ASPHALT PLANT NEARS COMPLETION of this week from Wellington village to the wharf at Ab- rams Village. A stock pile of gravel is being built from the ing completion and wil! provide paving surface material for the six miles-of paving that will commence the latter part | Transpotted te Wellington from Greenwood, N.S., the as- phalt plant above, owned by Forbes and Sloat Ltd. is near- Boatbuilding Clark Family Still Active At Mt. Stewart | MOUNT STEWART — For 41) large as 840 tons. Gears, Edwin Clark, a Pfelong; However, following the decline resident of this bustling Queens) in the local industry which set in County village built astraddle the} in the early 1880's, Clark Jr. upper reaches of the Hillsboro} moved to the eastern states where River, has been building boats for| he plied his trade - successfully Island fishermen. until his return to P.EJ.-in 1906 Third generation of the family ee boat-building again as to follow this trade Mr. Clark, 4 Side:ine. : : ae estimates that over 100 of his craft) His son, Edwin, joined him in gtill operate out of the province's | 1918 as has worked at the job sea- main fihing ports scattered from | Sally even since. Covehead . odes The past few years Mr. Clark greatest British statesman since For the past three vears Mr. has built only harhor boats; 36 Sir Winston Churchill @lark’s son. George, has been a. feet long a? nine-foot Bean.| Copeneie po wanes _ ace partner i aly He uses Island rock maple for ity. Maleolm Muggeridce, former ee ee framing and New —Brunswick/editor of Punch. calls him “atti SINCE 1566 spruce for planking. Galvanized /tundinizing.”” Left-winger Michael) The Clarks have been bnat! fastenings are used threughout. | Foot says he is a political Liber truilders in Mount Stewart since| Mt. Clark stated that it took ace. : 1866 when Edwih's grandfather) him about six weeks to get one! Labor Party leader Hugh Gait- took over the operation of one of boat ready for launching. i | skell detects an “‘element of thea- the several plants then in ex-| (A heading apoearing in last tre’ in Macmillan’s approach istence in the area. | Friday's edition of this newspaper! Before he succeeded Sir An- The present Mr. Clark’s father indicated incorrectly that there thony Eden as prime minister §oined his father at the age of 12.! was only one active ship-building Jan. 10, 1957—Macmillan was At that time they were building | firm operating on the Island at the often cailed the enigma of Brit barques and brigantine some as present time). jish politics. : By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON ‘CP'—A touch of mvys- | tery still clings to Maurice Harold Macmillan, Britain’s 42nd prime | minister. Supporters regard him as the! | | 4 His first year of office was un | happy One paper tagged him the WallStreet Party Ren Shih wee Stirs Up Distaste TAGE! CHANGED Gradually, the image changed Maemillan refused to become rat- By BOB THOMAS |Dorothy Lamour, Lana Turner, HOLLYWOOD: ‘AP)—Here’s ajAnn Sheridan and other well- Preview of the movie queen for equipped beauties. the 1940s: The ideal girl of the ‘'50s was She is beautifil, but not in aia reaction to the previous dec-! Sree ae ravishing,. unattainable way. She ade. Most notable were Audrey | Pable one minister, a cultured has the brains to discuss world Hepburn, who had the figure: of @™stocrat whe , eines Press politics or space travel. ja boy, and the cool Philadelphia! TTollope. Dickens bed Aeschylus Her proportions are not out- heiress, Grace Kelly. They were| things got —— is - @ized. nor is her allure a blatant definitely not sexless. but their! t am what I acs,” he ont. ; one. She has an inner reserve of appeal was ladylike, as was that | ave held all the great offices of passion that ‘is apparent to nien'of Deborah Kerry. Eva Marie Ste. 2nd being. prime minister Of all ages, yet is not so obvious Saint and Joanne Woodward. | §3 Dot Soing to change me } @s ta offend women Marilyn Monroe was the anach-| He realized that Suez had been’ Briefly, she's a sex kitten with ronism of the ‘50s, a throwback @ development of enormous im- centrated on strengthening the pound sterling. i He pinned notices in his own handwriting at 10 Downing Street quoting a line from Gilbert and Sullivan: “Quiet, calm delibera- tion untangles every knot.” Thus he became the ‘‘unflap- ; : ‘o. W fer th a da _\brains. {fo the wartime os irl. In- a cen eal Each decade of Hoilywood his- deed, she first found fame as the 1... away the screen, erected by tory has been marked by distinct foxhole sweetheart of the Korean diplomatic and political develcp- types of stars. | War. as i > : | ments, which had- concealed Brit-! The flapper dominated the How can we tell what the agin’s postwar decline in vbnsdog roaring ‘20s. Leaders were Clara 1969s will bring? We can't. of, Bow, the “it” girl, and Joan course. But we can try to fore-- DEEP AFFRONT Crawford of ‘out dancing daugh-/tell the temper‘of the spaceage| ‘Suez was a deep afront to the ters. . times. lself - esteem of many Englich- The sophisiticate followed in. The coming decade shapes up Men.” one of Macmillan’s. aides) the ‘30s, in the disillusioned, de-|as the thinking man’s era. But S#d. “They were shaken to their Pression-ridden world. This was all thinking and no play will roots.” . the hevday of the woman of the make life dull for even the think-| By quietly burying Suez, Mac-| ees ee by Greto Garbo,!ing man. He'll want a girl who. i ‘orma - Shearer, Bette Davis, is as appealing outdoors as in. : Caludette Colbert, Irene Dunne,' -Hollywond is «ready for him Cape Bretoners Rosalind Russell, Katharine Hep-| The new movie girl can probably gee P _? burn and the adaptable Mizs| play a smashing set of tennis Fined At S side Crawford. and swim like an otter. But she) = ' Two Cape, also-looks cute and cuddly in a\. SUMMERSIDE sports car parked on a lonely Breton residents pleaded guilty road. in police court here yesterday Here are some prime can- !9 separate charges of being didates for top stardom: intoxicated in a public: place. Ma- Lee Remick—Btimming with gistrate RS. Hinton, QC., fined appeal . . . compact, blonde, can the two men $20 and cost or 15) act, a graduate of little theatres, days. It was noted by the arrest-! TV, actor's studio . . ; scored,a ine officer, Constable Harry) hit in Anatomy of a Murder’ in MacKay, that the two men were role intended for Lana Turner. (Causing a disturbance in a lo Angie Dickinson — Long-stem- ¢al restatirant on Sunday. med lovely with throaty voice| Another resident of Cape Bre-| . . . legs and voice made good ton, Stanley Williams, forfeited) : ;@ bail of $25 when hé failed to) impression in Rio Bravo... | Millie Perkins—Beauty ¢hosen ®PPear in the court room. The; from thousands to play Anna ®¢cused was scheduled to appear Frank , . . former eover girl with 4 Charge of causing a dis deep, offbeat personality |turbance. Evidence noted that the| | problem: Breaking out of type as *°Cused was also causing a dis martyred Jewish girl. _ {turbance in a local restaurant | | Sandra Dee—at 17, she's the 294 was reported to have left! ideal of the teen-age set _ _ , the establishment .without paying. | honey -haired and cute as a but. . A Summefside resident appear-| aa. jing on a charge of causing a dis- OBVIOUS PINUPS The pinup girl was the demand of the wartime and post-war "49s, which sought fast entertain- ment and stars whose sex appeal Was obvious. Betty Grable adorned every barracks wall, 4nd she ruled the decade with Rita Hayworth, Esther Williams, ISLAND BRIEFS RECEIVES WORD Mrs. H.B. Dutbar, Alma, _re-' ceived word of the death Friday evening of her son-in-law, tHope Len turbance, had the charge drop. Chaker. : Lange — Green - eyed ' ge drop Thomas Landry at his home in deuahies of a musician and ac-| Pd when the complainant failed) Cambridge Mass.,'_ formerly tress . . . op Broad at 12. , ,|' @ppear in: court. from Kentville, N.S., He was 96 years of age and-is survived by his wife, the former Zena Dun- bar of Aima. KILLED IN TEXAS discovered in Bus Stop, scored in Peyton Place. Stella Stevens — Platinum blonde aptiy ‘case as Appassion- > von Climax in Li'l Abner... . ~The sad news has been wigan wi ceived in Summerside of the| tuesday Weld—Another model. death of F.-L Jack B. Oliver,! and amazingly developed at 15 - who was instantly killed ig acar|) | - Age haen’t hindered her accident in Houston, Téxas lak career, as she can play much weck. He leaves his wife, the for- oider roles. mer Albina Bianchard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Felix Blanchard, | ic arnicaean mee Ne y Mooi of Summerside and three chil-| a¢ 14, was discovered acting at - drgn, Jackie, Mary Frances, and | coljege , . . divorced and 18, she| adiey. é is-engaged to heir Lance Revent | | ‘ —_—_——— -\ * Carol Lyniey — sweet - faced girl of 17, she played prégnant ( teen « ager of Blue Denim on ” siege and screen. ‘ iaana Patten — starred as youngster in Disney films . now an attractive 20 and scoring LATE NOTICES . (Also s¢@ «announcements § fn) e Classified Ad. (a Fire Marshall's Four Lives Lost Four lives have beer lost thus far from fires in 1959, and the total property loss for the year 1958 by fires is estimated at just cver one million dollars, Earle F. ‘MacLeod provincial fire marshal, noted in his annual Fire Pre- | vention \Week report. The property loss, $1,027,267.00, ix regarded as extremely high. ISLAND NEWS PACE 2 The Guardian, Charloticiown, Tues, Oct. 6, 1959. Report Says This Year Block fire at Summerside on Feb-; _ Truary 6th and the $250,000.00, Market Building fire in Char- lottetown on April 29, 1958. * There have been no large fires to date in 1959 in Charlottetown. The largest single fire in the Province this year was the dis- astrous fire which destroyed the Se en ee Mystery Touch Clings To Harold MacMillan | last winter-of diplomatic capitals, ifor President Eisenhower and Ni-' and four-fifths of your petroleum similar action tled. He stepped deftly round the@luscive |2. Alphonsus Driscoll, | Vanier and Prime Minister Dief- 222 pounds from a boat operat- Fund meetings in Washington. CAPITOL - summersioe MONDAY — TUESDAY 7:15 — 9:15 MiTcHo:Wihn-EGAN- BRIT Pus ¥ Kr ste AS i ‘om h at Iona Two fires accounted for over half | ®°™@" Catholic Chure | _ The 1960 Rambler Six and | and inside. Large, wile deors | windows, the loss. The $570,000.00 damage on January 6th causing @ prop- Rebel V-8 models are highlight- | provide of coupled — the low caused in the Brace MacKaylerty loss of $60,650.00. | ed by crisp new styling outside | for all six passemgers. The large | passenger visibility. SOCCER GAME | IS DRIED OUT % LONDON (Reuters) — Soc- + cer was “dried out’ — not rained out — at famed Eton College Monday. Officials of the boys’ boarding schoo! near London decided to- call off most games hecause the current drought had made the playing fields sé hard that about 35 students have suffered injuries in the last two weeks. Relations With Yanks. Never Better Says PM r DETROIT ‘CP)—Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker told the Econo- -|mie Club of Detroit Monday com: mercial relations between Can- ada and the United States “have, Pointing out that Canada still, never been better.” ; welcomes further American in- “Our countries have differ-| Vestment which he said has been ences from time to time,” the responsible for Canada’s “strik-| prime minister said, “but we img and existant economic ex constantly strive to settle them.”’|Pansion,” the prime minister) Two sources of current resent- Stressed Canadians’ concern in ment and concern by Canadians the field stems from the extent are the export by the U.S. of the of control over Canada’s eco-| nomy exercised by the invest- dustry were owned or controlled outside your country.” INVESTMENT CONCERN pit at Freeland, and a three ear railway siding has been contructed beside the newly located asphalt mixing plant. Ship Unloads Fertilizer Junior Farmers To Hold Banquet NEW GLASGOW — The annue! banquet of the New Glasgow and District Junior Farmers Associa- ing at 8 o'clock, at Shining Waters Lode, Cavendish. Tickets are available from Mrs. Robert Rackham, ant Mrs. Wil- liam Andrew. ‘ Invited to attend as guests are Premier and Walter R. Shaw. special Mrs. Russians Seen Even In Missiles - WASHINGTON (AP)—Dr. Her- bert York, the defence depart- ment’s leading scientist, said majority of its wheat under ‘‘non- commercial concessional terms,’’; Ment. and the practice by some Amer-| Contrasting the development of! The Norwegian freighter ‘‘Av- ican parent firms of restraining the two neighbors, he poigted out ance’ docked at Summerside at) Canadian branches from compet-'that European investment in de- noon on Saturday where a cargo ing for export markets, Mr. Dief- veloping the United Slates ‘‘was of 6.000 tons of super phosphate enbaker = said chiefly in the form 6f portfolio fertilizer is being unloaded for | He was careful to\point- out, bonds that were duly paid off. the Canada Packers fertilizer however, that Canadian concern Actual ownership of the enter- plant. : in: these fields “is not anti-Amer-| prise was usually not in foreign); The cargo !s expected to be un-' icanism.”’ As an illustration the hands, and still less was the en- loaded within nine days, and be-!| prime minister asked his audi- terprise’s export policy affected cause of the Longshoreman’s | ence to imagine the positions of by the capital contribution.” strike along the American At-! the two countries reversed. | The prime minister noted the Juntic seaboard. the cargo. and | “You might then reflect what lifting of import quctas on Can*-. next. destination of the ship is |your reaction would be if about dian oil into the U.S. earlier this stili in doubt. broke the ice) half your manufacturing industry year, and expressed hope that —————————————_ will be taken ‘industry, and. about two-thirds of against import restrictions on Alberton Couple hero Sir your mining’ and smelting in-/ Canadian lead and zine Pk SP A | Tneintasstneeienenbteeesclecdnccnaseomcncticienerereieaaoad : Training For Wayward Girls illan allowed the wound to heal Now Maecmillan’s future hangs on votes in Thursday's election, and his record in foreign affairs is a trump card. He says his tour m j j including Moscow, . kita Khrushchev Macmillan, like his Winston. is a late-bleom! minister. Born 65 ~ See Odd Object ago into a years wealthy Scots publishing family. A strange light. travelling at he followed a conventeenal upper- terrific speed, was seen in the class route—Eton, Balliol Colege. sky by two Alberton residents.| Saturday afternoon. The sighting and Mrs. Is Supplied By Salvation Army Oxford and the Grenadier Guards Wounded in the First Word |Siophest Murphy. a one ae Stephen Murphy \ By BERNARD GAVZER War, he went to Canada in 1919) ymany staff -members as girls. tacit as aide-de-camp te the goyernor-- VALLEY STREAM, N.Y. ‘AP)| “Eight of the staff, live -in,”| ceeding toward Tignish when general. -In' Ottawa, he_mat and Dolly. is a 15-year-old blue-eyed says the major, ‘but altogether;they sighted the light as they married the governor - general's: blonde with a body bursting into we have 20, including a profes. WeTe approaching Montros= daughter, Lady Dorothy Caven- womanly curves. For her fa- sional case worker, a psycholo-| bridge. ; dish vors, New York tren-age gangs gist, a psychiatrist, a physician,! Roughly circular in shape the Like Churchill, he was often at cracked heads and waged bloody a tegistered nurse and three mystery ebject was clearly in teachers. Now we have 27 girls,| View for several seconds befcre but after our building program is completed we, may have 43." In the ranch - style cottages, where there are sunken living rooms and sun porches as well as smart kitchens, the girls seem to walk differently and talk dif- iferently. For almost all of them, such elegant quarters belong in dreams and motion pictures. Most of ‘the girls have private odds with Tory ruling circles. In battles. the 1930s, he was a rebel on do-- In the bucolic setting of this mestic issues and on Munich. | Long, Island community, she WHAT'S HE LIKE 'hésn't been drunk for more than a a ha ..' tl months. ° Wit e moustache. hooded eves and hait who was seduced at 13, once ; ‘ spent a harrowing night in a ae beck im cilver side. scamy New, York hotel room de- gs. ¢ Drop in to the pillared state fending herself against. three drawing room at Downing Street the de who tried to batter down where he receives visitors . oe you would meet a tall, friendly et “race — ™ ... man; with a surprising simpli- rible fear of dying che ar a city of manner, who discusses in. turn: time back, so far into the ternational, ‘issues frankly and Past that she would have no openly but somehow remains re- handsome stepfather, no beauti- mote. ful mother, no kid brothers or Catch him among a crowd, and Sister — ever have been born he may appear to have a stiff. herself. Her family {s like the ness of manner, a brusqueness | deal” one that could be pic- of reply, a habit of looking away tured on the cover of a magazine when he speaks, a certain un-/—but she can't keep from rup- sureness when an elderly woman) Sing away from It. tries to pin a carnation in his! Dolly. Rebecca and Grace are} lapel. theugh in the end he takes wayward minors. Their diffieult- | been the plunge and kisses her on the ies have never made headines, | their cheek : | but they've caused enough grief | girls h If mystery clings to Harold to come before a judge in chil-)$4ys the major, Macmillan after % years in pol- dren's court. jthink that in itics, a basic shyness may be the Rather than being let loose on good Lord has stepped in and | tniraculously changed things. But’ erly direction. ; REPRESENTS CANADA TORONTO (CP)—Mrs. W. Tucker of Port Credit, Ont., been sclected to represent ada in the secretary - United Nations fellowship pro- gram at UN headquarters during the coming General Assembit ' i i ‘as announced Fri- rooms—bright airy and comfort- a tise aidieh from each of 20 a8 countries will study the current Askéd if she ever had such a UN program in a series of scm- room to herself, Rebecca say$ inars, committee meetings and defensively. “Sure IT. did. 1) interviews . yushed my little sister out of the | —-—~—~ a yo Se ea cairn acles that never happen. We also his c falec : . he arent at toe tion that ‘sometimes gives Maj work with t rc b Eastwood cause for worry. |YEARN TO RETURN has Can- j | | have a better understanding.” Wayside's record is an admir, treated or how terrible Who have been at the home for surroundings were, these periods of between 12 and 18 ave a yearning to return,” | months the average stay—Icss j “It seems they|than five per cent have become ‘ | the interim the} second offenders. j— rcason the streets or being confined in ' TR isc tasicbiicespaitilidicdabanaiaaliiaebssiccidiaks . : ; hey amily i same, | é reformatories where they could [ey sc — ger a 7 SHE i SOURIS THEA E BETHEL SCHOOL learh tougher ways, they have | ‘at nothing is differen been sent here to the Salvation! ‘Does this mean Wayside wants | Army’s Wayside Home School to wean them from the environ- | for Girls. iment from whiéh they came? “We try to give them some- | “No, not at all."’ explains the October 5 - 6 thing they never had,” says Maj.| Major. “Not in the sense that it i Emily Eastwood, a tall, grey-) would further break up an al-| ak up _ “INDISCREET” {haired woman whose voice has a Teady broken family. What - we ‘quality suggesting infinite pa-|tty to do is to get the girls a Cary Grant and Ingrid tience. “We try to give them love |!ock upon their whole problem M onday - Tuesday ‘Honour standing for Bethel | Seheol fer—-month of September: Grade X: 1. Arlene Driscoll, 2. Jame; Lutd ‘absent!. Grade IX: 1. Charles Land, 2 Eileen Lund. Grade ‘VII: Grade VI: 1. Myra~ Driscoll Stephen Driscoll. 3. Adele l. l|afid understanding and guidance | Tealistically, so that when they Re Driscoll. | ciated # 8 & return to their homes they can demas ( de TV: 1. Paul N and di: cipline. : srade TV: 1. Pauline Murnag- | 'do so without counting on mir- — 2. Louise Driscoll, 3. Keith PERSONAL ATTENTION ie ns seven aii iat lial und. il « : wee Grade I: 1. Billy Driscoll, 9 | Such a program implies a pgreat deal of personal attention. Elizabeth Driscoll | ‘ : : ; Si e t 2 Grade 1: 1. Bernard Driscoll. | Ae meds sere Are Aimost 8s Perfect attendance for Sept.: | 1. Phoncie Driscoll, 2. / Adele| Driscoll, 3. Pauline Murnaghan Highest average in senior grad- MAYFAI Smelt Season | #s, Arlene Driacol] 96.2 ; i ° e ° 4] izhes aversge in junor DISAPpOinting | THEATRE, MURRAY RIVER frades, Bernard Driscoll, 99.8) . percent. MONDAY - TUESDAY, OCT. 5 - 6—8:30 P.M. ALBERTON— The amet gea- ‘son, which opened October Ist - is proving most disappointing | TWO-DAY VISIT for Alberton Fishermen. OTTAWA (CP)--Finance. Min.| Yesterday the catch averaged ister Tenence O'Neill of Northern | #bout 50 pounds from 30 nets, Ireland arrives in Ottawa today | ‘he usual number set from a for twotay visit during which ory. he will meet Governor-General| The highest catch to date was Mary T. Koughan, teacher. eis “KATHY-O” In color with Dan Duryea, Jan Sterling, Patty McCormack. Happy {s the word! Excellent rating. ‘ Coming Friday - Saturday. “The Law and Jake Wade.” Robert Taylor ~ Richard Widmark. ones He is en route home | in _ — The price ranges from International Monetary — =m cunts & pound. HEAR Radio Pastor _ PERRY F, ROCKWOOD In Person Reard Weekly in Canada and U.S.A, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9th _ UPTON GOSPEL CHAPEL—7:30 p.m. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10th MONTAGUE BIBLE CHAPEL—38:30 p.m, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11th BEACH POINT GOSPEL CHAPEL— 11 a.m, and 7 p.m. YEO'S THEATRE, MONTAGUE—3 p.m. > MAYFAIR THEATRE, MURRAY RIVER 8:30° p.m. ALL Welcome—Special lavitation to Youth “Youth Needs To Hear The Truth.” —— enti tinnetiitinn some i \ | it rapidly disappeared in a north-) general's” . Same time, trying to get them to; “No matter how poorly they've able one. Of more than 300 girls) Monday the United States still lags behind Russia in rockets for space projects but in the ‘‘life death” field of intercontinzn- } ballistic missiles has climbed Close to its rival. York indicated it might take at least a year for the United States te duplicate Kussia’s present ef- fort of hurling a 600-pound satel- lite toward the moon. son: The most powerful Ameri- +e¢an booster for space rockets has} only about half the thrust power of the booster believed used by Russia. : Elsewhere. Dr. T. Keith Glen- Man, head of the civilian space agency, taid Russia has ‘‘a solid advantage’ over the U.S. in the field of rocket propulsion Winter Meet Seen At Summit NEW YORK ‘AP’ —Henry Ca- bot ‘Lodge, United States ambas- jsador to the United-Nations. says he believes Premier Khrushch- chev’s recent tour of the United | States paved the way for a sum- mit meeting this winter Lodge. who accompanied Khrushchev throughout the US., jsaid Sunday on a television pre t | |Zram that he detected an “‘evol- -| ution” F ne in. the Soviet line “They used to say, for example WELL DRILLING POWER MACHINE ANY SIZE WELL _IF You NEED. WATER WE CAN HELP YOU! COMPLETE PLUMBING, HEATING & ELECTRIC SERVICE INMAN PLUMBING & HEATING LTD. Summerside Phone 2600 tion will be held Wednesday even- | The rea-' | BUNTAIN, BELL & CO. that if war came they wouldn't be hurt but all the democratie countries would be hurt,” Lodge commented. ‘Well, now they don’t say that. Mr. Khrushchev. said only a madman would want a, | Lodge declined comment on a report that Khrushchev had | claimed Russia cracked an Amer- |ican secret code. | | In Washington, the Central In- © | telligence Agehcy confirmed that | ‘Carter had made a repert cn |Khrushchev's comments but | would not go into detail on what ‘he said. PROPOSE MOSCOW SESSION UN:TED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Iceland suggested Monday that the UN General Assembly hold its regular session in Moscow next year. Ambassador Thor | Thors noted that previous assem- | bly s@ssions had been postponed or held outside New York to avoid conflicting with American presi- ' dential elections. — (ADVERTISING | CORRECTION — In the Community Concert a@ which appeared in Monday, Oc- Sth’s Guardian, it was | wrongly stated that the concert | would be on Tuesday, October | 5th. This should have read Tues- | day, October 6th, as the date (pr 'the Community Concert. A TY _ renee nae ee aN REN DIRECT SAILINGS i FROM. HALIFAX TO ST. JOHN’S Nfld. M-S Bedford Il Oct. 10, 19, 27 , Fauvette Oct. 23, 31 2 Sailing from Charlottetown te Goose Bay, Labrador, MV FAUVETTE Vessel will load in Char- lettetown on Oct. 12th, erigin to St. John’s. N connection with C.N.R. your shipments “C.N. Halifax thence N. C. St. John's. Newfoundland Canada ) Steamships Limited Halifax 3-8741 Charlotietown Agents i R. ry ss Dial 5424 THE P. E. I. All ranks of the and winter training. “B” Squadron at 1930 h Dress: Battle dress, web puttces. (RCAC) parade on the following nights for fall RHQ, Headquarters Squadron and “A” Squadron at 1930 hours on Tuesday, October 6, 1959, at the Charlottetown Armouries, 9, at Yeo’s Theatre, Montague. “©” Squadron at 1900 hours on Tuesday, October 6, at the Summerside Armouries. Signed: J, A. Macdonald, Lt. Col, REGIMENT P.E.I. Regiment will yo ours on Friday, October ‘ belts, berets, boots and ag a grown-up actress, a c ommanding Officer.