€- ba A total of 12 people were taken to Charlottetown hospit- als as the result of three sepa- rate accidents in the Charlotte- town area on Sunday Early Sunday morning shortly after one a.m. near Cherry Valley eight people were taken to city hospitals when the small Eng- THREE ACCIDENTS-—12 INJURED : lish car seen in the top pic- ture collided with the rear of the 1957 Canadian car, bottom. In the afternoon a three-ton truck from Nova Scotia collid- ed witha car from Ontario at Cornwall and two more were taken to hospital. Last evening about nine o'clock a car went Souris Day Camp Comes To Close Souris Day Camp came to a jor project of Souris Lions Club close Friday when over youngsters were tested for var- jous swimming and _awards. SHES i. Two official presentation cere- monies marked the closing day: one in the morning and another in the afternoon. Both were held coco esif.the, Canadian...ezion...Home:, whe tesoluntecr ladies. under lifesaving “""the leadership of Mrs. Roy Cof- fin provided refreshments. John Mullally; Kings MP, who 400° Pupils from” over “30° districts, along with came to the camp each day _bus. Instructors were Patsy son and Blair Darrach, super- visors; along with Patsy Sin- clair, Isobel MacNutt, Anita Gallant, Loma Burke, Norma volunteer workers, by Jud- "Craig, Alan Picketts, Toi Brad= Slaw “Soin Webt;" Mike-F texard * and Larry Henry = srgicamceear aes iia WEATHER tor, made the presentations. In addition to Mr. Mullally, speakers at the morning pro- gram were William Acorn, MLA, Mayor Ray Leard of Sou- ris and Winston Fudge, presi- dent of Souris Lions Club. Afternoon speakers were Cyril Gallant; chairnvan of the water safety committee, Dr. ° Wolf Marold, representing Souris Lions, and Iphigenie Arsenault, Red Cross commissioner. A large number of the older pupils received Royal Lifesav- ing Society awards. The Camp, Which was under the direction of the Red Cross water safety service, was a-ma- TORONTO. (CP) “Observed temperatures. \ Low. Overnight High Sund Dawson . 4 ay 67 Victoria: *.ccccccsas. 56.. 68 Edmonton .....0... 50 7 Regina osececcsees 45 84 Winnipeg? 58. Fis ivies 51 82 Toronto + .<6s+ss05 . 67 94 Ottawa; 2.ssecsicers = 60 90 Montreal: cc iesetsss: 4). . + 88 Quebec 65 86 Fredericton 60 95 Saint John . 51 60 Moncton 61 87 THantan..- 3. mm 70 Charlottetown ...., 61 80 54 84 -Sydney— ss Yarmouth wick and .N¢ Wits front te sea “temoeratures ~penerafiy inthe 4 | and cooler. Westerly winds “town. Sun rises foday at 6.25 - Island News Page Eastern and Central Districts The Guarilian, Charléttefown, Mon:, Aug-“16, 1965.5 {Jones of the depart.' ment of health said ‘‘most of the resentment” in the riot area “IS against. the city police, per- sonMied in the police chief, who treat these citizens as though they were of no consequence.” WAYNE AND Still No Co By CHRISTOPHER GLEDHILL federation ‘Theatre the audience listened to a relaxing entertain- ment Joyce Sullivan and Jack Scott) consisting of a sort of ealndar of a iypical middle-class Canadian family from the first and interspersed with songs aris- ing more or less out of the nar- pleasing unassuming way by Jacg Scott. The family, named Larkin, not to be confused with a very disreputable English family of ithe same name immortalized by H. E. Bates, consists of Grand- father, Grandma, Father (char- tered accountant and father), mother, son and daughter, and an uncle and aunt, not to men- tion the dog and cat. The story is enlivened by touches of sly humor, and has ‘(mutatis mutandis) a strangely Jane Austenish q uality of being completely insulated from the jturmoil of the contemporary world. Miss Sullivan has a voice of a pleasant, slightly-reedy quality, very even. throughout from low B flat to high F. It is not a big voice, and she wisely did not try 2 to force it. There were one or two mannerisms—the pronuncia- tion of certain dipthongs, and certain rhythmic distortions which undermined the stability of songs such as ‘‘Blow the wind southerly’. There was also a tendency at time to close off the | tone toward the end of phrases. | These reservations apart, it | was a sheer pleasure to hear her into the ditch on the Trans- Canada Highway at Churchill $ and_another two were taken to_| hospital. Many of those taken | to hospital were released after | observation, others suffered from minor iacerations~ and none are believed to have sus- tained any serious injuries CONVALESCING “ Keith Taylor is convalesing at pepe te 66 his home in Dundas Centre af- St Onn Ss hsace , 53 77 ter being a patient in the Kings Albany cic cca 5 6S 89 County Memorial Hospital for oven oe g9 , the past month, following his Wana 2.ccciscsy 14 ag. recent car accident, MAM iia. cese oie 85 t Los Angeles ree tk 8y | . RUBBISH FIRE HALIFAX ‘OP) — The wea- Charlottetown Fire Depart- ther office says unseasonably ment answered a cal at 5.30 warm air flowing into the Mari- times from the southwest caused temperatures in New Brunswick to soar into the nineties Sun- day. Fredericton, the warmest at_95,upset_the_previous-_record— Maximum temrnperatures for Aug- ust 15 by one degree. By con- trast, temperatures along the southern coasts of New Bruns- Scotia were held. 60s by chilling rubbish fire on Queen Ejizabeth ond alarm wa; answered arounw 9.30 p.m., when a small grass_fire—in—a—vacant—lot——on John Street-was extinguished. MACKERAL CATCHES A number of Island fishermen y-Tent“mackeral catches off Nortli o the Drier and cooler air will push, of the fish, which are reported into most of the district, today, & be running in great schools, sive ike Wy Sn eiike iva weigh in the vicinity of one and IS yea een NEW RESIDENTS Mr. and Mrs. seer eae mid to high 70s Regional forecasts. = Annapolis Valley, Northern and family of two girls and two Nova_ Scotia, Cape Breton, | boys have recently taken up re- Prince Edward Island: Sunny | Sidence in Charlottetown. Mr. 15 Malone is employed with East- diminishing in the evening to ,ern Securities in Moncton from light:- Low-high at Kentville 60 where he was transfered to and 83, New Glasgow 58 and 77, | Charlottetown. The Malones -are Sydney"58 and 75, Charlottetown Tesiding at 4A Admiral Street. 60 75 and GOLD CUP GIRLS High tide today at Charlotte- The Gol town 2.27 a.m. and 2.14 p.m. At a atten ie ce who will appear in next Fri- Rustico at 9.13 a.m. and 9.48 day's mammoth parade through p.m. Summerside tide” eighteeO’ Charlottetown’s streets and also minutes later than Charlotte- 1 and Saucer classic at Charlotte- town Driving Park will be guests of Rotary at luncheon at noon a.m, and sets at 8.08 pem. All times ADT. = === ra oe ASTRONAUTS a > ¥. _Astronauta Charles Conrad, left, and Gordon Cooper posed 4 ‘ Se © for this closeup after a day of training for -their eight day CLOSEUP ~~. Aug 19. “today The" Sight” attractive young ladies are: Patsy Lap- i, pin, Paula Campbell, Trudy } Callbeck, Lorna Vessey, Helen , MacCallum, Jane Hogan, Carol ‘ Foster_and Rosemary Brown. iz — On Sunday evening at the Con-|‘‘I know where I’m goin’ day of spring to New. Year's Eve} rative, which was read in a very| Driye. No damaze was reported. | A 4 River causeway lately =—="S0ME=GCALL PEACE TALKS” Concert Pleasant But ntroversy lis many old favorites such as " and “She’s like the swallow’, where lher feeling fo rthe vocal line was | sensitive and sure. | The accompanist, anonymous, performed his duties unobtrusive- ly and efficiently. Once again, no program. Please, Mr. Moore, |we would like something, even a | mimeographed sheet. It was once again a pleasant jand bland evening, and without |any disrespect to our charming {and amusing entertainers-I could not help hoping against hope that we might have the opportunity o fhedring Something controver- |sial, somethin bitter, something | harsh, to disturb our minds once {in a while this’ golden summer } ’ CALM | (Continued from page 1) | spokesman said, is ‘‘a conserva- tive estimate.” Entire blocks had been burned to the ground before an 8 p.m. | curfew Saturday was ordered by. California Lieutenant - Governor Glenn: Anderson. It affected a 40 - square - mile area covering about one-tenth of Los Angeles. FIVE-YEAR-OLD -DIES Among new casualties was a five-year-old Negro, boy, killed |by a sniper as he sat on the |front lawn of his home with hts mother and younger brother, seeking relief from the muggy heat. on |. Of the total dead, all were Negro except‘for one Japanese- |American and three whites, in- cluding a deputy sheriff killed with hts own shotgun and a fireman. caught under a falling and flaming wall. Police said of the wounded, a third were shot by police,-a o- by. national guardsmen and a third by unknowns. Governor Edmung G. Brown, \returning“turriedly to California from a vacation in Greece, flew jinto Los Angeles about two | hours after the curfew was }clamped on and announced he had assumed personal direction of the state's efforts to round up the terrorists responsible for Hooting, burning and~ sniping.** He said he wanted to “restore peace, make sure that this does not happen again, find out why |this happened, and to work’ to secure a basic and lasting rule of law in this-city.” He had already been promised full federal co - President Johnson who - said p.m. yesterday to extinguish a “‘rights will not be won through violence". Under most the entire. California Na- tional Guard was diverted to Los Angeles. = | The 14,000-man force includes ; {8,000 men of the 40th Armored Division, and 6,000 of. the 49th Armored Division airlifted from have been landing some excel- | northern....California.points—Sat-———— urday night. As the guard arrived in force, a peace Cofiference was called visor of group stores for New Competitor this year for Sunday by Rev. Milton B. “Perry, pastor of a revival~ten= “president of Atlantic Whole- tre in the heart of the riot cen- Austin Malone tre. He invited community lead- . ers and Negroes vances. It was the first peace confer- ence called since rioters took control of the Negro area. In a Saturday night television interview, police chief- Parker asserted ‘‘the so-called leaders of the Negro community can’t lead at all.’’ None proved ef- fective during the rioting. Parker said ‘‘meddlers’’ en- couraged -the violence. He said Watts has a high criminal ele- with ~ grie- in_ the evening at The Gold Cup ment—but—there—were—no—racial— disturbances there until the Ne- groes ‘‘were preached to by the | politicians _. and their own leaders.” z Repeatedly during and before - the riot the chief has denied as “a vicious canard’’ charges of police brutality. Poe eee sad ay ae. OTE | Tonight and Tuesday IT JUST DIDN that they that they = ROBERT MilChHUM WO Gemini 5 orbital flitht start. at Cape Kennedy. Fla, ing (AP Wirephoto) | ae that they did! FoR THE SEESAW poccewren OF USSOCR ION FTE SEVEN FPTS PRMD TORS Oe UTED ARTS TS MELEASS Negro psychiatrist -H-a ro 14 aA CKLEY PF. RD. Show at Dusk 'T FIGURE... would... could... MIRISCH PICTURES & ROBERT WISE PRESENT SHIRLEY «> MECLAINE e-2 operation by Brown's direction al- ‘Continued from page 1!) dates back to the 18th century. Details of the ceremony, to which the general public is in- vited, will be announced in fuller detail later, it was reported. Since their return to Charlotte- town a week ago they have been involved in intensive rehearsals for the stage show which opens Tuesday night at Confederation Centre Theatre: The performance is a benefit for the Junior Ladies’ Aid of Prince Edward Island Hospital é The production will be repeat- ed for a total of seven perform- ances Outstanding and pre-eminent in their profession in this coun- try, Johnny Wayne and Frank Shuster made thousands. of friends last summer when they were here. Similarly this season they have joined in the festivities of Old Home Week in Charlotte- town and will participate in the Gold Cup and Saucer Parade Friday “and at the Exhibition Grounds in the evening. Often asked why they remain in this country despite their in- ternational acclaim, they have replied they like to live in this country and to raise their fami- lies here High Winds Don’t Affect Ferry Runs Despite yesterday's) high vinds, ferry services to the Is- land continued yesterday as usual ‘ : The radio range said last night west winds reached ‘a peak velocity of 48 miles per hour gusts yesterday about 4 p.m Average wind velocity throughout the day was esti- re at around 30 miles per our \ Wood Islands ferry ter- minal official said traffic was not unusually heavy yesterday. The“ two ferries were able to handle vehicles without making extra trips. : a * i spragh APPOINTED _. i siete samc _.- .B.....Donald,.... formerly __ of “Charlottetown, ‘has - recently * been appointed district super- | Brunswick by D.J. Hamm, | salers Limited. Mr. Donald was supervisor of Lucky Dollar ;stores on P.E.J. from their opening in 1958 until 1962. Since 1962 and until his recent appointment, he has been engaged in group organ- ization in various parts of N.S. and N.B. Leigh is mar- ried to the former Olga Harris of Summerside. The couple have three children, Greg, Gayleen and Gary. ing plant to be slaughtered and “herd which reads pet | The Oswald Newson and Son, i “yea bY “fhe Raedale Farm and _, evelopment Of Park ls Centennial Project GEORGETOWN This fied and landscaped as the “ori- town's 1967 Centennial project ginal planners of the town pro- will be the reclaiming and de- bably envisioned it would once velopment) of Kent Square to be make it aypublic square, beauti- Ths decision was unanimous- ee era ly taken at a meeting--in the NOVA SCOTIA town hall’ Friday night attended - by a group of citizens represent- (Continued from page 1) * ganizations, ing all of the town’s major or-, fair-goers is the Women's Insti- Alec Arsenault, president of | tute building where displays of the 1964 centennial committee, home-cooking, handicrafts, flow- was re-appointed as chairman ers and art work have been of the 1967 committee Temple —— ee sredict. MacDonald was appointed secre- e . net tary-treasurer, The only other ed ideal weather for the start of , : Old- Home Week. festivities. The Project considered at the meet- forecast calls for sunny skies, 198 Was the erection of a lib- and west winds of 15 miles per Tary, but this was felt to be pro- hour. hibative from a-financial point Today is expected to be slight- of view not only pretained to ly cooler than yesterday, with construction but also to main- the mercury forecast to climb tenance to a high of 75 MORE MORE MORE HORSES IN SPOTLIGHT The- library is now located tn the post office building and with Horses will hold the spotlight = _ Eronpect of reorke: today at the Coliseum show ring (O“" Daving a new post _otfice at the Exhibition grounds here !" the not too distant “future and wits Standard Brede.. Roadsters the fact that if this is done he and al] draught breeds compet- presen pulling could become ' - e2 the property of the town, the ing in their various sections group felt that the question of The cattle show gets under- way Tuesday with the” steer classes and the inter-breed best- uddered cows being judged at 9 o'clock. The steers are to be sold ‘immediately afterwards. Then the animals go to the _pack- library facilities could then be more adequately delt with. Kent Square is situated in the centre of the town but because of it being a low-lying area it has never been utilized for a public square. Government assistance was more or less ‘promised the town a.year or so ago in the draining and building up of this area. It is now felt that with the expert advice available from the gov- ernment as to tiling and drain- ing and assistance In the pro- curing of clay fill to grade the area that it could be developed into a beautiful square “with walks, seats, swings and other facilities to accomodate the pub- lic. At Friday’s meeting.two com- | judged on the rail. Only 18 out. of the 100 points are awarded the live animals, the other 72 points are -on car- cass judging. Ayrshire and Holstein cattle will -be placed Tuesday and the Ayrshires will hold their sale of | breeding cattle at 8.00 o'clock Tuesday evening. There are ap- proximately 20 animals.for sale, it jis “believed. Hogs will also be judged Tuesday. On Wednesday the Guernseys and Jerseys and the sheep clas- ses will be placed. On Thursday the Dual Pur-|-. pose Shorthorns, the Scotch Shorthorns, the. Herefords and the Angus cattle classes will be placed. TOP ANIMALS ONLY There is a noticeably high quality of cattle in the barns | this year. With individual breed- jers sharply restricted as to |numbers, only the top animals in the herds are being shown. | There are nine and 10 animals representing herds this year |that normally had 20 to 22 ani- mals on show. . f | Dr. Alex George has his |Mount Cameron farm Angus here and those who like \t Gae- \lic can read the top sign on the “Cnec Cham-} |arain”. | | The Clyde River Dixons, and Frank Mutch’s: string from Earnscliffe are other blacks in |the big barns. on ’ THE COUNT FN _ Admission’ 75¢; Chi LADD: onent SANTIAGO FROM WARNER BROS. in WARNERCOLOR trove NOLAN TONIGHT ONLY jmittees were appointed. The first was a fact finding commit- tee and it is to report back a @ meeting to be held Aug. 27, Chairman of this committee ., ts Raymond Soloman and the otijer members are J.A-D. McConnell, Cyrik*x” Davies, *Mayor H&, MacLean and Harry Yorston An entertainment commi''e@ was formed consisting of Mrs, Walter MacLean, Jennie Batgh- ilder, Alex MacPhee, Raymond Lavandier and Alex Arsenault. Their duties will be to devias ways and means of raising mon- ey for the town, as the initiating agency to make the application before Oct. 41 for approval of the project. The amount of one dollar per head of the population must be raised in order to re- ceive the grants of a like amount from both the provin- cial and dominion governments, Blood Quota Reached For First Time GEORGETOWN The Roval Canadian Legion of Cardigan, citizens of this area of Kind’s County, the Georgetown. Lions Club and officials and emplovees of Bathurst Marine Ltd have ex- presed pride in the fact that at Thursday's Blood Donor Clinic in the Cardigan. Legion Hall the quota of 120 donors was reached for the first. time Alban Brothers, chairman of the Cardigan Legion Blood Do- nor Committee, was loud in his praise of all who contributed to the success of the clinic The sponsors were the Car- digan Branch of the Canadian Legion and in Georgetown the Lions Club arranged for the do- nors from the town and industry and for their transportation. Twenty-four employees ‘of Bathurst Marine in Georgetown were given time off to partici- pate in the clinic. Mr. Brothers was particularly pleased -by the co-operation and effort of the * Lion’s Club and Bathurst Marine. Members of the Cardigan Lad. ies Auxiliary served coffee and sandwiches te all those partici+ pating in the clinic RY DRIVE-IN Sturgeon a, — ROSSANA Idren Under 12 Free oo MacKinnon farm from Kinross, and“ theg-Sandersons - > he |from York Point Bre some of * * * * * those showing Herefords. XxX 8. RX *® Kingston and the Cyril Jones hgcdfrom---Pownal---are others” a LE Preparing for the big week. { These “are “Holstein ‘herds. Hor- | ace B. Willis is a new Holstein Ayrshires are rep: esented this | the Fairview Farm herds also by the East River: farm of Al- mon Wood and Sons. Jerseys in the barn include the Kingshurst farm from Roth- esay, N.B. and the Warren Grove Farm from North River. Guernsey herds include the Palmer herd from- Kensington, the Huurry herd from West Roy- alty, the E.A. Smallman cattle from O'Leary and the Roy Younker herd from Kingston. FILMWAYS presente kK * XxX x Return — Engagement kkk kK Kw Mary Poppins | aaa Ac xo a The moria/ Hank Wilhams 4! again, SINGS Again... Sacre! TTT OLNER BUTTONS. / Sy = “rs (BALA 2 ” > as’Hank Willams” d THE trey sf f eM. ‘ OW erg - Ts NORTH RIVER “STARTS TODAY—SHOWS 2.30-7-9 Join us in Istanbul —we’ll cut you in on the theft of #hé century! MELINA MERCOURI PETERUSTINOV MAXIMILIAN SCHELL [COLOR] “== UNITED ARTISTS. & Re AFOUR LEAF PRODUCTION’. PANAVISION® OCONNEL PR Starts ‘ Tonight Drive - in Pe Tee Se tee Rete « . é