e "Advert! sing Services: dt ‘as fev clue the erection of large and Che Guardian | Often obnoxious signs. They. may or Covers Prince Edvard isiend tike the. Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Ward Frank Walker weeng ng. Ecitor Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- day _and_statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P-E.I., by Thomson Newapepers Ltd. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Toronto 425 University Ave, Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Stree? Uni- versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037.: Mamber Canacian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association’ and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub lication of ajl news dispatches in this paper erediyed to It or to. the Associated Press or Reuters and/‘also the loca! naws/ puplisHed herein. ‘ All right: or repuplication of gpecial dispatches, here In also reserved. ,Subscription rate: Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas mot serviced iby carrier. ; $15.00 = year off Island and WK. $29-00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth her + Not over 10¢ s agile: cepy. Member Audit Bureau of Circylation. “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink” MONDAY, | AUGU ST 15, Exhibition Time The cylmination of many. of last autumn’ s dreams, last winter's plan- PAGE 4 ning and this summer's labor is reach- * ‘ed this week when the results of all these efforts are placed before the . judges - at the Provincial Patibinon which begins today. For more than 100 years: the an- nual fair has played a_large part-in + may not always be good in controlling | me sale of certain building lots. They may be bad when:they absolutely for- bid changing the ‘location of a*build- ing or ordering where a building may or may not be placed. ‘ Island winters being what they have been-known to be in past! years, it is not always practicable to state flatly that.a certain building must ‘be ~ placed in a cerfain location. It is al- j. | —own {Smacks of totalitarianism or at best ; 1966s} ways. possible -highway- construction or removal .of‘other buildings change the manner in which snow piles up. We do not always agree with ar- ebitrary government regulation, of the inherent right of owners on their properts_It-too— frequently. bureaucratic domination. Surprise_Casualty On a visit to New York it is always ‘worth a chuckle to see a public works department gang working: on street improvements behind the protection of those wooden sawhorse barriers on which are painted the slogan ‘Watch us grow.” Along with London and Tokyo, New. York. is-one of the world’s largest cities and it seems almost iricredible that it should’ still have the booster spirit that animates "$0 many smaller but ambitious com- | { the life of Prince Edward Islanders; | it was long the only real occasion for __people to get together in large num- bers’ in one place and they-came to the city from all parts of the province. “With them came many of their ,_ proudest possessions==a- choice hand- "made quilt, a ‘special sheaf of wheat, a display :of wonderful vegetables, ‘fine animals. from the milk herds as. well as sheep and hogs-and poultry. _ And of course the proudest of all _were the horse owners. They brought their Percherons-and Clydesdales and their trotting mares and stallions, some of them to.show, some to race. _ True there ‘ere only hundreds of people coming then, but in the smal-- «» , ler city of another era: that was almost ‘an invasion and taxed facilities ‘to the - ~ utmost. Accommodations available to. the public were never enough, but - hospitality—a longtime part of - the “ Island way of life—took care of mat- "ters and evervone had a bed in Which to sleep. : _~ Over the vears there have beén changes in name, changes in _ dates and changes in plant ownership. But through them all there was no change in the appreciation of Islanders for the entertainment provided. It became almost ritual to go out to the grounds: on Sunday before the show opened and look at the fine horses apparently as anxious to get to.the race track as" ‘the public was to:see. them.-Personal rivalries among owners.were common and special match races not unknown. The physical plant for the: exhibi- tion. has expanded greatly over the . ° Cris ‘ Corner and fron years and yet is taxed to capacity eacky August. New buildings have been added and still the number of entries continues to grow, The grand- stand has been enlarged and vet the tourists pour into the province by the tens of thousands. : Old Home Week: the Provincial Ex- hibition-and— Livestock Show: the an- nual fair. They are all the same. The sleepy little town of another genera- tion has grown up and with it the show has changed. From. the davs when a few ‘fakirs’ occupied a small space in Victoria Square to the vast the Bill Lynch Shows is a far crv in- deed. Times have changed- almost every- thing; but the one thing “which re- mains ever the same is The Island's wholehearted Alcott to all who come to the fair. Regimentation The years have brought many changes in the Island wav of life, and recent years have only served to increase the tempo of change. Cit. -{zens are no: longer free to build or remodel. homes: as thev wish . and: } | | -| munities-= Right. at this time, however. New’ York is beginning to worry because the centre is becoming smaller in- stead of growing.-The statisticians tell us that while in the past vear the. | labor force has increased in. practical- ly every.city in North America..there , are now fewer employed persons in ie | | | | ai 1, | | i | —display-of-entertainment provided by | | _many things they could once do with ., their own property are now against the law. . , Perhaps the best ‘illustration of <thisccomes from: certain regulations under the Town Planning Act-. many of which sérious!\ interfere with the right of people to enfovment of: their - property. For-instance, it has recent- ly been decided, to extend such reg- ulations to inc lide all the area with. in 540 feet of the centre line of the highway from-fhe eastern end of the Village of St. Eleanor§ down to Reids the Wilmot Bridge aver to the-north side. of-the-TFrans: Canada Highway at Alhany Corner That covers a lot of aa In genera! certain »Obihitions axe: |; cottages to which they take _ Tanged to pav them for the New York than there were a year ago. Metropolitan New York .in — this ‘period has actually lost four thousand: jobs. Being deprived of- its share of those pay envelopes has cost the City of New York four million dollars in tax revenues. Storekeepers: and. pur- veyors of, various “services have similarly lost the spending power | Profit represented by those disap- F peared workers and their families. -It appears. that some business firms are gelocating in other centres.-which is at’ the base. of New York’s fading popularity as a _business=site. Accord- ingly, the city. qs launching a cam- paign.to attract new industries-to the New York scene and is also attempt- ing to lure some of its defectors back to their old haunts. Auto Apathy Following recent hearirigs before a U.S. Senate committee on automobile safety, the automobile.manufacturers, foreign as well as Detroit designers, went in for some sorl searching as to whether their respective — products were truly safe to. drive: Testimony ‘before: the committee laid bare some of the shortcomings in various makes and -models. Other firms dragged their own unsafe skeletons out of the _closet._ Whether pushed into it or whether . it was done voluntarily, the - auto makers have issued a total of around sixty recalls on various 1966 models. They involved hundreds of thousands of individual cars. In each case the manufacturers appealed to car own- ers to take their vehicles back to their dealers so the latter could make — the *necessarv modifications or de- fective part replacements at no cost to the car owners. The car manufac- turers themselves provided the parts free of charge to the dealers and ar- costs that would-be invotved> | ; soe cipdi { | | man — “SWINGING BRITAIN OTTAWA REPO RT ‘h Hon — Canada Cai Help Feed World J x Greene, Minister of in only 14 years — the population ‘Canada be able to ‘stand. alooi Agrictilture and Liberal MP for jincrease in under- -developed re--from the explosive -desperat ton- the | Can- _in today's Renfrew South, describes hungry world’s need for ada's*abundant food, guest column: . , Of all_ man’s ‘essential free- | doms, the most fundamental, — | perhaps the first freedom- of | is freedom from hunger. If is a freedom without: which the others are meaningless and one with which, as Minister “of ‘Agriculture I find myself deep-> ly concerned. The population statistics are ! fairlywell-known. Every minute | some 110 new\mouths..come.into-! | | 4 a good chance of enjoying 2400 calories per day considered by the United Nations as the mini- mum. food intake for an adult. + The 64-others will face a lifetime { r1 which their greatest concern | will not be how to. fill the length- gions of -Asia, Africa and Latin- America will-require an increase ‘in“cereal foods Alone equal to the 300- million tons of grain now |Produced in North America and "Europe combined. ‘THREE IN’ FIVE HUNGRY And -yet, about the people on earth are already | under-nourished . and _miilions | Still live constantly on the~edge of starvation. Canada’s ‘record of external | aid, though a respectable . $520 million last fiscal year,-still_has room for improvement. It} ‘amounted -to=just under_half of | the world. Forty-seven will have~one per cent of -our Gross Na-_ tional Product last fiscal. year To meet |Nations target of one per ‘cent ‘of. the GNP, it should -be slightly more than doubled. It is. anything but “sentimental altruism to-aim at increasing ¢he | that hunger breeds AID HELPS CANADA But there are other mor2 po- sitive ‘though. just as- self: benefitting — reasons for Cana- -—dians to take up the challenge of world hunger as a part’ of. our three-fifths of national purpose, today. There.is the economic aspec ‘Every Canadian dollar sceated: in external: food assistance - is c :also a dollar invested in a future | market for Canadian. products. | This, return on our- investment may-not be realized in 10. years or in 20, but it will come and with interest: - There is—also- the political as: +pect of this challenge. We = will the minimem- United never. win-the—political support | ening hours-of leisure, buy“ se- Canadian role in extermal_food- ther have bread: The starving J | i { | | { cond car or afford a vacation. in Europe — but how--to pangs of hunger. : It is estimated that by 1980 — PUBLIC FORUM | This colamn ts open to the discussion by correspondents of questions of in terest. The Guardian does not neces- sarily endorse the ‘opinion. of corres. pondents. All letters published are sub. Ject to editing and condensation where necessary. The Guardian is unable tc enter’-into any correspondence regard- ing letters submitted. MY. 100TH BIRTHDAY Sir,—I think it: is fit and pro- per that I should publicly thank -|.the—many-—distinguishing -persons who have honored and congrat- | ulated me on the occasion of my 100th birthday: which took place |, on the 23rd. day of July last. In my have met Hon, place of residence I and conversed with Alexander B. Campbell, | Premier of P-E.I. and the young- | est Premier in all Canada, | was not | that reached that_high office —in- ¢ labor. but that he premier admitted the youngest he . honestly. this province. That honor be- Jongéd to L.H. Davies who even- tually became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, he was only 31 years of age when he became premier. Mr. Campbell is only 32. $ In company: with Mr. Camp- | Lorne’ Bon- his able Lieutenant who is bell was Hon. Dr. nell, { well” known for his jests and gen- There is an old saving that one can - lead a horse to ‘water’ but cannot make him drink. Car owsiérs are showing some of this stubborn: spirit. Theys are just not responding to the car manufacturers or their dealers: Only a‘trickle of owners are coming forward to have their cars made safe. “The others know their cars are not safe for themselves, for their families they will take driving in them. or for theother drivers on the ‘road and their families. EDITORIAL NOTE There are people who own summer family pets in. the summer. In the fall they leave them behind to fend for thent- selves. This, seems. like giving a rib- bon ¢lerk-a.how and arrow and telling hip. to-go-anfetive off the land Mf course there is sure to be a rer [tain amount of confusion in getting pets home to the city when autumn rolls: around.« There is a’ Montreal “ family. (mother, father, three child- ren and dog). Father took consider- able care to nrake sure that all were preseitt_ and correct: He hegan to have~misgivings after the car~ had’ gone a enuple anf miles Just fo he sure, hé stopped and counted noses. ‘ The dog was there- -butifiaye ét the welcome as adding ap! igang view by | children was missing. 4 iality. Also present. was Hon. Heath Macquarrie, one of the Members of Parliament repre- senting the dual constituency . of Queens County i Mr. Macquarrie is a very ac- tive and diligent worker for the welfare of this province, he is a Conservative. Among ‘those who -sent letters | and ‘telegrams were Rt. Hon. L. B. Pearson, Prime Minister of Canada, Hon, John -Mullaily, | Hon. Melvin MacQuaid, Hon. J. Angus MacLean, Hon. W.R., Shaw, recently premier of this province and now leader of the Conservative Party in the Leg's- Jature of this province, Mr. H.L. Palmer, formeg Judge of Pro- bate, whose grandfather Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of this province, and was I think, one of the Fathers of | Confederation, and from _ her most’ Gracious Majesty, Queen Elizabeth Il, Queén of England and Canada and the other. mem- bers of\, the Britisn wealth af. Nations proper“place, that among the la- “Mes, - ghter of the Hon. Mr. Mother- well, Minister of Agriculture at one time, MacKenzie “King, her husband, who died a few years ago the late Rey. A.D. MacKenzie, he was a pfipil ‘of mine many, vear® aga or I hope that no one will imagine that. have any design in what is written above, to flatter my: itl for I am no egotist. T am onscions af mv limitations I am, Sir, eic., ‘CHARLES § MacDONALD Lower .Montague RR . . z was. Common- | I should have mentioned in its there was present: the dau--| in the Government of | was” i. aid. To put it in terms of cold ‘couldn't care less whether nadian dollars in external food aid today, we are investing it os national security. for tomor- The external aid dollars we spend today will look like pea: Re alongside the military costs ‘forced upon us tomorrow, if the world's hungry millions are left “to languish in a hunger impoped upon them ~by~—nothing— 1 than the misfortune of ir birthplace. Not for many more years will'a richly nourished ; “commencing at a stake fixed in of the hungry -with guns of to steal without needing what ‘Commons ‘worked. »152-—sitting | the angle formed by the junc- speeches,’ however, powerful’ of they. take 7 rf a days, three days short of the 155- tion of the Wester side 56: qeloguent,_ The pang’ y. ate Batre: SITZ_BATH | day record set in 1903. Forty-three (43) acres. of - laid terested in the competitions of | 4 reader writes:~ How isa (ied w Bete Dolton with tle | political systems. They would-ra- sitz bath taken? : “Russia was reported scheming | Southern boundary line of Fifty | % REPLY to_wreck’ the 22-nation Suez Ca- | (50) - acres of land~ leased to tie ad Sitz down. in the bathtub- with fial conference at the_outset_and Foxe ph—Galtant—Cascumpery mocra ~ his mouth: Many of. the | Multiple Bee Stings: | Malay sia, ‘And: Indonesia y Peter Buckley Cana Press Staff Writer Fresh attempts to build a are already ‘loosely linked, with |By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen made-in-Asia counterbalance to Thailand, in the Association ot ’ Five hundred bee stings are said to be fatal. Stings: we refer to persons not individuals may die after -a sin- le rendezvous with the co honey bee. / was reported Dr. James A. Murray .in the Central Journal of Medicine. A 30-year- old European male was attack- ed without warning while walk- jabout' three inches thick They began to sting and -he felt as though he were on. fire. with his shorts. The bees contin- ued their attack ‘and he .| plastered mud -on his,shorts leav- ing a-hole for. air” They - found the opening and he was forced Indonesia: began its attempt to to bite the bees-as they flew into |were swallowed. The ordeal Jast- ed 4'2 -hours | Meanwhile headaché develop- jed and the diarrhea was assoc- liated with._continuous abdominal pain. He was |toward dusk, .after the jhad dispersed, in a |shock and exhaustion per part of His body jwith stings “and the hair matted | with dead, bees. The: face .was swollen- but-he was able to see and talk. Dr. Murray” injected hydrocortisone intravenousi\ Towards dawn 221 | were removed from the eyelids, ‘lips, tongue, and the. inside” of . insects state of The “up- 3 >the mouth: The remainder -were— eliminated after he reacted the hospital This , was soe by scraping rather than ith tweezers or forceps. In hin: way. the poison sac remains attack: éd to the stinger. and the con- tents are not expressed in ‘the body. He was well in five days and, I take his chances Against animals-than bees. IT’S AN OBSESSION i N. T. writes: Is kleptomania™ considered a form of insanity? _ REPLY No. It isa nérvous. disurder classified #s a neurosis. The kleptomaniac is” in contact the-world. and-haS no delusicns, hallucinations, or.ideas of per- ‘secution. In this regard_he dif- fers from the imsane, or psycho- tic, individual. _wild ‘have--an--uncontrolable -impy!se-— ment~began“last- Jan~ simultaneous . the, Exceptions have been reported Malaysia ‘in which a young man survived formally 600 ‘and a woman more than-5Q0 sweaty ‘little jungle war. allergic to the venom. Allergic West, mon - erted A new record of 2,243 stings ing, the treaty ratified’ African a concrete’ attempt by Asians ing along a river bank. Within a by Western, diplomats. as a wel- ew minutes the upper. half of come his body ‘was covered’ with bees turity. He about . |dived into the water and- must even ‘}have lost consciousness because Malaysia, the mext.thing he recalled was Philippines which form a poten- then” warily insects three heads of state held meet- burning held among representatives _ ot found ~ al} was black |——— stingers <% imagine, - would rather | with | These. persons session of Canada's 22nd Parlia- -crush from the historie” Roosevelt ~- | {Southeast Asia, known as ASA, Indonesian Foreign Minister Adam Malik has gone. on ree. lord as favoring an expansion of |ASA’s work in trade and other Lareas to include Indonesia. That would still leave therm ‘a long way. from the sort of Asian. mutual-defence. pact that threatening influence of China can be expected “now that and Indonesia have agreed to end their. Despite the pressures that-the and particularly the | United States and Britain, ex- on the iw] Southeast | Asian neighbors vst fight- | is week in Jakarta is most’ significantly ‘preciate, but there is no. doubt that it -would be a step in the West's direction. A good reason for thinking ‘so js that the Sovict community party newspaper themselves to settle their dis- putes. a As such/ it. is being regarde : of donesia about the dangers of getting involved in ASA. ‘CUT OUTSIDE HELP “The-—-end- of —“‘confrontation” between Indonesia. and \a- laysia will help Britain to cut {down on_ its massive defence ‘commitments in the area, ‘since sign of post- -colonial’. ‘ma- The next step would appear | “to be a renewal of -discussions expanded co-operation — a confederation—among | Indonesia and the | standing in a backwater without tially. .potent crescent around Malaysia . to take ‘ ae his shirt, vomiting, and having the . troubled Southeast, Asian fence in the areas where Brit. .|diarrhea peninsula. : «.. {sh, Australian and. Gurkha’ bat- He moved into aeaper water, UNION POSSIBLE talions, have. been fighting iy sat down. and covered his head - Although spokesmen for al] . But’ any effort to reduce American commitments in Asia will undoubtedly require larger- scale, longer-term agreements Only the U.S. has the nuclear power. to match’ China's grow- ing threat of nuclear domination in Asia And formation of that--took- in—such- -nations—as-tn-: dia and Japan could hope -to provide an_ effective” counter- weight to China’s masse armies Neither India nor Japan seem likely at present, however, to bemuch of a prospect such an Asian pact __Despite the enormous three countries. tend to speak about the possibilities of full-scale federation, such a un- ion cannot be ruled out. Before break up Malaysia in 1963, the ings to discuss ““Maphilindo.” . : Now that peace’ has returned to the area, meetings are to be three mutual-benefit . grams Malaysia _and the Philiopines countries to discuss and trade. pro- strength -and - Communist ac- tivity, the éffects of last wee.s ace treaty are not being. un- *derestimated,:: Barring a comeback hy Pres dent. Sukarno-and:his extreme left wing in Indonesia, it --rep- *resentS the final blow toi king's ‘immediate ambitions the South -China- Sea and a boost to the increasingly pro- Western atmosphere of a sensi- tive area of the world Our Yesterdays _ (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE” YEARS. AGO— (August 15, 1941) ‘Ina dramatic.climax-to a ser- ies of secret political, and ~mili-* tary talks at sea, Prime Minis- ter- Churchill. an@-. President Roosevelt rules out any . peace with Hitler and. Germany,. sket- ched the framework of a new world order and indicated far- “the Nazi tyranny.”’ ~ in | - Mortgage Sale ‘TO BE SOLD by ‘Public Auction Lord. Beaverbrook flew . prob. items posed in Asia by Chinas for | Churchill conferences and imme- | jn -front of the ~Law. -Courts diately-began-negotiations.to ob- | Building at. Charlottetown tain’ more. arms and supplies of Queens County © in the “Province all “kinds for embattled Britain. of Prince Edward Island, | He named tanks. planes. ‘partl- Friday, the 16th day of Sepr- cularly bombers) and food. ° * / ember, A.D. 1966, at the hour ~ : of -twelve o'clock ~ noon;: ALL = TEN YEARS AGO (August 15, 1956) Parliament was prorogued ‘af- ter one of its stormiest and long- est sessions in: history. The: third THAT parcel. of- land situate, }lying—aind being on Lot or Town- | Ship Number Twenty-two 224 in Queens = County aforesaid, bounded -and. described as* fai a: lows, that. is“ to say: By a line 10: They ithe U.S.’ and Britain might, ao- - Pravda’ has already warned In- / only a. defensive union Ie 4 6k communist. Their first. -interest is in. rescue from the ty ranny of hunger. But there {s one other reason for Canadians to take up this challenge, which I believe is the greatest facing mankind today, and this is the moral reason, For |any nation professing a belief in ithe equality and ‘brotherhood of iman, it is an. immoral situation ,that millions should go hungry while more. fortunate millions ‘are over-fed. : No. Alternative Left. Hamilton Spectator Gia s reputation for hypo- crisy in her immigration policy has beefi dealt .a sharp blow by the long overdue-decision to give qualified immigrants from the Caribbean the same tredtment | European cord-d Immigrants from Europe have ~been able to take advantage for “years of a plan whereby the gov- immigrants ae ernment advences their pas- Sage money, which they repay, installment plan, after they have settled down in Canada. Citizens of the Caribbean will now be able. to take advantage of the same plan. Not that the Caribbean,’ gov- Lernments are entirely happy at Canada’s decision. What they would like Canada to do is to provide the wherewithal: for -ec- onomic development. of Carib- bean countries. Most of them de- plore an immigration policy eid, a firm supporter of Brit- ain's moves against Iam Smith's white minority rule in Rhodes- ia, and is (0, record with the Canadian Bil! of Rights as offic- lally recognizing equality for all races, colors and creeds. To ‘have continued to deprive im- migrants from Caribbean na- tions of. the European immi- | | that will rob_them of _many ot their best younger citizens, men and ‘weme. ‘technicians. and |nurses, for instance) they des- | ‘perately need at- home. | | Canada had no. alternative, /névertheless. She is a leading critic of South African aparth- '60 named by Jacques | —— enough warm water to cover the. hips. substitute a bigger one on Soviet- running thence by the magneiic Egyptian Lines. ee meridian of the year 1764 North “phone equipment. nS see ~ WAITE’S REXALL PHARMACY Wishes to. advise’ its many customers a a eee OUR NEW NUMBER IS 9151 : ‘Until the end of this week anyone using Waite’s new number will receive absolutely free a 127_ ms Forty-five (45) . degrees. West_ ; | Ten (10) chains or to-- rear | boundary line of the Millvale !Farm, thence along the same: South Forty-five (45) degrees | West Forty: (40) chains, thence | South Forty-five (45) + East Ten (10) -chains, thence ‘North Forty-five (45) degrees East to the place of commence: ment containing FORTY :40) ACRES of land, a little more or: |: less, ee the land mén- | tioned attempted to be | described in'a certain Indenture af D. 1870 between Charlotte | Antonia Sullivan of the one part . and one Sylvester Gallant (Vic- tor .) of the other part and agreeably to a_ plan: on the margin of a Government Deed to the said Archibald Mur- phy bearing date the 6th day of | January A.D. 1885, being the land described in a deed from | Archibald Murphy and Another to Joshua Gallant dated 2 Nov- & grants would- have been to dis- : play the most arrant form of black and white film. ie Ce Rice a hypocrisy. t 44 Foli ; ‘ 5 F io 490. ALSO all that Canada cancot cource-encau: Remember Waite's Rexall Phismiacy. for all your, piceel We (aad Gide ici rage more investment in the. prescription needs and veterinary supplies: ~ and being on Lot or Township Caribbean. Already considerable |-Number: Twenty = tw ay 5 Gatadian money: is invested ih Free mail order and delivery service. | nty-two (22) in such, countries as Jamaica and Barbados. A good number of Canadians: have emigrated to ‘the Caribbean, more will doubtedly do so in the future. Meanwhile, however, Canada has put the Caribbean, with. which she has such close’ Com- - .monwealth ties, on the same level as Furope oe move was long overdue. NAMED MOUNT Montreal’s Mount Royal was Cartier in. 1535. un- MONDAY, AUGUST 15 THROUGH — SATURDAY, AUGUST 20 : at the Horse and Sulky Club Granada Steak’ Room 151 Kent St. : Open. From 12 Noon to 1 A.M. "KEN & EDDY” The Island's top folk singers : _ WAITE’ 5. REXALL __. PHARMACY : Opposite Post Office Summerside, P.E.I. |. NEW PHONE 9151 Queens County aforesaid, bound- ed and described as follows, that is'to ‘say: Bounded on the ‘Northeast and East by a brook. | known as the Trout River. (on the Southwest by tracts of land now or formerly | in possession of Daniel Ross now owned by Beloni Gallant, Jonas Frank Doiron and -the, said Jos- hua FP Gallant and on the Northwest by land now of form- erly in possession ‘of Robert MacMillan containing by esti- mation TWENTY (20) ‘ACRES of land, a little more or. less,’ agreeably to a plan thereof on the margin of a Government Dee dto Archibald Murphy dated 18th day of March A.D. 18% and heing, thus described in a deed from Zepherin Gallant to Joshua P. Gallant dated 3rd November Sti and registered tn Queens County Registry Liber 74, Folio 777 The above sale is made under | @ power of sale contained in an | Indenture of’ Mortgage dated _ the 16th day: of June, A. D. 1961, made hetween Alfred J. J. . Gallant of Fredericton in Queens County” afcresaid, . farmer. -Rether with his wife, Delma Gallant. nf the first part, and ; Her Majesty the Queen in “the | Right of the Province of Prince Edward Island, of the second part, default having been made in payment of the principal and | Anterest, of the said mortgage. For particulars. “apply at the SAT APPEARING NIGHTLY ALL WEEK 8 Ss ar Charlottetown x . STEAK SPECIA Filet Mignon,’ T-Bone or Sirloin’ = office of Martin & Scales, 129 Kent Street, Charlottetown, | Solicitors for. the Mortgagee DATED the 1ith dav of Ang: gust PAD 196A [R MAJESTY THE QUEEN in the Right of the Province et of Prenmve Edward [sland a8 1.95 MEMBERS, GU ESTS, “TOU RISTS “WELCOME . Sorry No Mihors © > ° Agr iculture thereof | rep-csented by the Minister ot : | Mortgagee. << . we degrecs Doiron, . t of lease made the 22nd—Mareh——