¢ 6 sane PM , By DAN POWERS CALGARY CP)—Visitors to the Calgary Stampede next July | will see a roughneck de cend | every hour from a monkey | | board high on an oil well drill- | ing rig Circus side show? No, just a} small part of the Canadian Pe- | troleum Exposition—first major attempt by the petroleum indus- ltry to make Canadians more laware of one of Canada’s most limportant industries. | A roughneck is an oil well rig worker, A monkey board or scaffolc board is the platform | where drill pipe is racked. | PROVIDES ESCAPE With the monkey board a per- ilous 90 feet above the drilling floor of the rig, an escape line |Funning from the board to the ground allows the roughneck a a The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed., Dec. 8, 1965. ‘66 Calgary Stampede To Salute Oil Industry and*last October the board of directors of the Stampede an- nounced it had decided to adopt the role of oi] and gas in Al- berta’s economy as the Stam- pede’s official theme for next year Plans call for a museum of Canadian oil history including pioneer equipment and docu- ments, a helicopter exhibit. ex- hibit of petroleum by-products, derivatives and refined prod- ucts. A medium-size rotary drillipg rig will go through the motions of drilling an oi] well and there will be a pipeline display and Missing Four Found Well In Vancouver MONTREAL, (CP) — Four Montreal children who disap- peared from their parents’ home here in August have been found in Vancouver, the Montreal Po- lice Missing Persons Bureau said here A spokesman for the bureau said Mary Balent, 12. — her brother Andre, 13, and Sisters Milicha, 14, and Draga, 9, were reported missing last Aug. 30 from their east-end home. He said welfare court officials have learned that the young- sters are living in the West Coast city were Mary has a job as.a nurse's aide in a hospital and is also working as a part- time charwoman. He said that some of the other children were working at part-time jobs. jof the Vancouver Children's Aid| ized to make detafled studies on | \Society for some time and were, an 8'2-mile bypass to carry | |reported apparently to be a Welland Canal traffic around | jmodel little family. Hthe city of Welland where five The society said the children | bridges now constitute one of) \were well nourished and well | the major bottlenecks in seaway \dressed and had been attending | movements. | schoo] regularly. Murder Details Heard Privately HYDE, England. (Reuters) — A tract of nearly 4,000 acres, |Details of multiple murder The children's parents, Mr,|mostly vacant land, has been|charges against a young man and Mrs. Vinko Balent, have |¢xpropriated as “a prudent lbeen “notified of the children’s | step” in case the project is ap- | iwhereabouts. He could not say | Proved. lwhat steps could be taken to| At Beauharnois the expropria- | return them to Montreal. tion involves 275 acres immedi- | jately west of the present two-| spokesmen said | hock system there. Projected | figures on seaway traffic had indicated this will be the next bottleneck and additional locks may bé required. | Sentra gine Mr. Pickersgill. said the land | jis being obtained in advance to |prevent price speculation and Seaway Canals |save the taxpayers money. If “the roceed i projects did not p , the May Be Improved iend"couid've aisposed. ot with }out a loss to the treasury. OTTAWA (CP)—Two major; He said the construction proj- |land expropriations to clear the|ects would involve “hundreds of |way for a possible Welland | millions of dollars” but declined Canal bypass and additional/to make any firm estimates. The police the children’s father was the victim of an industrial accident and had been living on work- |man's compensétion for some years. “ —jold schoolgirl locks at the Beauharnois Canal Out of their $250-a-month total | near Montreal have been com- earning, Mary rented a $90 flat| pleted .by the federal govern- and is acting as “mother to|ment, Transport Minister Pick- the three younger children, the | ersgil! has announced. spokesman said. f service rig exhibit. Mr. Gray said the exposition will have no edmission fees. It will pay expenses by renting ex- hibit space to companies.. He said the St. Lawrence Sea-|tons yearly, is MAKE TONS MORE PAPER | World pulp and paper pro-| duction, now 106,000,000 metric | expected to and woman following a massive police hunt for graves on a lonely moor were given behind locked doors at a police court here. Counsel for lan Brady, 27, a clerk, and Esther Myra Hind- ley, 23, a shorthand typist, asked for the court to be cleared before the prosecution started its case. The magistrate accepted the argument that publicity given to the prosecution statement could impede a fair trial if the ac- cused were sent to a_ higher court, because such viol emotions had been aroused. Brady is charged with the murder of Edward Evans, 14 Lesley Ann Downey, a 10-year- and John Kil- bride, a 12-year-old schoolboy Miss Hindley, an attractive blonde, is accused in the first two murders and of sheltering Brady knowing that he had murdered John Kilbride. fast avenue of escape in the They had been under the eye|way Authority has been author-|reach 124,000,000 tons in 1968. | event of explosion or fire. | The escape line is a strong " jcable equipped with a little cart Pied or T-bar on which the rough- Papers neck can sit and slide safely to eS ttt learth by .using a brake device. . . This terminology might be un- \familiar. to the layman but ithere’ll be experts to explain it lwhen the 1966 Stampede salutes jthe oil industry. | The petroleum exposition is “— the official theme for the Stam- m= ipede July 11-16 and will show more than $5,000,000 worth of loil industry equipment. SUGGESTED THEM The idea came from lim Gray, target by 30 feet Tuesday's 32-year-old district geologist for firing exercise had aerodyna- Kert-McGee Oil Industries of mic drones as targets. (AP Calgary, in August, 1964. He by radio from Saigon) broached others in the industry | Chrysler Shows | New ‘Fastback’ WINDSOR, Ont. (OP)—Chrye- ler Canada Ltd. has an- nounced the addition of a new four-seat “‘fastback’’. sports mo- del to its 1966 passenger car said it expects to make an an- lineup, the Dodge Charger, @ nouncement, possibly within a sleek, two-door hardtop derived week. |from an experimental show car. | Other banking sources said built by the company a year the higher rate could lead to 2° higher interest charges in many!| The Charger, with four indt- areas, including mortgages and |Vidual bucket seats, will go on personal loans, but added in-|Sale early im the mew year. creases might be so-diffused|PTices have not been em they would not be noticed in |pounced, the spiral of rising prices. Some sources questioned whe-|said the news of the rate chan- ther the higher rate actually|ges apparently affected Cana- marks the beginning of a tight-|dian investors Jess than Ameri money policy.~ “It’s going to|cans. The New York Stock Ex- Mean money is more expensive,|change underwent heavy sell- pay the extra int.rest for| but not necessarily that the |ing Monday and closed lower. money to finance them. ’ | supply will be reduced,” one |Losses on the Toronto, Mont- In Toronto, spokesmen for two | said. jfeal and Canadian exchanges DEADLY MISSILES ARE TESTED Surface te air HAWK mis. ailes are prepared for launch- ing in a test firing exercise on South Viet Nam’s Ky Hoa Is- land, exght miles north of Chu Lai air base. Tuesday. The HAWK (Homing All the Way Killer) {s capable of making a iol! even i It misses the General Approval Given To Increase In Bank Rate By KEN SMITH announced the hi gher bank rate Canadian Press Business Editor |many similar economic condi- An increase in Canada’s bank| tions exist in both countries. tate has won general approval |ELPs SET LIMITS as a necessary move in The bank rate combatting the inflationary ‘po. charged tential of the country’s y interest 1 chartered banks for = : booming | loans from the Bank of Catada onomy. jhelps establish limits for inter.’ oe the rate to 4% per | est payments and charges . cent from 4% created little sui-; A higher rate means bor: — — teh ck ee ‘rowed money costs more be- caer Froid been anticipated |cause interest charges also go some , ‘ up. As a result, it.can help’ slow One banker said speculation down an economy that i was moved wp one-quarter of one per cent, marks the begin- ning of a tight - money policy — ‘ost immediate reac-| chartered banks said the jin-| Others noted Louis Rasmin-| were fractions of those im the es sa \crease has led to a review of |Sky, governor of the Bank of/ U.S. ove followed an in-|\the prime rate for lending|Canada, said last week in| Canadian business reaction crease in the United States dis|money. The rate, int rest|a speech monetary _ policy | was generally. casual to another count rate—equivalent to Can-|charged a bank’s best custom-|Should not be reli i r m- relied on exces-'U.S. move during the weekend— ada’s bank rate—to 4% per cent/ers, now is 5% per cent. | sively to control inflationary!a bid to limit Us. investment from four. The U.S. said the| in Canada. W. Earle McLaughlin, presi- | Pressures. step was to ‘‘dampen_mounti a ; a i a eee dent of the Royal Bank of Can-| “It “could well give rise to| Most business sources said ada, said the question of in-/|difficulties because of its un-|the move should not affect Ca- ood = coc lt Com that | creasing the prime rate is aca-|even impact on different clas- o ,,2dd, te inflationary pres-|demic since almost all borrow-|ses of borrowers and because sures. __ jens now are paying the present /of its effects.on flows of cap!- While the Bank of Canada-did | legal ceiling of six 4 re,” not mention possible inflation-|way. e Spies saad er ag se ™ One partly _ because the proposed U.S. limit appears high enough to permit continued growth and partly because money can be analyst 'found elsewhere. stock market TE hin TEND for Plains - Neats Stripes - Tartans All Wool Hand Wovens 1.50 to 2.50 Other Gift Suggestions... Scarves - Gloves Hose - Jewellery aurice Mill. Ltd CLOTHING OF DISTINCTION FOR MEN Summe rside 290 Water Street madian economic expansion, | 3 Christmas || Interesting thing about daily newspapers. Surprise you? Well, it’s a fact. In a recent North 3 American survey, 78% of the people interviewed said they actually prefer a newspaper with ads to one with- out. They like the advertising. In contrast, 54% would rather have TV without ads, and 61 % would prefer radio without ads : In another survey validated by the Canadian Advertis- ing Research Foundation, 71% of those interviewed said they find television commercials irritating, and 13 % said the same of radio. In contrast, only 8% said they were irritated by newspaper advertising. What’s more, Canadians not only like newspaper adver- vs Dial 436-2326 people like the advertising tising, they’re influenced to buy because of it. 83° of those interviewed described newspaper ads as a guide to day-to-day shopping. Only 6% considered television, and 3% radio, in this same light. Yes, Canadians are a nation of readers. 12,400,000 people read a daily newspaper every week day. They read the paper for local, world,-and social news; for entertainment; and for the ads. And many like news- ads so much, they'd rather read a paper with themp>than one without. Interesting fact. Especially to the advertisers. Ghee Griardian "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" Display Advertising Department.— Phone 894-8506 f