~ -|sland News Page Western and Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Thurs. Nov. 18, 1965. 3 Di dnt \ to D ' Halifax Symphony Orchestra’ so that they could be heard and oF f¢ , sf F : ¢ |By CHRISTOPHER GLEDHILL made in the high-spirited finale, | The Halifax Symphony orches-. As an encore we were given Sentence D SUMMERSIDE — Cari Joseph Franklin Arsenault of Summer- side was found guilty of break, entry and theft in Supreme Court yesterday. The petit jury gave the verdict after one hour and 25 minutes of deliberation. Presiding Justice R.R. Bell deferred sentence to Tuesday, Nov. 23 at the request of defence counsel J. Melville Campbell. Before making its decision, the jury returned to the court room to clarify two questions: whether another person had been convicted of the offence of which Arsenauk was accused; and whether the Crown main- tained the convicted person and jthe accused were together. CITY TWINS MAKE HISTORY Two Charlottetown youths, from left and Barry, extreme Crown Prosecutor’ George R. Gary and Barry Sherren, have ig ‘ right. Others in the photo are, McMahon stated the answer to made history at The Canadian Barry are the first twins to be left, Sgt. Major Scott and se- (both questions was yes, that a Guards Depot in Petawawa, received at this unit. In the cond from right Major D.R. juvenile had been convicted of Ont. Sons of Mr. and Mrs. above photo, Gary is second Brochu. » thee charge and the crown main- jtained that Arsenault was with « KIPPING TELLS BOARD Tourist Industry Development Ave Charlottetown. Gary and Arsenault was charged with breaking and entering into the’ bhorre cf Misses Esicil- ent” - ny Bowness, 208 Notre Dame treet, on May 1, 1965, and steal- ing money from the purse of Jenny Bowness. The Crown call- ed seven witnesses while Me. Found Guilty Of Theft, Should Include Conservation ALBERTON — Eric J. Kip ¢¢ oem ‘ tis ping. general manager of the, Charlottetown Board of Trade, was guest speaker last evening) . at the annual meeting of the Al-| berton and West Prince Board | of Trade held in the United Church Hal! at Alberton. “Tourism” was the topic chos- en by Mr. Kipving. “Prince Ed- ward Island sells to tourists sun, | sand, and water, as well as!) Wy what I like to call rustic charm,” | he said. ‘These along with the): warm hospitality of he- peore | are the natural resources by|’ which they are attracted repeat- ', ediv to the Island.” ! He suggested that in the next; decsde Islanders-must-do a lot: of thinking, deciding, planning} and working. He foresees the! eauseway bringing about a re-| volution not only in transporta-| tion but also in the tourist indus- trv which. he said, may be plac-| ed in a vulnerable position. He stressed the importance of con-| President Fred Peters propos- servation of our natural resour- ed a toast to the Queen and then} ces “‘which. if once lost, can ne- introduced the head table guests. ver be restored.” |They were Douglas MacKinnon, ‘We take the short term view Rev. Arthur Pendergast, Claude too often,” he suggested, “and |Smith, Amos Hubley, Mr. Kip- | | MR. KIPPING "\Fred Peters; president, Harold =| Cyril Leard. ‘|tive are Father Steele, E. W. POLICE CALLED -+|Wells, Ann Gavin, Bernard Shea,|merside Police Forée, testified @ |Rev. Arthur Pendergast, Terence |that he had answered a call from )|Gavin, Edwin Hansen and Frank |the police office to go to the Campbell called none for the de- fence. : : George M. Muttart was the first witness called to give evi- dence that the property at 208 nominating committee, ponght tue tate tae he ne “a in the slate of officers for the tart town assessor, stated that Phillips; vice-president, Gerald |>Y Estelle and Jenny Bowness ; ‘jointly and that he had a copy of Handrahan; secretary ase hed: dsoeine’ that tas ; Other members of the execu- ¢fty was bought in 1939 by them. Turner, Carman McNeill, Andrew, Const. George Arsenault, Sum- Weeks. |Bowness home while patrolling Harold Phillips, the new presi- the town residential area on the dent, was escorted to the chair morning of May 1, and he stat- by Frank Bryan. Mr. Phillips expressed appre-'ed in evidence was similar to | been shown him, and gave aj had the in ques- brief outline of ‘the highlights'tion araian. ie of the annual meeting of Canadian RCMP Identification Section in AFRO-ASIAN | he had received the purse from two-thirds majority in the Chi- Chief Wannamaker on May 4, nese “vestio _, had also received from the | : ¢ a standard: from on which |sue was debated, the assembly coming year: past president, |)sxes were paid on the property |were the fingerprints of the ac- cast 57 votes against the seat- jeused. He illustrated the points ing of Peking, 41 in favor, with of similarity of the print found 12 abstentions» The assembly on ‘the change purse with the consisted of Bell he stated — to his know- 17 per cent abstaining. Two jed that a change purse produc- |made their closing summary. ciation for the honor that had/that of Jenny Bowness, which he were: Waldron B. Moase, Fore- it has been demonstrated man; Wendell MacFayden;John..it.is-not-the-United- States alone’ the Clair Hodd; Austin Pendergast; which kep Communist aan | Estelle Bowness stated: that\Douglas Rix; Ivan Clark; Clay- out of the UN. He said it is a amber : of +=Com-’ se had seen a man in her bed- |ton Mill; Merri Dunn: Chester ‘‘substantial vote of the mem- merce in Toronto which he-had|ro99m on the morning of May 1, !MacKay; Ian MacMurdo. Said Thoroughly Professional “. Fined $25 ‘tra, which played last night in a glittering excerpt from Car-| Wider interest and bility ' Confederation tre, improves|men as a foretaste of the and if the direction of the orch- cock time I hear it. It is a thor- sibility that when the eee 2 'e be iteed an 8 hennder : oug' professional body of Opera Company comes here in| footing migh e SUMMERSIDE — A resident musicians, albeit numerically February We may hear opera as |faught with beneficial conse. of Sherbrooke, Earl Samuel | weak in the lower strings. The | it should be heard, namely with uae Se te suisse and Chadwick, was fined $25 and blend,- balance and style can|an orchestra, and not a couple costs by Magistrate W. Chester ‘compare with almost any other of clattering pianos which would S. MacDonald in Prince County orchestra of comparable size. | make nonsense of Bizet’s un- Court yesterday when he plead- The amme was of a/canny gift for instrumentation. to stop before reaching a station- two-thirds major works and|/ottetown audiences prepared to w ary school bus. |make-weights of a lighter char-| P&Y enough to hear things done An Inverness, P.E.I. man, | acter. The concert opened with| 25 they should be done? It has that she had screamed and the James Wilfred Phillips, wes fin- a neat and workmanlike per-|>€e® shown that large numbers man had left the room after ed $50 and costa for driving while |formance of Mendelssoha’s Fin-| (2° to pay $25 a head shining a flashlight in her face. his license was suspended. |gal’s Cave Overture. The deli-/{0F & meal and the chance to She told the court that she had George Alan Mayne of Emer- | cacy was there, but there could|bob-nob with a handful of sports dropped her sister’s purse on aid was fined $20 and costs for |have been more warmth in the ‘elebrities, the floor in her bedroom after |throwing a bottle on the high- | \Tical Second theme. | Unfortunately.opera is the most getting it that night to pay a way. Vaughan Williams Suite based |Cl@borate and consequently the television repairman, that the| Fines of $10 and costs were im- on English Folksongs went with |™0st expensive of. all. the per- purse was found after police ar- |posed on Richard J. Arsenault, a rare swing. I particularly en- | forming arts. Carmen is, with| kidney rived, in the rear porch, and Summerside, Gerald Ed w 2rd | joyed the oboe solo in the second Sm justice, the most popular | Si" foie Dodd's snd eee if that next morning an RCMP con- |Caseley, Wilmot Valley and Mrs, | Movement, though there were a | ll operas. Surely there must toe better, reat better. Used success- table bad dusted the purse for |Aun Martha Dawson. Albany, on | few spots where the accompani- be enough people ready to pay to) fully by millions for over 10 years. New ar we oh Cee one ment was too strong for the see it done properly. Jestectainattiseboasvese fingerprints : J ee sles = a oo termezzo from M ke lenny that she ae! was fined $10 and costs for | n as- had not been feeling well on the |passing on a solid white line | cagni’s Cavalleria Rusticana, be- * 2 8 a¥ + % & 4 =|? = 3 LBS. A DAY Most pass about three pints of liquid a or about three pounds of liquid-waste. Now, if k become night of April 30 and had gone to |while Robert Beer Craig of Mi loved of ensembles in faded ho- | bed early. She said that $65 to {dleton was fined a similar tels in ee eee | Today Only Starts Fri, $30 been taken from her |@mount for failing to halt at @ | Sorts, recel Shows 3:30-7- :30-7- purse by an intruder who h ad (stop sign. | sloppy performance. aah mote taken out e@ coal-bin window and! On a charge of driving without | guyMWERSIDE SOLOIST smashed a pane, and also broke | 4 license, Robert Arsenault, St.| Mogzart’s superb clarinet con-| tt A * : @ locked rear door. |Chrysoetom was nad $20 end certo, shorn, alas, of its first| Classic Horror THE COLD-BLOODED costs. The accu: was a1!s0, movement played | i FOUND PRINT . ‘given a fine of $10 for failing to |jte and exmplary Morart ayie| Moviel... Bone KILLER WHO Summerside RCMP constable, have his TERRORIZED A TOWN! vehicle registration | Alban Gallan‘ ss FL. Connolly, said he had dust- transferred. * "la a ae Ge ee ed Miss Bowness’ change purse lyre Joseph Arsenault of St. born in Summerside. This is Mr. | for fingerprints on the morning | Philip was fined $10 and costs | Gallant’s first professional ap- of May 1, and bad found a la for operating a vehicle with in-| pearance in his native province, tent print. : \sufficient equipment. and we hope that it will not be | Town Police Chief S.D.A.| For driving -a vehicle not | his last. The purity of his tone Wannamaker said that Constable equipped with brakes, Railph|and his sensitive phrasing went Connolly had handed the purse Clinton Phillips of Mt. Pleasant | With a complete command of his | over to him and that he had in was fined $20 and costs. instrument. There was a little, turn given the purse to Cpl. MecKenzie, then head of the Chilling.” —urs mae. rH it) FInne MAN the work as a whole. Here is a| MI MMINIIMNNIITS UO Te » ofan f} Stdl wn, Cpl. Roderick MacKenzie said : | Very promising young (Continued from page 1) | whom the Island should be proud. one rae co va at |given a_ sensitive wel In 1963, the last ‘time the is- thought out interpretation. The concert concluded with Beethoven’s First Symphony. | Sais Gy te see i great t | 111 members at great predecessors | thumb print of the accused, that time. (eet already wagon in his opinion the prints; The vote Wednesday was 40 | mistakeably the stamp of the been made by the same per cent in favor of seating Pe-| young Beethoven, exulting in the On questioning from Judge |king, 40 per cent against, with | vigour of his' young manhood. Mr. Fenwick gave us a straight- forward reading of the first and second movements. ver h fingerprints years ago, 51 per cent voted no, different fingers been 37 per cent voted yes and 11 Something ical. per cent abstained. went wrong with the opening of U.S. Ambassador Arthur |the minuet, which is really more Goldberg said in a statement |of a scherzo than a minuet—the | Members of the petit jury after the vote that once again|tempo that emerged was too) that | sedate—but full amends were! Church Mission China | | bership.” attended in September. He ex- the hope that member- pressed Bee fo cao ina iti er increa attend-| jance improved during the com. ec ru TI n g ing year E: W. Turner expressed thanks to the ladies who had catered to the banquet. it has been the exverience. ping, Cyril Leard, Aubin Gallant, ‘ie Sie mates oe a RAISES Furour retary, Cyril work he had done during the past Now Under Way The vote fell far short of the two-thirds majority, he noted. SUMMERSIDE — —Rev. BF... “In fact. it failed of a simple Howlett, minister of Wyndholme majority.” ‘ |Christian Church here in Sum- | The battle to seat Peking was merside, will speak at a mission | taken over from the Soviet Un- jin the church here from Nov. 17 fon by the Afro-Asian nations, = 21. Mr. Howlett has had a with France making. a strong jgreat deal pf experience in; plea in support of the Commu- | Preaching at missions such as everywhere this is done that|Father Steele and Mayor ROY | vear. He described him as “‘a! where natura! features, natural; beauty, or natural purity are in-' volved, their naturalness and their beauty and purity soon dis- Al appear in the fervor of capital- || izing on them. If we take such short -ighted action during the | next decade on Prince Edward | Island, in the mistaken belief | that we are building up our tour- ist industry, we wil! awaken one day to find that we've sold our heritage, and that it is gone for- ever.” 4 He indicated that~a thorough | study of the tourist jndustry is being made and that it will g) should be studied and discussed by groups such as boards of trade. He recommended that we | learn from the experience of the more heavily industrialized and. populated provinces and set to work to draw up measures to prevent such conditions as land spoilage and water, pollution. | “Having governments take ac-| tion is a responsibility that ¢) with citizenship,”” he said. “There mus’ be vopular support : for these measures.” AFFECTS EVERYONE In conclusion he said, “I have, dmplied that the tourist industry | affects every person on the Is- | lanc and I believe this strongly | — it will continue to be and to show itself in an even more marked way in the next @ years. Finally I have suggested that to flourish in the changing economic °7d social climate, of the desirability of zoning, of in- formation available or else how to gather it; we need an adher- ence to high standards so -our - NEW YORK (AP)—The rum- |players. We were just trying to lear Leard extended a wel-|™an who lives for the board of ble about the pro football drat, | come on behalf of the town of |‘Tade.” Father Steele's apprecia- gow set for Nov. 27 in both |want to make it clear we were ‘ , jtion of the secretary — echoed. major leagues, has turned into |not violating any regulations.” PRESIDENT’S REPORT | RY, almost very speaker during en argument about whether the | _ Sonng:.Werblin,owner-of- the In his report of the year's [Americas Football’ League held New Yorkt Jets of the -APL, work, Mr. Peters said that prior OTHER SPEAKERS & secret advance draft or just ‘joined the general denial of any to’ is term of office he had not! Other speakers were Aubin #1 Lacerta eerie isecret draft and charged the fully realized the amount of Gallant, chairman of the village|, Faced with newspaper reports National Football League had work done fo? the the commissioners of Tignish; Amos that the AFL already. had se-/held a meeting in Chicago last board of trade, nor import-| Hubley representing the Summer. several players e@t @/week where 18 players were ance of the business it handles side Board of Trade; Claude|Mmeeting held two weeks ago, /named as “musts” to the league each year. He expressed ap-|Hunter, representing the Char- Owner Gerald Phipps of the in the signing period. preciation to the other officers |lottetown Board of Trade and the |Denver Broncos said he and the| Many of the players named with whom, he said, it had been|Maritime Provinces Boards of |other owners met to 'by Werblin were listed in the a privilege and a pleasure to| Trade; Douglas MacKinnon, discuss top players. alleged secret ANL dreft. ac- work. He also voiced gratitude to| President of the Crapaud Board! “We didn’t talk contract with, cording to ta all ‘who had assisted with the|of Trade; Edison Rayner, presi-janyone and press dispatches | siianta Tuts Gan Nene York work of the board of trade; to|dent of Kensington Board ofthat we held a secret draft | : a pet: Sabato other boards of trade for their Trade; B. Graham Rogers, make a mountain out of a mole-| Pete Rozelle, NFL commis- cooperation; to the town: of -Al-|Claude Smith andHenry May- hill,” said “Phipps in~ an inter- |Sioner; said ‘no league meeting berton for making its town hall / ard. jview in Denver. “We sat down |W held but several field rep- available for meetings, and to! A vote of thanks was extended {and went through a group of |Tesentatives, who have no offi- representatives of the press. to the retiring president, Mr. outstanding college football cial connection with any club, Harvey Hutt, reporting for the! Peters. | met at Chicago and other £. \City to New York, was not available for any further com- jments on the decision to move Producers Association was re- quested Wednesday to approach | the Board of Public Utilities’ for home and barn in an early morn-| blessed with some good luck in| United Milk Producers A: is ing fire yesterday along with a|that they were aroused before) tion meeting her. a he their lives were taken in the fire. | Th association suggstd that C llid ars Collide, pnpasbase : P : i Seek Increase AFL officials denied any se. e cret draft and commissioner Joe ami y scapes In Milk Price Fo:s, en route from Kansas +r heck eka N.S. (CP)— ova Scotia Milk and Cre ; H B om | back the draft to Nov. 27. ; | oa ain of © cents per hun- | t milk SUMMERSIDE — Although a, large number of animals as well cents per Genk ge sedis St. Chrysostom family lost their | as farm machinery, they were| The request was made by the | | Shortly after midnight . occu-| the dairy department of the Nova pants of a vehicle proceeding | Scotia agriculture department as- past the Archie Gallant farm no-|sume responsibility of milk in- e Two Injured SUMMERSIDE — Two per- sons were injured in a car-pe- | sso flames coming from a@ barn| spection from the farm until it adjacent to the home and Mr.| reached the distributor. The milk jand Mrs. Gallant along with| would then be inspected by the |their nine children were awak-/ department of public heaith. ened and escaped without injury. Although neighbors gathered | ness letterheads. work guaranteed. mist Chinese. The Soviet Union | this, having preached in most of oler rreen spoke in favor of seating Pe- the ker areas across Canada. | ay? 6 | a Also C Ca king, but only briefly. The general public is invited to | icc) Shorts ‘ avoid wasting a lot of time. I| Roger Seydoux, France’s rep- share in the services as well as * x ¥ ¥ resentative to the UN, said hear the special musical talent : after the vote that the 12nation arranged for this mission. ¥ ¥ ¥ + ¥¥ draft resolution calling for _ the <—___________——— ms admission of China would have | ‘e nr > ‘been better had it been worded the resolution calling for the ex- pulsion of the ‘representatives of Chiang Kai-shek’ from the UN “was somewhat discourte- More Robin Hood Flour | TALK TO MIXED GROUP Tt | JOHANNESBURG (AP) —| The Human Rights Society | of ‘Johannesburg's Witwatera- BONUS CERTIFICATE ‘rand University has invited Sen- | ‘ator Robert F. Kennedy to ad- idress a mass meeting of stu-_ dents next May. Kennedy said Oct. 28 he has accepted an in- vitation to speak before a multi- | racial student group in Cape | Town in May. The government has not yet indicated whether it will admit him. South Africa has strict racial segregation laws. COMFORT SOMETHING To Think About... - if your furnace ts over 10 years) eld, you may be money ahead te give it a good. close look! HERE'S WHY: The usual “life expectancy” of ie gare Sandra Fitzgerald, 44 Gunn Street, Sydney, N.S. Mrs. Chester Webb, Oyster Pond, Jeddore, Halifax Co. N.S. Mrs. Gordon Ritchie, 41 Hawthorne St. Dartmouth, Nova Scotie ordinary furnaces is about 10/| pesier: Dominion Store, Dealer: Mrs. Garth Haskings Dealer: Sydney Co-op Store, years. Canal Street Dartmouth er Pond, Jeddore Ashby, Sydney BUT EVEN MORE. : Sain , IMPORTANT There have been so many won- derful improvements in the last 10 years you have a right to be brand. of tourism will carry ‘the mark of quality, with all, we; must show the initiative and oan] ssa to ~ e ae ae avnle thing wa. ee ae accident here at ap- Mr. Kipping was introduced by |Proximately 10.30 last night. Rev. Gerald Steele and thanked) The pedestrian, William Stull by Andren Wells. | of eaae oy oo 2 The banquet which preceded |4 car reportedly driven the snbetiog was served jointly| James Joseph O’Connell of Car- by the Western Hospital Aid and|leton Siding on Water Street Alberton United Church Women. | across from the CNR Station. | He was taken to hospital by an j|ambulance from Browness Fun- DEATHS eral Home and was attended } there by Dr, S.R. Cameron. He ARSENAULT — At St. Chrysos- jis being kept overnight for ob- tem, Nov. 12, Mrs. Julianne Ar- | Servation and Dr. Cameron stat- senault, wife of the late Azada jed last night “at the moment we Arcen*ult, in her 86th year. For- | don’t feel he is seriously hurt’’- warded this morning from the| An occupant of the vehicle, nah esidence from where the |was taken to hospital with glass funeral will be held Saturday, jin his eye. He was also attended Nov. 2% to St. James Church, |by Dr. Cameron and released. Egmont Bay, for Requiem High At approximately 8 p.m. town Mass at 9.30 a.m. Interment in |Police were called to investigate church cemetery. a two-car collision at the inter- section of Notre Dame and St. BOWNESS — The death occur-| Lawrence Streets. red at Charlottetown Monday,| The vehicles involved were a Nov. 15, 1965, of Frank C. Bow- late model car driven ‘y John ness, brother of Preston Bow- Albeert Ford of Summerside and ness, North Bedeque, in his 66th a 1954 model driven by Ralph year. Resting at the Bowness James Arsenault of Albany. Da- Funeral Home until noon today mage to the Ford vehicle was then to the North Bedeque Unit- estimated at $150 while the Ar- ed Church for service at 2 p.m. | senault car sustained approxi- Interment in the church ceme- mately $50 damage. There were tery. \mo injuries. Funeral Home to her Blaine MacDonald of Borden, | |quickly at the scene the most) they could accomplish was to) save a greater portion of the fur-| niture as the house and barn, | ally insured, went up in lames. The Wellington Fire Depart-! tment was also at the scene but, was unsuccessful in its attempt to douse the flames. | Lost along with the home and | tely 30 pigs, a tractor and milk- ing machinery. An apartment in one section of allant, lived, was unoccupied at the time, both of them being in oes Hudson succeeds R.R. Good- Charlottetown. ee Cars Damaged In Collision The Charlottetown detachment of the RCMP investigated an ac- cident that occurred at 5:30 p.m. —w on the Mt. Edward | { |. The drivers of the cars were | Rev. Menzo Dornbush of Pictou, Nova Scotia, and Jasper Pickard of 25.Oak Avenue, Sherwood. | Police said each car sustained \approximately $300 damage. barn were 17 cows, between 17,ience throughout the area for | and 20 young cattle, approxima. | Which he is now responsible. the home, where Mr. Gallant's for the railway’s Maritime area ts, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore with headquarters in Moncton. Express Freight Head Appointed MONCTON — A new supervis- or has been appointed for ex- press freight operations in Can adian National's Maritime area. | He is G.D. Hudson, a Nova) Scotian who gleaned his exper- Mr. Hudson’s appointment was announced by C.B. Fowler, su- Perintendent of express freight A native of Oxford Junction, win, promoted assistant termin- j jal traffic manager for Moncton. Mr. Hudson worked in various centres within the Moncton divi- sion after joining CN in 1946 as @ spare operator. He worked as jan operator at Cold Branch. an \operator-ticket seller at Am- |herst, agent-operator at French | | Village, Oxford Junction and Up- |per Musquodoboit. | In 1964, Mr. Hudson -was_nam- ed work study analyst in Monc- ton. He is married to the former Joyce Ryan of Springhill, N.S ‘They have two children and live ‘in West oe | discontented if you don’t have a modern LENNOX heating sys- item! If you do not have a LENNOX heating system call as | TODAY. | Palmer Electric ‘Dial 894-8543 - ation! GUARDIAN - PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY Phone 4-8506 Mrs. John E. Hall Mes. Maxwell Knott 106 Queen St., North Sydney, Mrs. Gerald Marsh, W Point Auconi, N.S. James River Station,~Ant. Co. E CHARLOTTETO N Dealer: L. Rehey’s Super mar: N.S. = Sabie tices wx f ket, Blowers Street, Dealer: 1.G.A. Commercial Street, : ! Introduces North Sydney Antigonish North Sydney ; a = New Feature ‘ Dinner - Dance This Saturday, Nov. 20 YOU TOO and Every Saturday Night 9 p.m. -12 midnight No Admission charge CAN WIN $1,000 or $100 CASH! Look for $1,000 and $100 Certificates in the 25 Ib: bags of Robin Hood Flour. ROBIN HOOD FLOUR is really big on bake-testing... to help you make # good thing a sure thing! r a eS ee