"JUDGING 4-H JERSEY CLASS: Bruce MacDonald of New. Wiltshire one of the'IsJand’s leading author-- ities among Jersey cattlemen close- S This pair of Herefords owned and MacKinnon of » Brooklyn at last year’s Dundas Ex- = hibition walked. off with the grand ~ shown- by Jack - champion for the male ~ class. Here, Mr. MacKinnon. SEC- ~ Montreal Plant Seeks Shore. More engi- | MONTREAL (CP) — than 120 scientists and neers at the Montreal plant of | RCA. Victor Co. Ltd. are in- ‘volved in a company effort to “elinch a major share of a big new worldwide job — providing | ground stations for _ satellite eommunications. The job is said to be worth at least $200,900,000. The Mont- fea-hased firm.is acting as rep- | fesentative of the entire group of companies owned by the Ra- dio Corp. of America: Ry 1970. “ground stations “ghould be operating in about 50 eountries Linked up with space satel | fites. they will be designed to =a give--high-quality.. world..commu-:; nications. ~ Competition among various | companies for a place in the building of the ground stations | is stiff Firms from six countries are -{n the running. There are seven competing companies. in. the United States, two stwo in Japan and one each in West Germany and France. -RCA Victor is the onty compet- «ing firm located in Canada ~ J. A. Collins, marketing man- “ager for RCA Victor Space Sys- atems, says the company has “been preparing for the ground “station project for six years. RAS EXPERIENCE Mr. Collins says that already | ft has carried out 57 connected with space efforts. These have been done. for ;27 | ' agencies and have involved a * total value of $28,000,000. The 57 space jobs required * hroad research by the RCA per- = eonnel-as—well—as-design-and « supply of satellite systems and “of ground stations. Among previous jobs carried ~out hy the Montreal firm was “the design and supply of Can- ~ada's first satellite station. at Mill Village. N.S. The station is equipped to earry out experiments in inter- «National space communications, and also can handle commercial communications The commercial traffic will the operated by Canadian Over- seas Telecommunication~Corp., , the Crown corporation which handles Canada’s overseas tele- eommunications facilities Mr. Collins said a ground station developed by RCA' Vic- tor has. won a warm reception from the International; Telecom- munications Consoftium, an agency representing about 50 countries Known. as Intelsat for_ short, the agency will own the satel- _ Mtes with which the ground sta- itober.”’ é in Britain, projects tion. and female ward Island. tions will maintain communica- tion. But dynamie salesmanship is ineeded to clinch a sales con- jtract for RCA, said Mr. - Hlins. ; Recently, peasrenuntatives \from 38 countries were flown in ito see the Mill Village station. Then’ RCA technical teams ivisited countries planning an jearly start on their station pro- grams. Start of commercial opera- tions from Mill Village ts slated for -ahout--Oct..1,--a -COTC_ offi- icial said. | It will include telephone and itelegraph. traffic. The earth stations have an- ly examines one of the ‘4-H. Jersey classes at the 1965 Dundas Exhibi- HEREFORD MALE-FEMALE CHAMPIONS ° OND FROM LEFT, receives the championship trophy from Louis Hayden of Cherry Valley, the dean: - of Hereford breeders in Prince Ed- # \classes, jtually every class. of now, and lclasses with money prizes being |classes. jbulls, One is for junior and sen- jotic feelings in Soviet ‘| Peértaps 10,000,000 “youngsters |48 Nothing is” forgotten, ——— oe "throughout ipart in marches to battle sites “Sunday by -Communist party 114 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Sept. 18, 19686. \Events now large i e - ° agricultural fair There several plowing |ior calves, the other is for junior them for horse jand senior yearlings. when the Dundas| The female classes have one were all of drawn. plows, {Plowing Match people, as they |for junior and senior yearling jwere known jevent which now, 26 years later, then, started the jheifers, another for two-year- olds, one for three-year-olds, one has. extended into a fairly large |for 4-vear-olds and another is for agricultural fair, But there was |cows five years old and over. little else in those beginning| There is a class for a group of days, althdugh there were class- |four animals bred and owned by es for plow teams, and to’ be the exhibitor, with. not more eligible the teams had to have |than one bull. Each animal must jbeen used to draw plows in onejhave been shown in one of the tof=thes-competitiveeventss==" P “regular classes, or in” the” inter- But _there—are classes for vir- [breed tidder class livestock | Exhibitors are limited to one this year’s program (entry per class, except that the jindicates that the Hays’ formu- |fair may authorize two entries lla is being applied in the cattle [per Class for a minimum of two inter-breed bes: provided for placings all the| The iplace. more than one entry. ; There’s a first prize of There's a special class for ar- ithere is $20 for riz $18. ant tificially bred calves which calls ithird, $15 for fourth, $12. for |for 2 junior female born after |fifth, $10 for sixth. and all the [December 31, 1965 and not be- ‘way down to four dollars for the fore May 10, 1966. tenth animal in the class. The same prize money is available for both dairy | beef cattle at the fair. There are ing classes will be the one for the Kings County Championship and jon Thursday afternoon. Dates for the big plowing two classes for |match and agricultural fair are September 14 and 15. 20,000 Young People | Parade In Red Rally MOSCOW (AP)—More than jenbal, joined Soviet leaders for 20,000 young people marched |the rally. {through Red Square before top nn Soviet leaders Sunday and took |VIET NAM NOT A TOPIC an. oath to build communism. Reference to Viet Nam was land struggle against imperial- |made only in passing. :‘The So- \ism, viet youths pledged solidarity 4 The colorful rally, displaying |With North Viet Nam. But the iflags, portraits, banners, slog- Stress was on battles past Flow- ans, military bands, balloons ets were placed on Lenin's and parade floats, climaxed a|Tomb o honor war dead. year-longdrive-to— instill—patri- youth. such | the year-long” campaign, Russia -h taken (i$ forgotten. battle sites | There were only a handful or | and monuments, aimed at giv-\banners on Viet Nam: Hands | “ting “them-a better understanding (Of VietNam, Shame ‘othe ag: “tof the~ Soviet - ~earbarism,: ‘struggle in the sressors, —Halt—the— Second World War, which began |Youth of the USSR. are with for the Russians. 2 years ago. Viet _ vam, and Viet Nam will Marchers included Pioneers, the |Win.” organization. for school children |_ The year-long campaign was | from nine to 14, and Komsomol, |clearly an attempt to bridge the the Communist: league of teen-|gap of understanding between agers and young adults. eceuoes. fem the ee The Red Squate finale was revolution 1917 through the viewed from atop Lenin's Tomb Second World War. It implied concern by the So- Chief Leonid Brezhnev, Presi-|viet leadership that young ‘peo- dent Nikolai Ped gorny, top |ple who didn’t live through party theoretician Mikhail Sus-|these difficult-years might lack Dmitry Polyansky and (Mazurov, and others. East -German party Walter Ulbricht, and MongoHan- premier and munist chief, Yumzhagin boss, Outer jing. Let the country . Com- |world listen to the voice of So- Tsed- |viet youth.” ~ itennae..measuring 85. feet in. di- Oe ‘ameter. Construction’ of ‘sucha {station must be completed in 12 months. RCA Victor now {s completing ta_large: microwave system join- ‘ing Egypt’s Aswan Dam with ‘the Egyptian capital of Cairo. Other large systems had heen previously built by the company ‘in Liberia, Turkey, Iran and | Pakistan. ~ | In its “quest for the ground station contracts, RCA _ Victor has submitted tenders for proj- jects in Australia,’ Hong Kong ‘and two other areas. | Postponement Is Regretted FREDERICTON (CP) ~ Pre- mier Louis J. Robichaud said here a one-year _postpone- ment of a start on national ‘medical care insurance is re- igretted bit his New Brunswick government would proceed with its—_planningfora—seund—med- icare service. Mr. Robichaud said ia a Statement it was not possible to offer detailed comment because he did not have the full text of Finance Minister. Sharp's an- ‘nouncement in the Commons Thursday night Mr. Sharp announced post- ponement of medical cara in- surance to July. 1,— 1968 and other cuthacks in federal spend- ing in. an anti’ - inflationary speech. “There will be no slackening of preparations for medicare as far. as we are concerned,”’ the premier said. “We will ensure that this ser- vice will be provided. for New Brunswick citizens on the date when federal ‘participation is available. It should also. be jnoted that it is still the inten- jtion of the federal“ government to give priority attention to medicare. legcislaion . when. Par- liament resumes its work in Oc- We wish to congratulate the 26th annual Prince Edward Island Plowing Match Association and Agricultural Fair on their long ‘record of success- ful matches. The plowing match at Dundas has long been an event eagerly looked forward to by the plowmen of this province. ‘Also wre nffer our best wishes to the manv comnet- itors in these events and the exhibits at the fair. P. E. |. Dairymen’s Association P.E. I. Fluid Milk Association P.E. |. Federation of Agriculture + BEST WISHES Provincial Plowmen udder | jway down to and including 10th- class limits each exhibitor to not ~The feature event of the plow- | Banners carried the slogans ot} lov, first deputy eet ideological and as fervor. | France Announces Deadline For NATO Budget Payments PARIS (Reuters)—France has, announced it will ipaying its share of the costs of |sider the A -working committee of the stop iNATO council later. met to con- implications of the |NATO’s infrastructure—such as|French move, which follows by airfields and naval bases—and two months the. ‘edmpletion of will cease contributions to most |France’s withdrawal NATO military budgets Jan. 1, 1967, representative council NATO Leusse’s sources announcement as bombshell » and France's 14 Atlantic allies will | lhave to shoulder a greater bur- lrrench were going to play the \den in paying costs of NATO aire igame at wall from all from NATO's integrated commands. } France was not represented at NATO |WON’T | “Today's described de ifirms” a alchange’ in NATO," wondered to the very” ‘said it Saat {with ifields, communications — facill- ithink 80." ties, oil pipelines and navy; The eck bases. ' *' INATO pet BEST WISHES to all. ‘PLOWMEN Competing in the France's one source said. ee. The announcement was made jthe meeting of the working com- by Pierre de Leusse, permanent |mittee,: the sources said. ‘PLAY THE GAME’ announcement con- far’: reaching relations whether the Now we~do~ not share of the current Iwo Words That. Go Hand in Hand -. sARMING Orville R. Turner __ Winsloe Compare Genuine. SURGE with the very best imitation so far built! P. Et. Provincial Plowing Match! eestor 908 cont Ye aboot Per) Old Lighthouse The current four-year (1966- 7 : 1969) infrastructure budget was Becomes Museum agreed on by the ‘NATO allies— | ee : : including France — Jan.. 21.| BONAVISTA, Nfld. (CP)—On NATO sources said France was a bleak, wind-battered cliff .150 committed to financial contribu- feet above the sea, the 'nch tion to the four-year budget only cane Roek lighthouse guided on a year-to-year basis. eit: iships for more than a century acct tana Tarheel NATO | Built in 1842 and replaced by a few commands uly 1. ,/a modern structure only De Leusse said. there were years ago, this nostalgic ine: several NATO activities |mento of the past*now is to be in which France wanted to con- turned into a tourist attracion tinue to take part. These in- | ts lights were kerosene . oil cluded the telecommunications |jamps which had to be trimmed system for long-range ‘detection and” ~ cleaned daily, “and ~ the~ in air defences, the. communica- mechanism wound up by hand tions network involved in this, every 2! hours. the NATO technical research| The reflectors were hand-pol- centre at The Hague, the anti- lished every day and any break- stibmarine™ warfare~“institute~ at down had to~ be-repalred= with © La Specia, Italy, and the NATQ.|parts the lighthotise keeper hawk missile organization based could make in his own work- at Chateauroux, France. shop. ~ McGowan’ s Ltd. Kilmuir es Pee An ancient trick of selling is to make a few “changes here and there so that your pro- duct looks a little different .-. then . 44. label it “NEW” and start making fantastic claims for this NEW product. ' bs Surge equipment is constantly being im- ' proved ... but... change sare made only when it can be shown that’ they actually Improve milking operations, not just to pro--} vide new advertising copy. The Surge milked its way to the very top of the Milking Machine Business . .. and .. careful, honest. tests convince us that Surge is still much better than the next best: For a great many years, numerous highly skilled engineers have struggled to build a machine that would match the SURGE kind of cow milking. We urge you to compare that best imitation that these engineers have been able to build with the milk-get- ting, udder-protecting performance of a genuine SURGE milker. Even if you have already invested in one of these IMITATIONS of the Surge ... it will still pay you in increased and improve .. udder health—to see your SURGE DEALER - about switching to a SURGE, Wey PaaNE he