Students from tho Univen ally of Montreal ‘were stop- ped Tuesday when they tried STUDENT STOPPED to crowd into headquarters of Canadian National Railways in Montreal during a protest EQETILE WITNESS AT TRIAL I Younger Brother Says Hacke’r’r Hit With Siick' SUMMERSIDE - Donald Joseph Brennan. 18, younger brother of the accused, Earl Joseph Brennan. charged with manslaughter was the main wit- ness in yesterday's proceedings of the trial which commenced Tuesday in Supreme Court, Summerside before Chief Jus- tice Thane A. Campbell. Deputy Attorney-General J.A. McGuigan is conducting the case for the Crown and J. Watson lllacNallght, QC, is counsel for the defence. Mr. MacNaught has also been retained to defend Donald Bren- nan who is charged with crim- inal negligence arising from the same circumstances that result- ed in the death of Roy Hackett. North Cape. Oct. 6. Donald Brennan told the court he went to Vernon McCarthy’s 80 home Friday evening Oct. 5 in company with R Arsen- Hackett. a cousin of the victim. He stated they had some shine with them and started drinking. They got up in the LATE noncss (Also see announcements in columns adjoining Classified Ad- vertising section.) MAY — At the Charlottetown Hospital, Thursday, Dec. 13 Mrs. J. Bernard May, Covehead it her 65th . Resting at the Charlotte. Funeral Home from where the funeral will be held Saturday morning. leaving the funeral home at 8.30 for Re- quiem High Mass at St. Michael's Church, Corran Ban. at 9 o'clock. Interment in St. Eugene‘s cemetery. Covehead. PINEAU — At the Charlotte- town Hospital. Thursday. Dec. 13. 1962, Domise Pineau, New Glasgow Mills. in 74th Year. His remains will be for- warded this afternoon at 8 o‘clock from the Charlottetown _ ncral Home to his late rc- sldence from where funeral will .be held Monday morning, leavmg the house at 8:45 for Requiem High Mass at St. Ann's Church. Hope River. at 0:30 o’clock. Interment in Sgsg Eni’b 5H3.“ morning and started drinking again and later went to Tignish and purchased a case of beer. They went back to McCarthy's and did some more drinking. He testified that Basil Spears and Roy Hackett, along with the accused were talking in the yard when he came out of the house. Hackett told him some- thing about not being treated so witness went back in the house and got a bottle of beer for Hackett. HIT BY STICK Brennan said Hackett pushed him down and he got up. Hackett hit him again in the chest and he fell down with Hackett on top of im. The witness stated he got clear and got up. “He or threw it at him". Brennan said he thought Hac- kett was knocked out so he went in the house and got some water which he threw on Hackett's head. He said he didn't see any- body else there at the time. Brennan said his brother Earl. the accused. was in the house when he went to get the water. and came out with him. Hackett was still breathing and “mumb- led something" the witness stated. ~ A few minutes later the wit- ness went home. he testified. The next morning “Earl came over to my place and told me they found Roy dead over at McCarthy's." HOSTILE WITNESS The witness, on motion of Mr. McGuigan. was declared hos- tile after considerable legal ar- gument. The Chief Justice ruled that Brennan had shown an ab- normal reluctance to give evid- ence on points he should normal- Sc Iy have first hand knowledge. This .resulted after Mr. Mc- Guigan had asked the witness if he saw anyone wielding the stick that struck Hackett and Brennan had replied "no". Mr. McGuigan told the court this statement was in contra- tlon to the statement given to the police Oct. 10. On cross-examination by Mr. McGuigan. Brennan persisted s as he never saw an wield the stick that hit Hackett. He also told the court Hackett E: n 5' ISLAND NEWS PAGE Summerside And Prince County The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri. Dec. 14, 1962. 3 Tho province's first real tastei tor vehicle accidents, in urban. Thursday. driven by Roland Doucette, ters. Bunbury, at the intersec-i vehicle approximately $200. when approximately $100. Icy Roads Cause, Minor Mishaps of winter brought a rash of mo 3 PYOXImater $150 e so ‘ and rural areas- WedHESday and Ihicle collided with a car driven i g ‘ o [by Adbuiiah Taweel, 233 Queen‘ ' An accident involvmg vehicles Street. Parkdale. 811d LOUIS Elmer Pe“Iresulting in vehicles receivmg l-. tion of Hall] Road and the Hills-boned by city police. borough Causeway occurred yes- 1 terda'y momiflg- Damage ‘0 theiaccidents involving little or no Doucetlae vehide W85 aDDI‘OXi-1damage occurred as a result of mater $100. 811d to the Peters; Wednesday‘s snowfall. Most of Dama o a vehicle driven cles sliding into ditches. by Lloyd E. Wellner, 35 Ambrose Two or three minor accidents Street, was sustained Wednesday involving more than one vehicle ' a second vehicle rolled ioccurred in rural areas, police into it. Estimated damage wasisaid. ' l l Damage to the extent of ap-‘ was sustained j I by a vehicle driven by Charles‘. n, Winsloe, when the ve- 1 % Three other minor accidents, 2 only slight damage, were re-‘ "innumerable" I RCMP said these came as a result of vehi- None caused extenswe' damage, however. against Donald resident. (CP Wirephoto) demonstration Gordon, CNR had called him “a little bas- ' tand" during their fight. Later Mr. McGuigan asked the witness “Did you leave Roy Hackett unconscious on th e ground?" and Brennan refused to answer on the ground his answer might tend to incrimin- te him. Earlier in the day Cpl. Calvin Bungay and Cnst. Victor Came- ron of the Summerside and Al- berton detachments respective- ly gave evidence regarding their investigation of the case. Trial was adjourned until 10.30 this morning. D Tractor Fire Extinguished SUMMERSIDE — Summerside firemen responded to a fourth call in a little over 48 hours yesterday around 8 am. A tractor used in the potato warehouse sheds on Marine wharf had backfired and flood- ed resulting in the extra gaso- line being ignited. No damage was caused to the sheds. The flames were quickly extinguish- Eighteen applicants have been osen rain for the auxili- ‘ary police force, Inspector A. S. McNeil, RCMP, said yesterday. It has been decided to train 18 for the 15 required, to pro- vide for dropouts or transfers. Standard training procedures have been approved. Inspector McNeil estimat- ed that it would take at least four months to complete train- Auxiliary Force To Consist Of 18 V wANTWs'IHosTEluETwotliK tional secretary of the Canadi- lan Youth Hostel Association. Hostels provide low-cost ac- commodation for youngsters J .« :. . if. i ing, all of which‘ will be carried out on the Island. Training will begin after the beginning of the New Year. This auxiliary police force is designed for emergency use and various duties during cen- tennial year, such as traffic con. rol. More information on the force including names of the trainees will be released later. Canadavwide system of youth hostels is the objective of Charles A. Harris. 52, of Toronto, newly-appointed na- visiting scenic and historic} parts of the country. (CP Photo) NewYork Is NoiThe Same S’side Coin Club Elects SUMMERSIDE — Aubrey Doyle was elected president of the Summerside Coin Club Wednesday evening at the an- nual meeting held in the George R. Pearkes VC Branch of th a Royal Canadian Legion. Elect- ed secretary was Clair See]. Re-appointed to the executive Trinity Men’s _ Club Elects Slate In S’side SUMMERSIDE Edison Watts was elected president of, Trinity United munch Men's the an- nual meeting Wednesday night. Cal-mam Carlo is the new vice- ptesident. while Maynard Thompson was reelected sec- rotary-treasurer. were Wallace Moase, treasurer; George Seel. auctioneer; Brian Thorns. RCAF station, public relations director. Wendell Rogers, retiring sec- retary, read the minutes of the last meeting. A report on the financial status of the club was given by Mr. Moase Following the business meet- ing a discussion was held to formulate plans for the n e w year. The club plans to obtain some interesting films on coin collecting to show during future meetings. It is anticipated that many more will join the club at the next meeting to be held Jan. 9, 1963 at the legion home. Other committee chairmen named were: program, Gordon Yeo; membership and attend-‘ once. Ernest Mmth: sick visitilg, Hugh Smith; ways and means, Roy Amsworithy. Retiring president Ernest devo- he given by chairman. Phillips. Guest speaker was Jack Paynter, vice~pnndpal~ of the 0" Market For Fruit Seen On Prairies BRISBANE (Reuters) — The Australian Apple and Pear Mlair- keting Board will open export markets next year in Canada a for Australian apples, it was an- nounced Thursday. R. W. Ander- son, Queensland representative the said a . 5 indicated a good potential mar- ket in Western Canada. Vance Bridges and thanked by Dr. L. M. Callback. Other guests were Nonman Hardy, Barry MacGregor. Ron- ald Ramsay_ Gerald Hopkirk, aliolwbomaineleadmofthe boys Signs-C and firm groups. DEEP FREEZE A portable freezing chamber developed by the Central Exper- imental Farm. Ottawa, tests young fru s for winter hardiness. Cold Wave Hits Tropical Cuba HAVANA (AP)—.A cold wave has hit tropical Cuba. In Ha~ vana, Cubans donned wooilens as daytime temperatures failed to go over 60 degrees. The Ha- vana weather bureau predicted temperatures as low and golds as high as so miles an church cemetery. MURCHISON —— At New City. New York, Saturday. Dec. a. 1952. Rev. A.J.C. Min-chiscn. ,' .A A weir-us. feih‘mfltmm” ' .. Britishtrncpsccverzrueni robdswbcwalk with hands sn‘noadsdtsr surrendering I ‘ri. .2. V . BRUNEI REBELS followingbrltlahrccnptureof mmmwmmum mm‘mhfl ROUNDED - UP hostages by tho rebels for fourdsysinthotown's Jail. (AP) — A three - stage rocket blasted off Thursday night in an effort to put into orbit a relay satellite which could link three continents in communications experiments. he sleek, 87-foot Thor-Delta rocket roared skyward at 6:30 p.m., its flaming exhause bril- liantly illuminating the night sky. It was to hurl the intricate 712-potlnd package into an egg - shaped path ranging from 800 to 4,500 miles above the earth. The launching appeared nor- 5 .— CI. Relay ’Sa’relliie Placed In Orbit CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Press International. Reuters As Millions Miss Papers By JAMES DEVLIN lpaper advertisements to browse NEW YORK (AP) — Take.through in search of bargains away 5.500.000 newspapers a or to compare prices as she it off until an unspecified time day and life just. isn't the same plans her Christmas shopping. in January “in hopes the news. for New Yorkers. youngsters and adults paper strike will have ended by It isn’t only a matter of iry- miss television program listings then " ing to keep up with local na- and the comics. tional and World news during The Chi"! million! of com- the newspaper shutdown be. muters, without their usual pa- cause of t c printers’ strike, Del‘s. scrounge {or my reading which started last Saturday. material availabl . It‘s the absence of other things What's at tho movie! tonight? ken for granted that leaves an Who knows? unreal void. Was the new show on Broad- The housewife has no news- way l hit 0" I “11357 0' W” there a new show? Students SI'Op CNR Locomotive Hidden stranger, .- drama scheduled to open Dec. 29. put Broadway fears that some shows on the thin edge may fold for lack of publicity and adver- tising if the strike is prolonged. Stockholders h whether they are winning or 10!- ing without their familiar finan- and Agencc France-presse to be exchanged between Andover and the British and French sta- ns. The experiment schedule also showed teletype transmission between Nutley and Rio de Jan- eiro on the fourth day and a swap of television programs be- tween the United States and Eu- o rope on the sixth day, Dec. 19. Relay was designed for a use- ful lifetime of about a year. Te - star lost its effectiveness last month after four months of re- :7. O tions have greatly expanded their news and advertising cov- erage, even to reading comics and presenting society items in mm c Stock brokerage houses issue mlmeographed shoots listing mal but definite confirmation of orbit cannot be made until the vehicle has completed one cir- cle cf the earth. expected to take about three hours. Shortly after 7 p.m.. officials confirmed the rocket had per- formed as planned. } Relay is one of many types of communication satellites being tested by the United States to determine which is most feasi- ble for a world-wide radio, tele- vision, teletype and telephone stem. 5 Designed for operation at low orbit, Relay is much like Tel- star, the highly successful sa- tellite which orbited last sum- mer and served as an effective transmitter of radio, television and telephone conversations be- tween the United States and Eu- rope. Telstar was closed down operationally last month. Th stations employed suc- cessfully with Telstar — - dOVer. Me.. Goonhilly Downs, England, and Pleumeur - Bou- dou. France—were geared to conduct similar eperimenet: SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)—— . . markable performance. 1' some 200 University of Shebipl‘lces of XhaJor stocks. Some l- bmoke s “d en” Thursday keep an office open evenings to stopped a CNR diesel locomocl tive in the CNR yards here but I the engineer backed up the lo-l comotive and the students dis- persed when he drove it for- ward again. Pierre Deschesne, presidentI of the students' association. said I the demonstration was not or-ltheir display windows. ganlsed by the association. 1 50m! HGIEhhorhood and col- The students carried placards lege newspapers have gone “his protesting statements made by time" With expanded coverage CNR President Donald Gordon and boosted circulations and to the Commons railway com- OUt-Of-Clty newspapers are sell- mittec Nov. 20-23. 108 W811- Gordon said there was lm no French-speaking Canadians among the railroads top 28 of- of Picture Your Lady with handle calls for information. tors owners mainly have turned to radio and television, but that isn‘t all. Some post ads on subway car windows under a rental plan offered by the city. Some list wares and prices on old - fashioned blackboards in Canadians Aid Satellite Job MONTREAL (CP) —— A 150- man team of Canadian engi- neers and technicians built vital components of the latest oom- munications satellite launched Thursday night by the United States at Cape Canaveral. John D. Houlding, president of RCA Victor Company Limited of Canada. said ThurSdfly night Canadian designed and manu- “all Canadians can take pe - factured Black Brant rockets 10 501181 Pride In the launChlnS" 0‘ inches in diameter and 18 feet Relay I. the latest space com- long munications satellite. One was launched at 10.20 Relay is much like Telstar. a.m. and the other at 2:45 pm. which orbited last summer and Wallops is on the Virginia coast served as an effective transmit— 120 mile, southeast of washing- ter of radio, television and tele- pho n e conversations between the United States and Europe. RCA's Montreal laboratories was entrusted with the design and development of the satel- lite's vital electronic heart—the tiny receiver - transmitter that makes the satellite functional. WASHINGTON (AP) —— Can- ada and the United States jointly launched two Canadian sounding rockets Thursday from Wallops Island, Va., to al- titudes of 61 miles. Each flight carried a 100- pound payload, including 1 cos- mic ray sensor, a roll-rate mag- netometer, and a new type of radio telemetry transmitter with related antenna. The payload vehicles were ficials only because of a lack qualified applicants, not be- cause of discrimination. Later he issued a statement saying French - Canadians occupied many executive positions in the CNR, amounting to 18 per cent of the total. Thursday’s demonstration was ii. The US. National Aeronau- tics and Space Administration said the launchings were part of a series to test the flight per- formance of the Black Bram, orderly. The students set fire to and to obtain engineering data 3",“me 0' Mr- Gordon and: on the effectiveness of the in- the“ placard-9' Fur Jacket For with Relay. Stations were add at Nutley, N.J., and near Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for experi- ments between the United States and South America. Other stations are planned. The first Relay epcriments —wideband radio frequency and television test patterns — were scheduled for the fifth orbit, about 13% hours after launch- . The second - day schedule ca led for news stories written by the Associated Press, United If” Wimphoto‘ (AP via radio from Singapore) WESTMORELAND SCHOOL Report for the month of Nov- strumentation NASA said both rockets per- Chrisfmus! 7 " 0 ;'St' ' and in 8115’ jacket from a: formed in excellent fashion and ore your lady Will look the tests were successful. STOCKHOLM (AFN—Sweden iabsollite loveliest! W a to it her Thursday night squashed Can- geyes sparkle when she tries it on ada's representation team, Sas- I. . . and remember, too. at Island katoon Quakers 7-0 in the first ‘Furriers we welcome your busi- ember: Gradc .f 1. David MacKen- Life Appeal )5 Reiected MONTREAL ICP) -— Five e. Grade 7; 1. Sharon Leard. 2. Robert Newson. 3. Richard Snow. Grade 6: 1. Chester Fall. 2. . part of a two—night hockey meet *ness . . . your first monthly payl- Donald heard, 8. Donald Wll— judge. of the Quebec Court ollhere‘. S ‘h lment can serve as your down "grade 5. 1 Mary MacKemi. Appeal unanimously tu r n e d . 9 WM 5 world Cham' ‘payme'nt- Why “M come in W down an appeal Thursday '62 he! 1' Margaret bard' against the conviction and 20- Grade 4: 1. Douglas Moore and Lowell Oakes (equal), 2. Nancy Oakes. 8. Eric Wilslon. 3: l. Joeanna Oakes Grade 2: 1. Pamela Wilson, 2. Gene MacKenzie. Grade 1: 1. Darlene Gamble, 2. Leslie Oakes. Highest average senior grad- of g- 17! Grafton St. Ch'town i Dial 2-1273 2);.1351u cs: Mary Mackenzie. Highest average junior grade as: Pamela Wilson. Catherine G. Corbett, teacher. I Mr. Justice G. R. W. Oweni 1said the conviction could have Icarried a sentence of life im- prisonment. The court ruled it did not feel Facchino‘s illness‘ GREAT MUSEUM New York‘s Metroplitan Mu- seum of Art has a collection of. 4.000 m u s i c al instruments—— some prehistoric — among its ‘year‘s world championships Ifinest Christmas! he will die of cancer in a few elight 0f some 15-000 Cheer i planning the murder of his pre Ifigfgs I“ the “mt Perlnd. “ere job last June Mo Iincurable cancer '8" “Enable I“ the Various ' .PIOM. training hord for next 1‘ , . m a k 9 Christmas year sentence of Nicholas Fac- Ialelr t'h wereh fimpletetlyh superigr, V chino. 26, whose lawyer claims Id mug 9 ma c ' to SM, m, ilSLAND FURRIERS Facchino was convicted swat!" “er In tin-"I LuL . . . , in check in the second and ititllffia histories: = more in . . . PLENTY TO READ I I Medical reports filed in the ; lease said he was suffering from ‘- 9 than “mm” -. and wouldi . . ,i. _. [probably have less than a year Hype“ 0f “bran” in Canada‘ ‘ lto Ii . We wish to announce that we have added a complete service for domestic and com- constituted grounds for modify-i ing the sentence. I many treasures. » menial refrigerators in addition to auto- MAURI‘CE MILL LTD. K YOUR i GIFT STORE FOR MEN 1 Maurice Mill Ltd. Summerside \ )l \ \ as well as wringer typo washers. We have the latest . . and best test equipment etc.. to assure . . you of speeds. economical service. antic washers and dryers Water St. l