The West Wales Tourist Association came out strongly on the side of Sunday opening of public houses in the ‘dry’ areas of Wales.

Narberth was told it would have to put up with new parking restrictions for the season.

A distinguished visitor to Tenby Guildhall was Sir Lalita Rajapakse, High Commissioner for Ceylon.

Smash and grab raiders got away with a £22 transistor radio from Dale’s Music Shop, High Street, Tenby. The window pane was smashed and the radio, the most expensive in the window, stolen.

A Whitland housewife, Mrs. Joan Seeley, of Whitland, reached the area finals of the Mrs. Great Britain, sponsored by the Daily Mirror.

Mrs. Jane Powell, of Sunnybank, Narberth, celebrated her 103rd birthday.

The advertisement said: Join the services and travel the world. The world, of course, did embrace some very way-out places. But for at least one local serviceman, life had been one long glamorous globetrot. Twenty-two-year-old Roger Paice, of Kilgetty, had returned from a detachment with the Royal Australian Air Force in Malaysia.

Mr. John Walters, the headmaster of Llangwm Voluntary School since 1955, was appointed headmaster of Jeffreyston Voluntary School.

Miss Delma James was chosen as Kilgetty Carnival Queen. Attendants were Caroline Morgan, Julie Hare, Angela James, Rosemary Beynon, with page boys Philip Merriman and Kevin Thomas.

Showing at the South Beach: The Sandwich Man; at the Royal Playhouse: A Countess from Hong Kong; at the De Valence Pavilion: Pop dancing to The Change Place.