West Devon ni erent ner,.wag__For an encore, Mrs. — ~Bevon—man- A eee charas tlaved_a_Chopin. W La et -_ sssession of stolen goods by \ ‘ . .* eters --+* Island News Page Western and Central Districts -- |The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., Aug. 7, 1965. 3 | Fortune Teller Is Blamed For Woman’s Death LONDON {(CP)—A group of Canadian doctors report in the current British Medica! Journal J. Fran | k W Quartet Willis, Appear , Some of these wil be beard Sunday night with Mr. Willis is a@ program of songs and verses of the Open Sea. For the All-Canadian Festi- val at Charlottetown, the Sun- day program promises to be ond” of the highlights. the case of a woman who might ne of the most unusual pro- have been scared to death— ductions at the . Charlottetown | cently he is known for a prow gram called “Flanders’ ‘fields,” Cardigan, Montague Clinics Need Blood Quota Of 170 Red Cross,.blood donor clinics | hopeful of reaching the quota at Cardigan and Montague on | this year. Thursday next will wind up next, The new Legion home at Mon- , ; ; tague will be the locale of this week's four day series which | year's clinic which has . } lel? at the Beaver Club hall literally—by a fortune teller. Doctors A. R. Elkington, P. R. | Steele and D: D. Yun of the | Grenfell Labrador Medical Mis- sion, based in Ottawa, suggest British doctors might contribute to fuller understanding by re- porting any similar cases. The woman in the Canadian case had been told at the age of five by a fortune teller that she would die at 43. | Festival "65 this season features J. Frank Willis, Halifax- born internationally - renowned radio personality and the famed Har- mony Harbor Quartet. They ap- pear together Sunday night, at Confederation Centre. Some of Canada’s most me- orable radio and television pro- grams have featured the warm, knowledgeable voice and pers- onality of Mr. Willis. Most re- a breadcast history of the Can- adian Corps in the First Worid War as told in the first person by surviving veterans. The sound of rolling surf and sea gulls’ cries for many years ushered in “Harmony Harbor’’, a radio program of shanties, |sea songs and tales of the sea ‘heard across the country from gic The land owners surround- ing the Prince County Ex- hibition Grounds at Alberton forbid the landing of planes on their property on exhibi- tion days Aug. 11 and 12. Signed: Alten O'Brien. Arthur Wilkie, Erskine Clark. DRAWBRIDGE RAMMED BY FREIGHTER | mouth at Lake Erie. “‘We think all people are accounted for” | and there apparently were no | injuries, a Crosse Ile police | officer said. (AP Wirephoto) | The freighter kissed the open- ing of the bridge and toppled one section of the structure and five automobiles into the channel close to -the river's This is the wrecked draw- bridge across the Trenton Channel of the Detroit River near Crosse Ile after it was rammed by the ore freighter John” T.~ Hutchinson Friday: Sail Races Here Today Will Decide Area Champs Twenty-one crews from fivewill be sailing will be plainly, There will be four races to- different points in the Maritimes visible from the Victoria Park day and two run off tomorrow. will be competing; beginning and the first race gets under-|There are 10 crews here from this morning, for the right to way this morning at 10. ithe Halifax area, five from Saint represent the Atlantic area in 'John, two from Lunenburg, two the Canadian Nationa! Junior ifrom Shediac and two from Sailing Championships to be Charlottetown. - held late this month in Lunen- Later in the Nationals there{ | has again assumed the respon- | ahead. | Legion re-modelling project was | | for the past 16 years @ 96 donors, which was a consider: | British Parliament Recesses, ="=es= Mood |s Troubled By Economy ban J. Brothers, who heads the | committee, is hopeful of a feast. reachini the 120 mark '—.By-€ARL~MOLLINS —-~—heavy dose of austerity and- per Bank~betieved-to~ have~ totalled local residents oof de | LONDON (CP) — Parliament haps devalue the pound. about $280,000,000. i Seed eee Be! hender on the Sly ine trl gn er months ans jin a tr m over the holiday on the Scilly Isles in ‘ Montague branch of .——— stole of ‘oe —* Atlantic off Land's End Wilson oe ee ee , i economy and a threat deep- assured Parliament that the Britons spend heavily on v the leadership of A.A. Fraser, ening problems in the weeks aia! and he Bank . tions abroad and lactate a ngla are determined ommoditi | Prime Minister Wilson's La- avoid devaluation. — = iPr gh year ‘bor government, which took of- Before Parliament was ad- aiso results from faltering con- Club of i |fice last Oct. 16 on a pledge to journed, it was announced Wil- fidence by financiers who con- Montague while the | give the lagging economy a lift,/son will be the Queen's guest at vert sterling holdings into safer has spent many of the 292 days Balmoral Castle in Scotland goid or dollars. = progress. | since then devising a succession Oct. 2 to 4. Observers said the ieee eke sat aioe Montague has a quota of 150 of emergency measures to pre-| announcement in advance would . jg € aT aoe "2 donors for the two-hour period. |vent the collapse of sterling, | prevent rumors of crisis which —. preeere a. — While last year’s registration|currency for a quarter of the might spread if Wilson makes “°°*S — SS eek ae was somewhat below this num- | world. ‘such a visit unheralded. ea ygsnae - ck imports ber, the committee in charge is| At the same time, the govern-- The word from the prime 294 encourage~ exports—though ment has been working on pro-| minister’s official residence fol- Some experts believe their full BELIEVED DEAD |grams designed to tackle the lowing a meeting of top advisers impact will take months—and ‘trouble at its roots by boosting Wednesday was that they be- 2 how seriously foriegn finan- TIMMINS, Ont. (CP) — A the efficiency of management lieve Britain's economic situa- Ciers regard Britain's efforts te Schumacher man was—believed.andthe productivity of man- tion will improve asa result of tidy up its economic affairs. killed Thursday in a shaft ac- power in British industry. austerity measures imposed last oe Pie McIntyre Porcupine. The question is whether Brit- week. ¢ ines_ Ltd. Rene Desjardins, ain can survive the strain of The: gold and convertible cur-} : 45, fell from 7,125 foot level|spending more than she earns rency reserves—the fund used SOMETHING while removing broken timber|long enough for the corrective ot make good trading deficits’ a from a fire-damaged shaft of measures to take hold. If not, between the sterling area and To Think About... the mine. -'the country must take a further the rest of the ee eee if your furnace is ever 18 years in July by $140,000,000 to $2,651." gig, you may be money ahead give it a good. clese leok! ° 600,000, despite payments into 4, the fund by Germany and the) “EDGEHILL” WINDSOR: NOVA SCOTIA wi Al BOARDING AND Instant . DAY SCHOOL FOR Neo wires! @ No cords! GIRLS Nothing. behind vow enti ween Nothing ! Ws her! Wher you hee «i | Grades II to XII Seite a coo inclusive no one will ever know. Hear at one with clarby, free from de ft High Academic record Here is 2 new technique, a new Music, Art, Household way to better hearing, s new Science, Sports, Typing, — new Saat der dae — Riding, Elocution. People naturally proud of their appearance mow can happily join | Michaelmas Term begin in We with everyone else and begins forget deafness. Prove this cleim <5 in your ewn home FREE by send- SEPTEMBER 8, 1965 ing the coupon within 10 days : Rd. ing. Centre, pe aie. home N.S. Headmistress Tee Peewee rare ae B. D. a ARK DANCING BAY VISTA LOUNGE burg, N.S. The competitions, between crews of young boys and girls not over 16-years-old from Hali- fax; Saint--John,...Shediac,.. Lun- enberg and Charlottetown, starts this morning at the Charlotte- town Yacht Club Representing the Island wil! be two’ crews; David Stewart and Alan Prowse, Peter Love and David Lidstone, of the Charlottetown Yacht Club's jun- ior sailing program The top four. crews in the re- gatta being held here today and tomorrow will earn the right to in represent the Atlantic area the national rezatta to be held will be 20 crews from five areas} in Canada, four each from, Bri-| tish Columbia, the Prairies; On-} tario, Quebec and the Atlantic: area. . . | ELIMINATION } These 20 crews will be chosen! initially by winning the elimin-| ation run-downs in their own, club and then by being one of. the top four in their own area regatta. The boys and girls who! will be at enone in the last | _ A warmly responsive audience | Week of August will be the top at St. Dunstan's University au- | 40 of some 6,000 boys and girls, ditorium last evening heard a Under the age of 16, sailing in Piano Recital Popular. piano recital by Marcia A.|junior sailing programs across Loynd. { | the country. Music lovers hailed the two-/ Today’ and tomorrow each Wheat Acreage In Canada Down 5 Per Cent From ‘64 OTTAWA (CP)—The acreage!sown to oats to 9,621,000, down sown to wheat im Canada this|/one per cent from 1964. ACREAGES UP year is estimated at 28,282,200 Acreages devoted to growing Gerald Grimes acres, down five per cent from harley and flaxszed, however, 1964, the Dominion Bureau of|were higher. Barley acreage highway accident at M Statistics reported- Friday. i was up. 11 per cent to 6,037,600, Last year’s wheat acreage/ flaxseed up 13 per cent to 2,239,- was 29,685,800, the largest in’ 000. history. The average acreage in’ Rapeseed, grown for its oil, the 10-year period 1953-62 wasiestablished a record this year 24,224,400. in acreage planted, 1,435,000, an DBS said farmers in Western increase of 81 per..cent. Canada planted four per cent; The report. covered 16 spring- BUT EVEN MORE IMPORTANT There have been so tem! If you de net LENNOX heafing system call TODAY. Palmer Electric Dial 894-8543 - Ch’town $1.00 per cover eal (Just West of Cavendish) WEDNESDAY. NIGHTS Music by the Velvets . SATURDAY NIGHTS Gordon Heustis Orchestra Fully Licensed Lounge ednesday and Saturday. PHONE NEW LONDON 33 Reservations held te 10:15 p.m. admission to dances on in Lunenburg on Augus 26, 27 hour performance with waves ot |Tace will cover a course that is, and 28. a - sustained applause, and brought)some four miles long. Racing| SEEN FROM PARK ‘the artist back on stage for sev- will continue today until about The es the young sailors ©ral curtain calls. four in the afternoon and will Soca : One of the best-received sel-'start again tomorrow stieesind ections was given Mrs. Loynd’s|and should finish early tomor- interpretation of the Beethoven row afternoon. |Sonata in E major, opus 109. — PWC ACTION Other number included Prelude — ‘(Continued from page 1) and Fugue in C major by Bach; | Sonata in B-flat major, Mozart; ‘Clog Dance, Hanson; Gymnope- ManlsFined & : go die, Satie; and Toccata, Khacha- ‘SUMMERSIDE A West turian student would be well known to Lovad| school authorities. n 5, Snape : 2 _... eaSE_SPTing, SHOTUY iter ais ae Tepe ae ee inauguration, Mayor Walter J. =Mrs. - David Loynd; technical director Cox arranged a joint meeting of Magistrate R. at Confederation Centre. She re- | winter | tural officials, said farmers ‘this’ acres, compared.with 90,500,000 : 7M zt « : nora b ; . - +. . | a ee ee ee . bes fennct packet men fee ceeeieneetiineeeee | , SSE fewer acres in spring wheat this | planted field crops and said the year-than they did in 1964, while| aggregate area was a record of wheat acreage—mainly | 51,000,000 acres, éompared with! ~ in Eastern Canada—was down | 50,600,000 in 1964. Together with | 20 per cent. |erops planted last fall and sum- The bureau, reporting on sur-| mer-fallow—land left idle to re- veys made in June andconsul-! store its fertility—land tilled this tations with provincial agricul- year amounted to 91,200,000. year also reduced the acreage last year. © WE LOVE THE BEAUTY Penamiees sessmere§ = zs “In town police court yesterday. - The goods in question <con- | sisted of a bracelet from R. T- Holman’s store. The man had previously pleaded not guilty DEATH NOTICES HAYDEN — At the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital,__Friday. August 6, 1965. Miss Mary B.- Hayder of Charlottetown, for- ceived her bachelor of music de- gree from Lawrence University Conservatory of Music and~ her master of music degree from the University_of Wisconsin. In 1946, she was a student of Viennese concert pianist Paul Badura. Previous to that she City Council and the School Board at which time Dr. Lea, as. spokesman for the Board, outlin- | ed its plans for the future. He told of the expected need of a | high school in view cf a foresee- | able. création of Prince of Wales | as & degree-granting university. had taught music history and literature and piano at the Uni- versity_of Wisconsin. ; It is believed other meetings j with civic authorities have been jheld to acquaint them with pro- |gress of the situation. The School Roard is a body specifically set up by legislation. and is respon- All these wishing to attend Grade SHARE IT 8 in Alberton Elementary School please contact the secretary immediately. Only a limited number accepted. as —2-4-and-7-10-p:m.———— merty of Boston and Vernon River. Resting at the MacLean Funeral Home from where the @uneral will be held Sunday, jsible for education, in the City of Charlottetown. | However, ;Since it as no taxing powers CITY AREA |all funds for its. ysesrhust-be pro- | FUNERALS August 8. with service commen- - vided from civic revenues. Mrs. Blanche England, . Secretary, Alberton. cing at 2 pm. Interment in| MacKENZIE FUNERAL —| Noting the approximate $800.. | Peoples cemetery. Visiting hours The funeral for Hugh Verner /000 cost of the‘new. structure Dr. | — MacKenzie -was—held << raat tegen te aaa So cat -+August—5,1965,_from—the--Mac-.. being _made__to-ot evels of : BRADLEY — At the Charlotte- 1.5 Funeral Home where ser- | government (meaning other than town Hospital, August 5, 1965, vice was conducted by Ven. City Council) for financial aid to Mrs. James E. Bradiey, 172 Syd-' archdeaon J. R. Davies and ease the already heavy strain mey Street. Resting at the Hen-| Rey Donald Nicholson. Honor-| 0 civic finances caused by edu- messey Funeral Home lary pallbearers were K. M. | Cational costs. where the funeral ae mace’ Martin, Ralph Dumont, Donald; SMOKING COSTS MUCH Bionday at’6:45 a.m. to'St. Dum yrartin, F.A.S. Jones, Robert! The average British family stan's Basilica for Requiem High j ge ; } M cS vek te t in ¥ndman, Hugh Buchanan and spends 7.4 per cent of its in- BSS ate ee mermen' i Mark MacPherson. Interment!come on tobacco and 6.6 per the Catholic cemetery. Visiting : | ‘ i at 3 took place in Belfast cemetery.| cent on fuel and light. Pm. MURRAY — At the P_E.I. Hos- pital, Aug. 5, 1965, Mrs. Gordon Murray: Brackley Beach in her 7ist year. Resting at the Cut- cliffe Funeral Home from where funeral will be held today ‘Sat- urday), service commencing at 2.30. Interment Brackley ceme- tery. CONFEDERATION CENTRE KINDERGARTEN LEARNING THROUGH ART For boys and girls from 5 years to school age. A one year course of three terms, October to December, January to March, April to June, of preparation for -~-@200++ 0420772884 May We Accommodate four - ~ When vou are in Halifax weer tr errs * and Group Plans @ Commerecta) Rates $ : ceotralty Wocstee 3] school.’ sa oe aed <4 Punting Reading Readiness 3| Crafts Writing Readiness Sterling’ features” $1 Music ___» Number Works ~ Stee caiumg sre Cenk 3 Dance/Drame ~ _ Creative Playtime @ 2 MONDAYS to FRIDAYS, 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon, FEES—$30.00 per term. ° Registrations by phone 2:2464, 222, or at desk in Memorial Hall. extn. Confederation VrrTVTeve ee 0000006 7 7e POSCSCSCOSSOSOSSSCSTSSCS 299994 Centre Siig 1965 ‘NOVA SCOTIA FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS — TATAMAGOUCHE, N.S. AUGUST 15, 14, 15 * PIPE BANDS * HIGHLAND DANCING * MUSIC RECITALS * OLD TIME FIDDLING CONTEST ° EXHIBITS * DEMONSTRATIONS * CHILDREN’S CONCERTS, PAINTING, ETC. ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY * SUPERVISED PLAYGROUND BABY SITTING SERVICE RECITAL TICKETS...$1.00 available at Festival Grounds, or by writing Box 814, Halifax, N.S. Admission t6é grounds (Exhibits, eté.) 506 - WE HOPE YOUR VISIT WAS PLEASANT COME BACK AND SEE US AGAIN s ' 3 You'll find them aif along our mod- They welcome you to a memorable Over 2,700 miles ef paved highway in the Province makes it easy for you te travel from ene beaty spot te another. ‘ Thie summer, get acquainted with a wonderful way of life. Bring your car when you vistt Nova Nova Scotia Travel Bureau CGP 7365 , } Box 130, Halifax ; Nova Scotia 2 i Please send travel literature to: ; I aici cca ssusssniasiancsata tcicscnaneseaaitatiieeiebscabipiiialiis : MANE So neen sanubainioabapaps iiinsinbna © C j steteceeesensnen senieeneannenseseessensretannatscs Gh