t(?Pt - Funeral st-rv ice will be conducted here today tor John Lorne MacDougall. Lib- eral member of the Commons (in Vancouver Burrard. who collapses and died Wednesday in the Pariia ment buildings. He will be buried tit Vancouver. millhand, schoolteacher, g r o e e r. restaura- teur and hotel owner he saw the A ll . .- .. r I" tthfnlrwlililurlll n:,l"t:hliicshrr;)an. luuiwn small settlement grow in a busy hh Pgllranp mi rein !iitarin for lumber centre. From ii whpplrhair MP it nrivr-rsity. he guided its lightning develop- Dominion Stores Limited TO THE SHOPPING PUBLIC Knnual Report: goes.) every province. purchased. purchased. (0l.0UIlED BANDIGE 16c ifi'c7'si( HUGHES DRUG CO. AND THE JENKINS I Customers set a new record of patronage. spending iiirirc than S2l9 million at stores of the Dominion organization. (See below the brcakdowii of where each custonicifs money Plans were Completed for ex- pansion of Dominion from coast to coast, with stores in All shares of Thrift Stores Limited. operating in Oucbcc and Eastern Ontario, were All shares of Town and (miti- try Food Centre Limited. operating in Alberta, were TRULY CANADIAN Dominion Stores Limited is a public Canadian Company. which means that anyone in Canada who so dcsircs may purchase and own shares in the Cmnptiiiy. At present more than 3,400 men and women in all walks of life are the owners of Dominion. Recently. Dominion mailed to these shareholders in com- prehensive 40-page report on all details of their Company's activities during the fiscal year ended March 17th, 1956. Dominion believes that in addition to reporting to the share- holders whosc invcstmcnt makes the Company possible. it should report also to the shopping public. whose ever-increasing patronage has built Dominion from three small stores in I9 l 9 to more than 300 today. Following arc some of tlic higlilights from l)oiiiiiiirin's Jfith t Tucnly-one new Dominion markets and seven new Thrift stores were opened. - An offering of rights in sliarcholdcrs to purchase -,.(idlll.,,,;,l shares was particularly well accepted. and o The sale of .Sl0.000,000 4!.-.' 95 Sinking Fund Debentures, Series B, was accomplished. Reproduced in the 36th Annual Report was the "Aim" of the Company, which reads as follows: "The Aim of Dominion Stores Limited is to fulfil with ever-increasing efficiency its responsibility as a distributor of food, thereby performing a satisfactory service to the consumer. producer. manufacture! and processor; to discharge its responsibility to shareholders whose investment makes the Company possible; and to provide its employees with a satisfactory living under the best possible ;' ' conditions." Iminua acts at it once in .,. ..,.. --A..,.-, .l,. M M m" "M Annual Report incorporated I mi. u...,i. i..i.u.,.i. Special Report on EV0l'-liI- ''5' "” creasing Efficiency.” revealing SALES s2i9,7:i5,a:ti si57,2s6,ooo hm, eve,,;nc,eaS;ng emcimcy NET EARNINGS .................. .. 3 4,326,000 3 2,691,602 in 1(,w-c(,st distribution of food - Equal Per Show to - 5 2-68 3 213- has won Dominion thousands DIVIDENDS s i,:i72,o25 3 945,042 of new customers every year. e Equalpershursto 95;: 75a bringing ever-increasing bene- EARNINGS REINVESTEO IN fits to farmers. fishermen. manu- rnesuswess .................. .. 3 2,953,975 3 1,746,560 facturers, packers. railways. CURRENT ASSETS .................. .. 3 23,8l5,3l3 s l2,349,582 truckcrs and Other Iuppllefl ll CURRENT'llABlllTiES ................ .. 5 10,760,962 3 s,9Ai,4is Wely Pr0V1ltCC0fC3ll8d1- And WORKING CAPITAL 3 13,054,351 3 5,908,166 I" the 5?""”"'"S Pr.”V'd”d."T9" SHAREHOLDERS. mum 3 2L953,a9 p HIWSJJS convenient shoppingpfactlities N b H d and the lowest possible food um or o tors: at an of Year 304 207 Prices K, mnre and more Cg";- dian homemaker: every year. When a Family Spends T10. 00 at Dominion - EAuEIiA'ElE'S'Ag:i . . . . . .. 58.32 82! EMPLOYEES Get . . . . . u I snvicss, SUCH as I8! LANDLORDS Get GOVERNMENTS Get .. SHAREHOLDERS Get.. 6;! W LEFT POI MODIINIIATION AND NEW STORES I: . . . .. DOMINION IVIIYTHINO GUAIANTIID MORE PIIINDLY PHARMACY