FREDRICK BEER LIEUT. GOV. tContinued from page I i. and Mrs. Marshall Peters of Midgell graduated in Home Economics. William Angus Smith. son of Mrs. and the late Mr. Smith graduated in Sc Arnold Taylor. S. ience. iottetown graduated in Science Donald Robert York of Alber- tnn graduated in Arts. He in- tends to take Arts-Pre-Theolo- 'n Patricia Louise. daughter of, 3 Roy Young of Earnsc I uated i l i i Mrs Allan Cecil Taylor of Char-Hone} RUSSELL BOYLE Ross Dewitt. son of Rev. and, Mrs. Quincy R. Stairs of Char- ‘ lottetown, graduated in Engl-l eeri g. Gordon, son of Mr. and r iiffe. grad- = in Engineering. Gordonl plans to enter Dalhousie in the! to bring together the prime min-l later and some of Canada‘s kcy‘ personalities in the economic and cultural life of the country “There will be no agenda. no points to be made," the official; said. Guests will come to Ottawa at their own expense. The cost ofl the dinners will come out of the; prime minister's entertainment: allowance. ‘ thoriaed at the last plenary' meeting in Novem er. The June meeting, to be. at. tended by the 10 provincial re.-, sources ministers and the fed era ' ' ' consider a. proposal to launch studies on‘ pollution and on conflicts in me" use of resources. it will BISUl look into the possibility of another conference on Canada's renewable resources. By BRENDA LARGE JUDITH GARNIIUM l l GORDON BRANDER .‘ the recent selling of shares thatl prompte the government to; amend the original act. He said' i will ensure that Newfound-. land gets an eight-per-cent cut. of profits regardless of who.l owns the. shares in the future! fail to obtain a degree in Elec- tirical Engineering. Alfred Robert. so Lloyd Wakelin of ‘ I wn. graduated in Engi- neering George Thomas Yeamans of Newcastle Bridge graduated in . Engineering ‘ gy at Kings College in Haiifax.1-———~——————————————_, John Pierre Vallalncourt of“ Summerside graduated in .Arts. Next year he plans to attend Dalhousie University in ax. Horace Barrie. son of Mr. and . H. B. Willis of Kingston, graduated in Arts. James Brian, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wonnacott. of Char- lottetown. graduated in Science. Brian hopes to study medicine at Dalhousie University. Ralph Leslie. son of Mr. and Mrs. Elton C. Woodside of Clin- ton. graduated in Science. rederlck Wallace. son oier. an cl Mrs. Arnold Beer. Clyde River. graduated in Engineer- lng. Russell John. son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Boyle. New Haven graduated in Engineering. Gordon Leo. son of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Brander of Kensing. ton rzraduated in Engineering. Willllam Barry. son oer. and Mrs. R. B. Brown of Charlotte- town graduated in Engineering Douglas Blair. son of Mr. and Mrs. Clair MacDonald of Char. loftetown graduated in engineer- ing. Blair Grove. son of Mr. and Mrs. Grove MacDonald'of Cove-t per cent head. graduated in Engineering. Blair plans to further his edu- cation at Mount Allison Univer- sity. Herman Douglas. son of Mr. and Mrs.,Robcrt Palmer. of Freeland. graduated in Engl- neering. John Allison. son of Mr and Mrs. John A. R or. graduated in Engineering. Hall- * Nfd. Amends Power Act ST, JOHN‘S. Nfid. tort—An amendment to the Hamilton Falls Power Corporation Act, designed to ensure that New- foundland gets eight per cent of the profits before taxes. has been introduced in the legisla- ture Mr. Smallwood explained that the British Newfoundland Cor- poraton Act provides that the government would get eight per cent of Brinco profi om. Hamilton The amend-‘ ment would give the Newfound-‘ land government eight per cent of both Brinco's and the "lew- foundland Power Corporation‘s‘ profits before taxes. Brinco owns 70 per cent of‘ the Hamilton Falls Corporation, r also revealed l {block was taken over l‘Brincn. 055 of Flat Riv-‘ that ownership of the corpora- .tion has now been split four lways. Brinco has 70 per cent, lthe Newfoundland government . five per cent. Hydro Quebec 15 and Rio Algom. a .‘ B r i n co subsidiary company. 1controls 10 per cent. The five per cent owned by Newfound- land was purchased from Hydro. .Quebec an the Rio Algoml from . Originally Brinco owned all1 the stock but later ‘20 per cent; was sold to Hydro Quebec. { 1 Mr. Smallwood said it was! HOW TO KILL LAWN WEEDS WITH A ‘ WATERINO MN“ All you need is water and KILLEX by GREEN CROSS. Mix. Then use a can or a sprayer. KILLEX eliminates hard-to-kill wccds including Dandelions, Plantains, Chickwocd, 1 ‘ Clover, Bedstraw, Black Modick, Heal-ail, Ground Ivy, Knotwood, Ragweed and Shepherd's Purse. It won‘t harm lawn grasses: 9(- OR USE THIS HANDY UNBREAKABLE WEED SPRAYERI Do it the easy way! Just put in 1 ounce of KILLEX, fill with water and spray. WHATEVER THE WEED. WHAT- EVER THE PEST. WHAT YOU REALLY NEED IS GREEN CROSS! GREEN CROSS has what you need for everything that flies, crawls or bites—grows where it shouldn't—or doesn‘t grow when It should. PRODUCTS ,. m CANADIAN—IT'S ousurv “of TN! SHERMAN! CO. or GINA“ um. l l gro :‘ walks of life in Canada. l ‘ e cosy. l n of Mrdandl Pearson Plans Dinner Series OTTAWA (CPI—‘Prlme Minis-i ter Pearson is starting a series, of informal dinners at his offi-l cial residence for small, selcct' ups of leaders from vartOUsl meetings are planned as off-the-record affairs. with conversation flowing informally, in the glow of after-dinner con~ viviailly. The first dinner is set for Fri- day—when 11 publishers. edi- tors and broadcasters will dine wi s o it. Another gr up fr m the newspaper and broadcasting field is to join the prime minister early in June. The gatherings were scribed by an official in Mr. Pearson's office as an attempt a. 9 held at 2:00 pm. on Royal Canadian Legion @ 0! a an". frosnl"to A meeting of the Bty. Association Sunday, EQRL ELECTR Seal Hunters Hold Meeting MONC’i‘ON ICPI—l)r. A. w.. Needler. Canada's deputy fisheries minister. held what he termed a "listening meeting", here with 30 s e a l hunt- ers from the Atlantic prov-l inces and the Magdalen islands on the topic of seal-killing meth- 'i‘here was no statement is- sued and officials were not available for comment on the discussion which followed recent complaints about alleged cru- elty in the taking of seals. Dr. Needler had said the meeting merely would be to- hear the views of the men in: the industry on the general field; of consrvation of the North At- lantic seal herds. Draft Review Of Agreements To Be Tabled MONTREAL (CPI — A pre- liminary draft of an inventory of resource agreements between the federal and provincial gov- ernments will be submitted to the Canadian Council of sources Ministers at the third p l e n a r y session in Dalvay. P.E.I., June 22%. The inventory represents the - first stage of a review of some 75 existing shared - cost pro- grams being made by a team recruited by the council secre- .-. an E A council spokesman said it had been hoped to present a fun review but the complexity of the task had slowed it own. it is expected the final inventory—— started early this year—will m completed by the end of the The inventory is a first step towards seeing whether any im- i provements can be made in thr existing system of shared cos: resources. The review was an , ATTENTION ALL EX-MEMBERS 8TH CDN. H. AA. BTY will be May 24. .l964 at Home. in Charlottetown. All members are urged to attend as final plans for reunion Mil be decided on at this meeting. Douglas Bros. 8. Jone-s Inc. SAVE 9.95- INTRODUCTORY OFFER POWER MOWER BLE IC Rc- ' OTTAWA tCPI—A proposal l placed before the Canadian Ho:- l pital Association's annual con- v e n t i o n Wednesday suggests Parliament At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS THURSDAY. May 21. 1964 I Set To Expand Prime Minister Pearson said SYDNEY (CP) Eastern the design of a proposed new flag will be revealed in a few Provincial Airways announced Thursday it would inaugurate service from Newfoundland to Q. A! ‘< m Accusations were made Mr. Pearson interfered with mac plans to broadcast a TV doc- Sydney and Halifax starting umentary about him. June 15, . Th? Commons. passed ,3” announcement said the "new" sgpply b'” as a Re“ new service will originate at St Democrat'c Party MP de' ‘ John‘s,. Nfid. Stops will be‘ manded the House take a summer holiday. ‘ Two Conservative senators expressed reservations about a bill adding a judge to the exchequer court. The Commons passed a bill extending existing bank char- } ters by one year from .luly l. l l ‘ made at Deer Lake. Nfid.. and Sydney en route to Halifax. ‘ ald Aircraft, will connect with ‘ another EPA service from Hat- 5 ifax through Moncton to Goose Bay. Labrador. Tom amett NDP—Comxc SPORTS MAPLE LEAF Albernil sought to refer the pAms (Opt—Prime Minister 12amiie fishing limit bill to B ‘Georges Pompidou, gomet'hing committee. of a dandy dresser. now sports FRIDAY. May 22 a maple leaf brooch, It was The Commons meets at ll presented to him Tuesday by a.m. EDT to consider externa- Annette Fortier of the Cana- affairs department estimates ,dian government travel bureau- The Senate stands adjourned in Paris. t to 8 pm, Monday. May 25. that government hospital lnsur-i ance plans be amended to per- ; The service. using Dart Her-t Hospitals Hear Plan For Special Charges ! plete hospital service. while on McCracken told the 200 delt- In 0 The Guardian. Charlottetown. Fri... Mny 22, 1964. O to implement this financial pol- icy. If it was not true. "then the sooner we know about it the better so that we may turn out if it was true that it was the efforts to developing the best vernment’s intention to rew h o s p l t a i system we tain the voluntary hospital sy.‘ l under centralized government tem. then steps should be taken control." e other hand we are being enied the funds to do so." Mr. gates. t mit hospitals to charge patients a daily fee of up to $3 for spe— cial services. George McCracken of Tor onto, assistant director of the? association, said the proposal: would provide extra revenucn above that received under the federal provincial insurance 1 plans. for hospitals that wished l l l to provide special services. These services were not de- fined in the proposal, but asso- ciation officials indicated that l they could be whatever new {11- : ‘ cilities the individual hospital v wished to have installed. it, for example. a hospital oard wished to purchase a to bait unit for cancer treatment ift could use funds raised by the ac lCHARGE FEE T0 PATIENTS ‘ The fee would be charged it all patients entering that par- } ticuiar h o s pit al and wouidl amount to anywhere from 50‘. cents to $2 or 53 depending on f the special services the hospital 3 wished to finance. The association plans to ask the federal and provincial gov ernments to either accept inc. l iproposai tor a modification ofl :iti or to restate their ‘ in the hospital field. 3 “Our hospitals are very ra purpose , idly reaching an impossible sit- l v " ‘ f nation. On the one hand we a: being asked to provide a com- ‘ l i SYMBOL-CREST CHOSEN l REGINA tCP) —— A symbol- crest showing a human figure. ,a fear-wheel and farmland fur- rows has been chosen to repre-, .sent Saskatchewan in celebraw tions of the province’s 60th birth- ,day in 1965 and Canada's cen- ltennial in 1961'. The crest. cre- ated by Regina artist . W. Davey. is designed to represent ‘ the three elements which have gone into Saskatchewan's de- ‘velopment—its people, industry and agriculture. day. May 23 my Guernseys and dual Catering to FREE 100 FT. EXTENSION CORD The new Canadian General ectric Power Mower is "Port- oblo" because it's lightweight (only 35 lbs.) and highly monocuveroble. Add to this the all new exclusive folding handle. and you have the most flexible. versatile trons- PO'RTABLE power mower available. Thirty seconds from mowing to slowing. and no tools required. 18" cutting width single rotary blade weighs 35 pounds twin discharge chutes folding. swing-over handle with 3 lock position Sposifionc 3 sturdy dis-cost olinninum housings mechanical slip-clutch protects motor and gum 3 wire grounded electrical system drive unit cushioned In rubber pushme start and stop comfortable. insulated hondo grip oonplotoly assembled—coolly to use "to. and off white 2er warranty Mod I oops. 120 volts. 25-60 cycle. AC 0001 . sitting height odiustment l "i , iitt ‘. l j NOTICE I am offering by private solo Satur- Sale at my form in Mount Royal. RAYNALL A. MocNEILL. l O‘I.eary i BAY VISTA MOTOR INN and RESTAURANT Route 6 ——Bayview. 1'/; miles west of Green Gables Golf Course 0 Weddings 0 Smorgosbord 0 Banquets 0 Portia CAN ACCOMMODATE 10—180 PEOPLE For Reservations and Information: CaIl Frank Wolf. New London 32 .95 With FREE 100 ft. Extension cord vol- uod at 9.00. OUGLAS BROS 8:: l herd of registered purpose Shorthorns. ‘ OUTBOARD NAME CORPORAWON N CANADA LTD.' PETERBOROUGN. CARA. 1964 Lawn-Boy grasscatc ends raking spring, summer and fall In the spring Lawn-Boy's grasscatcher lets up the lawn without tedious raking. In the collects leaves. in the summer, of course, i g grass so efficiently the neighbours wil think spent hours raking. The grasscatcher is no usebecausoitcomesonandOlTiuseconds empties in a shake or two. Even wet grass leaves can't dog it. Lawn-Boy’s Finger-Tlp-Start engine isthe oasis: V to start in the world. Pushing is easy because Lam . Boy is made ftom ultra-light magnesium. And, a: b. easy on the ears, Lawn-Boy is extra quiet. its mums is the largest on any mower. see the1964 Lam-Boy at your dealer‘s soon , it's warranted for two full years—twice as long a: ‘ any other was. LAWN-BOY AGAIN CANADA'S BEST SELLING POWER MOWER HOLMAN’S of P.E.I. Provincial Distributor Snmmerside Charlottetown MURRAY WHITE SALES and SERVICE John St. off Gerald St. Dial 4-7189 ~ DOUGLAS BROS 8. JONES INC. Charlottetown Phone 2-1234 I55 Kent St. FIRESTONE HOME 8. , AUTO Co. Ltd. 2 : . Q 18'! Great George St. Plum 4.35" I.