aren! . - ees. . a . ~ . . i €F ” aeueye eee eeeeee Dawson Vancouver. ..... a aek Ras Alberton and West Prince county SHOWS ‘ ~The Guardian, Ohatloticiown, Wed, Jan. 17, 1962. a e iL i >= RE : a i | Agriculture Minister Andrew ; ly Victoria Edmonton TOGA <ccctecdss Winnipeg Toronto Ottawa Montreal a “ ae : B. MacRae expressed jtime market, there is qe) ae ee eee svesenese “24 2D tion yesterday that butter | problem of storage,” he sai@* . | Ported 3 : ssqeecesees, 22 2B S p production had increased 10 per| “We ere a little disappointed | The killings were reported in <> seeoeeons , SA tae ' |eent im 1961 to a total of 5,808,200 | though,” he added “that there am eastern area of The Congo ied .ectscons Gh se eae ae pounds. has been a fairly sharp decline where unruly soldiers in jer |QUEREE -naeense. » + ‘ “It's we expected”, said |in cheese production, and we past have been reported wader’ wnt a \ the , who had to ex-|are hoping for an increase next | the influence of leftist Vice-Pre- | saint John ......07 39 . \ y r n a e |press keen disappointment alyear, particularly in high | mier Antoine Gizenga. Te: | Moncton : #0 oe ~ ts your sg, when, uatter cheese for which there |bellion against the 6ov- Halifax 0 s . i, (ion fell off sharply, due partly |is » ready demand.” ernment now is crumbling. 36 As the result of high tempera- |in the building while.concrete ' to lack of moisture and poot| Cheese production of 875,748| As the reports circulated, xs tures combined with high winds being poured. pastures, but partly, he said at | pounds in 1961 compares with | Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula o AM and rain, early Tuesday morn-| The section at the the time, due to a letdown 1m | 1,007,935 pounds in 1980. announced that Gizenga had 2 ing, streets in Charlottetown and RCAF sta reported winds snimal husbandry and breeding | Total milk production was up been stripped of his post as dep- many other sections of the pro-| gusted as high as 57 .m.p-h. ces. last year. Figures for the com- | uty premier in the central gov- vince took on a summer-like ap- around 3 a.m. yesterday and guICKLY SOLD year are not available,| ernment for leading the insur- 4 pearance yesterday. However, were still averaging around 4 1 must be remembered that | but the 189,748,000 pounds to the | rection. : Griving conditions during the | ™.p.h. at ten o'clock. Tempera our high qualitY butter is quick-|end of October last compared; 4 virtual prisoner of govern- early morning hours were rath-| tures were close to the 40 de-| ‘with 177,385,000 pounds for the | ment troops in, his old strong- er: treacherous but no accidents | gree mark long distance lines, | same period in 1960. This ‘is am hold of Stanleyville, Oriental | were reported. * \with similar reported |increase of more than 12 million | province, Gizenga may be re- Winds in the wees IT, along the south shore and parts |pounds for the 10-month period. | piaced by a friend of ‘his arch area reached their peak at 5.30 | emperature of the Annapolis Valley. - — | foe, President Moise Tshombe of o'clock this morning when gusts | mS Damage was light to cs e secessionist Katanga province, reached 5 m.p.h. At 6 a.m. Ri T 42 and communication lines oe Britain Has Atos at. winds were recorded at 3 | NIS@S 1O | Saint John ares, Mo lengthy aa The report of the slaughter of m.p.h, gusting to 50 m.p.h. Ac-| - | power failures in Nova ion mieiadias eooke oer cording to the meteorological! The warm weather of yes-| Scotia. 4 More Cases from a seminary student who station at the Charlottetown | terday was. ususual but it did| However, an estimated $45,00/ — , ‘|said he escaped. He reported radio range winds remained at | not establish a record, it was | damage resulted in a fire which 35 m.p.h. gusting to 45 m.p.h. | learned from the weather office | 2 (l 8 r i E a two-storey building ¢ , for the greater part of the day. | at the Experimental Farm. at Kentville, N.S. The fire is be- Ghost were among the 7000 mite oe xcatville 1 and i They gradually diminished dur-| The thermometer stood at 42 |liyed to have started when the By ROD CURRIE victims. ; ing the i | , 28. me ow oe : es ae degrees Monday night, but there |high wind tore a power line| LONDON (CP) — Fear, waig- |~ Prince. Edward Island, East- *.,was a redding of 51 degrees on | joose, causing a short circuit in | nd anger swept much ot les: 15 m.p.b. gusting to 20 m.p.b. | Jan. 16, 1959, for examplé—and |the frame building : | Deitel *Tuesds “| Arrests Made eo Ne. ee: poe a ritain Tuesday as four new : Temperatures remained at the | 48 degrees on Jan. 3 the same| Framework, staging and icon of aiaietad candies tered snowflurries; clearing in of fternoon; much colder; west “6 Sure bar tepien- aro |Seyrece Ox Duweary Te Teer peer peee asorerame were tipped by | were reported lu previewsly a As Insurance nists Low-high at Charlotte: X [de egy hed md rag} wi a three - storey | affected areas — Manchester, e town: 15 and 25, Moncton 10 and ping during the evening. At 11) There were 141 ine ©” | women’s residence under con-| Birmingham and Cardiff, Wales. Swindle Probed 23 o'clock temperatures of 20 de- snowfall in December this year, | struction at Acadia Universily| Thousands continued to line up| Bay of Fundy: West winds 20; grees were recorded. compared to 23.5 last year ut | at Wolfville, N.S., resulting m| for vaccinations and again med-| TORONTO (CP)—Police ar-| a few clouds; visibility 10 milea;’_. tt — ft Sunes onan ee 4 we oct ta naphong $15,000 damage; q ical centres ran out of vaccine. | rested Mrs. Annie Vaughan, 32, | colder. ties e wind were received | ; In Bradford, centre of the out-| of Toronto Tuesday as they coa- * : pnt. , , - in Charlottetown. However in trast with the situat a@ year | DISRUPT SHIPPING : or caused by infected Pakis-| tinued their investigation into an| High tide today at Charlotté Summerside the story was a | 98° The. gale played havoc with! ;,,is who arrived here recently, | insurance swindle~they- said in- | town at 8.56 a.m. and 8.03 p.m. little different. - * | shipping. Nine ships of the mae than 10,000 people already | volves at least $250,000 and per-| At Rustico at 3.57 a.m. and 32% ' U2 PILOT HANGS OVER SWAMP, “Gale force’ winds caused two 1OQ MPH poned. sailing tor exercises ott | Save, beet Vaccinated! — shout |hape as mach ax ‘500/00. | minutes later than Charletig power interruptions in $u m-| Bermuda one-third of the population. Earlier, police said they ar-|™inutes later than Charlotte ' he , : town, Sun: rises today at 7.20 Here's the desolate swamp | Jan. 30, Stratton hung in a | of Stratton’s parachute and | merside yesterday. The first| (Continued from ‘page 1) But the clinics in the York | rested five men within the last | O™™ y The. storm pounded the ity were among those sets at 5.01. eae / which U.S. Air Force | tree over the sunke-infested | the tree from which he hung. joccurred around 4.30 when aparently escaping the brunt of | grounded Lebanese freighter - Sa te. cece aati a 2 Bs — the —* cad = a bits Charles P. Stratton and | swamp for 10 hours. At the | The picture was taken from (primary line near the Summer-|the storm which hopped around | Suerte, delaying salvage opera- Seatade of Gu es sr poo oerede ee ony es ee siciaiate cates Be high-flying U2 plane | extreme upper left the ar- | @ rescue helicopter. side electric light plant was |the district for about 12 hours. | tions at ‘Three Fathom. Harbor, | cine supplies there. More was ee LS ae ie ee ae p@pasbed during the night of | row points to the remnants (AP Wirephote). | broken by the high winds, re- |. Wind-recording instruments a@t/ 15 miles east of here.. - erepencies , pour icham- ments. . + |med to Medina in 622 AD. ~ BENEFIT SKATE sulting in a power failure {m | Saint John, N.B., geared to re-| ‘he fishing vessel Felix and expected to arrive by today from . r, ; iF 2 k Of P part of the town for nearly two | cord winds up te 100 miles @M/ wiorence Hickey out of Locke- London. Funeral Is Held For Victim (Week Of Prayer hms. 4 : | diea hour, hit their maximum read-| port N.S., asked for assistance ne ot aoe sy : Around 8 a.m. two broken |!mg and weathermen estimated | ater springing a leak off the nd adh ts ae h ° ake Albe Ends At O’Lea . |lines near Muttart’s service sta- oe as high as 102 miles. 80) south shore. She was taken in eames te teat been couned by Of Asphyxiation In rton ry en F ” | hour. ; - = tién on Water street resulted in L The _weathe _ sted to tow by another fishing ft the disease. There are three} for the— Sherwood_Fire Dept. pas ALBERTON — funer Directors Association services concluded Sunday eve- | west end of own for approxim- | !ater y my tem-| fax were delayed by the winds- ' s , ; James Saas oe said aw Don Campbell a ning with service in the jately ohe-half hour. | Peratures went skidding toward| ‘The salmon River overflowed peapenien. anes : ; the Sh erwood Rink on . trom the| Active pallbearers were Ger |‘st Church with some 500 The neoprene, enclosing the | more seasonal levels. Light snow | its low banks in the Truro dis-| FLURRY OF CRITICISM a ¢ home of his parents, Mr. and | ald, Desmond and Alex Skerry attendance. |new fire hall under construction ;is expected in the area today. trict, flooding several streets| Amidst the rush for vaccina- Ze Gerald Rooney, Alberton, | Joseph and Franklyn Doyle and |, TP service was conducted bf” was torn badly by the winds and | VALLEY HIT % ~_|and dozens of basements. tions there was a flurry of cri- ‘Wednesday, Jan. 17-9:30 - 12:00 p.m the Sacred Heart. Chureh Bernie O'Connor Rev. Ross Howard with Rev. |took a battering~all night. The} Winds reached 85 miles an During the height of the cds | teataee against government reg- : ~Gelemn Requiem High Mass| Flower bearers were Dean Dewis Rector leading the hymn | neoprene was used to retain heat) hour at the Saint John Airport. | tne Eastern Shore communities | ulations covering checks on peo- . . Admission 25c 5 celebrated by Rev. Phelan | Carpenter, Raymond O'Meara caging. A. R. lave Wet Me) | 66 at the Greenwood RCAF base | o¢ sheet Harbor, Sherbrooke, | ple entering the country, part- . : h with Rev, J. N. Gak Lioyd Gaudet, . Grant Noonan, congregation is prayer, from two to four per cent |in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Val- Musquodoboit Harbor and Chez- | cularly from places such as Pak- If weather, is not suitable, skate will be held t je. Toad os deoced aad ev. Thomas |Coct: Arsenault, Laayd Gard, | ere) muse: wae rendered | higter. ‘ley and 64 at the Shearwater | rotcook had no telephone com- | istan where the disease is known | following Wednesday. . MeKenna ss sub-deacon. Rev. | Allan Johnston, Aisa Nichol- |}'ayronce Herrle, Mere ‘Wiltert |n:7te wemployment rate was | Naval Air Base at nearby | munfeations. to be widespread. : son, Leonard McCue, Wendell | pennis and Mrs. Blair Bernard higher than the national aver- | Dartmouth, ; . } *\age of 6.4 per cent in the At-| Trees and communication | - ve , ae 7 - —.. ote” David ee aoe Lig Elizabeth Ellis was organ- ‘antic provinces, Quebec and on | poles were toppled along Nova| — ; ; Sey M, i ey, Rev, ro on i. — Blair Wilkie, -Archie | aie, ¥ n ih ie | the Pacific coast. - ' Seotia’s Eastern Shore, cutting | . . ; arence|MacLeod,. Gary Rochford, | scripture lesson and also deliv- | : Pitre, Rev. Emmanuel Rich- | Billie McHugh, Hilton Barbour, | ered the message taking for his |* 4% % WP Myigke pw we * ‘ ,. Rev. Claude Shea, Rev Wayne Bel Bothy Corcoran, |theme Dhrienes conviaton und oe ; ¢ * * a4 am Cain, Wallace Skerry, | God’s love. TODAY ONLY _ Shows 3:30-7-9 C7 ee a. j ' : : a tin “eriec ous ending. i ' | a Perfection Evaporated Milk makes good cooking sense every . step of the recipe. Easy to keep right at hand, unrefrigerated ~ - until opened. Even then, its golden-Imed tin keeps it better,: ~ longer! Simply add equal parts of water to use as regular milk and-you just -naturally-add-extra flavor. Finally—Whip it!..~ | Wee Wiles, Wh [Rede tere _—e Group Elects ; KENSINGTON— The Members of the ¥5t. Funt- | cemetery. ton United Church . Young t ay outh’ Is Theme Of Address 2 toate Pte To Alberton UC Men's Ass'n 2, size Seaies president, Rev. L. M. Murray; »»ALBERTON — An. inspiring meeing” of Alberie | youth “in thle foriaive | ‘There was an atendance of undiluted for fancy topping. Stands, looks, and tastes like Church Men’s Associa- | years,” concluded, 24, and the e af } cat “fon Monday evening "fare church is in the hands | Wiroid: MacDonald, presided. | cream — but, costs so much less! it and seé what delicious - Bo tred an deemesting C0 | eee Mr. Murray gave an interest- | = e ed —_ Rowell, founder of we Bey | source vibe pees ense it makes!.... | - Bist, movement, and” Adak | reading hy the president, J. R. | Christion family S Se nakes ee Hider, Whereas Baden-Powell | Bonyman, and. prayer by an T ' 5 eaw, great potential for good in R. Leard. ; S. . . neem eerie ; ; ete 7 toe” tity | the folleying aakens welt Chreies family life, board ADTH sHows oer task youth ae appointed: Prayer and -enter.|of Christian education of the STARTING THUR.-— 3:30 -7-9 : them to carry out his evil de | tainment, Henry Wallace, Ar | United Church of Canada, Tor- signs. thur — ov onto, was in charge. * ; hungry ren; visitation,.G. R. Refreshments were served d rie TTT confused and perplexed in our | membership, Horace Gamble | . rapidly changing world order, | #4 Kenneth Quigley; press; Fleming reserved detailed‘ com- be said, and it must be the| Rev. James H. Macintosh; | ment until he studies the agree- concern of adult Christians to | ‘wach, Perley Hardy, and re- | ment in detail, but he said Canm- @ive them the kind of leader. | ception,’ Elmer Wallace. ada may benefit indirectly, Re eee Tees a ae ious tet Sead ton Nos 'U.S. AND ‘ Market negotiations, with much temptation, be . qootensh. od tw ter te (Continned. from @ponsibility and our privilege ruary. i HAS com amo = tige: S i ; ; E i Cook in Asked when the 20 - per - cent from bests cuts would be. Hijgea ree. Chill said “they are already being af Fr Hi i f a3