Koen ae TEAM OF FOU Alan Holman, right, duplicate bridge presi- Ltd., dent of R. T. Holman Co. events for The pre- gpee tidings sentation. took place at the company for the team of Charlottetown Hotel tast-even- ' four club championship in ing. From the left are: Bob TROPHY PRESENTED Hambly, Louis Gaudet, Roy Vessey, Mr. Holman. Missing from the picture is.Dr. Doug MacDonald. * Confederation Centre Theatre ~ To Open Summerside Box Office Confederation Centre Thea- reaction to the recent opening of tre will open a box office im the box office has been quite Summerside ‘within a few encouraging so far. In addition days”, public relations director to local sales, tickets have been John Paterson said yesterday. ordered from playgoers as far The office, to be in year-round away as Toronto, and various operation, will be run by the drama crities -have expressed Linkletter Travel Agency op their intentions of coming to Market Street. It will carry a Charlottetown to review certain full selection of tickets in all | shows. 3 ce ranges. . ower very anxious that peo- MAJOR SHOWS ple find it easy to buy tickets." Major shows in the th Mr. Paterson said. He added Will be “Spring Thaw”, “Anne that the theatre plans to make of Green Gables”, “Laugh arrangements with specified mo- Leacock” and “Wayne and tels and hotels so that guests Shuster in Charlottetown”. plus theatre | Willis and the Harmony Harbor Joyce Sullivan ‘and Jack Scott, Sheila Piercey | << Western And Central Districts’ The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., June 8, 1965. _ SUMMERSIDE —_ The at-, tendance at yesterday's Red. blood donor clinic at the | Legion Home here was termed | disappointing when only 155 of | the expected 270 registered — | a deficit of 115. Co-chairmen, George Small- | man and Ralph Crossman, re- | presenting the Summerside Jun- | last night they hoped that the residents of Summerside and the surrounding area would turn out in large numbers at both the afternoon and evening clinics today to make up for yesterday’s craft over t! nited States holding. the of the ship properly. fired all four- retro-rockets and began their steep descent at 12:56 p.m. By 1:01 p.m. the hot gases building up around the re-enter- and'John Arab, and Les Feux pected ‘communications black- 'Follets. The theatre will also run a week of operetta movies in July lout. It lasted about seven min- jutes—then the astronauts were reported coming in weakly. and almost daily performances Parachutes were released and in the children’s puppet theatre scheduled. the spacecraft began its long: |fall to the ocean. for a quick recovery splash. 390 are last got tion east Cape Kennedy, F1 the of red orbit just that. The entire opera- from miles | . to carpet welcome on the carrier deck took just 5 min-. ‘their desk clerks, who will be_ can get theatre tickets for the concerts by Alan Mills, the Con- “festival of laughter” through the box office, with the theatre able to phone the orders in to picking up the telephone tab. Felix utes—less than the time it took \for two-thirds of an orbit. There was a wild and cheer- ing crowd of sailors on the deck i ” LBJ INVITES ie! the Wasp as the meoceniint federation Centre Choir, Leclerc, Jan Rubes, J. Frank The theatre’s major aim this | (Continued from page 1) summer is to get large crowds) for every performance of what promises to be an excellent group of shows. Mr. Paterson said that local, Truck, Train amining table on the carrier. When the table was tilted so that White was upright, his | helicopter. | They shook hands with Rear Admiral William. McCormick, the ship's commander, then went immediately below decks to the sick bay for the first of some intricate physical exami- nations. CHECK HEART ACTIVITY Doctors quickly took the as- Collision the relative vacation of weight- tronauts’ blood pressures and less flight had affected his checked heart activity to see . heart's ability to pump blood. what effects the four days of Injures One | Wntes aistance "runner |Teightiessess had on the circ inet nee lation- mow that they were back normal, _it usually beats with gravity and their feet on SUMMERSIDE | — ee slower but still keeps the blood the ground again. Both astro- he walked away + he ete pressure normal. During his nauyts were placed on filt-tables ed vehicle after been walk in space, his heart rate 5, that doctors could measure struck by a train, a ‘Clermont man, Gordon Mill, is in hospi- tal today with a number of in- juries which include fractured ribs, a lung injury and shock. Mr. Mill was travelling along the highway through Travellers Rest east of here yesterday morning at approximately 10 o'- clock when the half-ton truck in which he was the lone occupant was in collision with a gravel train at the Travellers Rest crossing. The train was proceed- ing in the general direction of Summerside at the time. to pump efficiently enough against the pull of gravity to service the body with blood. Some astronauts have fek faint or weak on stepping out of their spacecraft. Evaluation of the precise medical effects of a prolonged space mission was one of the chief purposes of Gemini IV's voyage. The astro- nauts will undergo three days of ; medical examina- The front portion of the P&S tions aboard the Wasp. senger: truck. was extensively damaged and the vehicle was HELPS MOON VOYAGE sent hurtling to a shallow ditch Flight officials hailed the on the opposite side of the high-| four-day ordeal of McDivitt and w | White as a tremendous achieve- ay. Mr. Mill walked away from ment—and a major step toward blood pressure upright and hori- zontal to see how lazy the hearts | of the spacemen had become. | The two astronauts had kept their spirits high during the long routine hours of experiments on board the Gemini. spacecraft and in the last critical hours) when they got the bad news of a broken computer. They tried in vain—with in- structions from the ground—to fix it. The computer would have determined more precisely the recovered in a hurry.” municator. ‘“ They | got to do is hit the spot.” |. It went just about that way. | manager Jan Grude to be the It was one of the fastest recov- | only heated terrace in the Mar- the history of U.S. itimes, willbe open to hotel eries in space flight. Retarded Children Assn Elects Slate — “Help us, Corney; to grow in understanding _of_thy | Wedge, and directors Mrs. 7 G.|__ SUMMERSIDE plans for all thy children so we may become partners with thee in leading these handicapped ones along paths to happiness.” So reads the invocation which opened the annual meeting of the Summerside and district re- night. Sgt. John Kingston presided for the first part of the meet- ing and later handed the chair- manship over to the newly- elected president, Reginald MacLellan. Other officers elected includ- ed: Honorary president, Solic- itor General J. Watson Mac- Naught; vice president, Edward J. Gallant; treasurer, Mrs. Earl late-flight manoeuvre that would have imsured a gentler, shallow) re-entry into the earth's atmos-' phere. _ Without. it, space flight officials ordered a steeper, \rougher path—that hit the as-, itronauts with slow-down forces ‘mearly eight times the force of gravity as the spacecraft the wreck and moments later developing the experience and/T, sks Ghee carth’a beeaieet was transferred to Prince Coun- equipment that will lead to a ty Hospital by an ambulance manned flight to the moon. from Compton's Funeral Home.| The astronauts in their} The train, destined for Well- spacecraft ington, came to a halt approxi-\by debris and equipment— mately 100 feet from the point/splashed down just 17 minutes of collision and was unable depart until a tow truck arrived rockets some 90 miles over New to remove the heavily damaged Mexico. hovering vehicle. A helicopter was The Summerside RCMP de-over the bobbing spacecraft tachment investigated the acci- within minutes—and 3 minutes dent. : after splash-down the two astro- : ioe were airborne again for 32-mile quick trip to the re- DEATH NOTICES oth aircraft carrier Wasp. The capsule had Received too late for Classified the sea about death notice column t cs ; formerly of Charlottetown, aged 42 years. His re BECAME HUNGRY . will rest at the Hennessey hungry. | “Horray! Horray! we're go- — crowded | to after they fired their breaking | mains will arrive, by train tonight amd | The first words from the as- jof air. Even with this handicap, the jastronauts brought their space- craft down within. five miles of | jone of the helicopters sent iby the Wasp. McDivitt refused to leave his ‘spaceship in the Atlantic until frogmen had attached a flotation collar to help keep it afloat and he was satisfied that the collar ,was firmly fixed. HUMOR EASE TENSENESS | The drama of the last orbit) unfolded quickly — punctuated iwith McDivitt’s good humor— breaking the tenseness in Gem- ‘ini control. i At control, flight, controllers jhad made computations they ‘Tadioed up to the astronauts to insure the proper re-entry. When McDivitt was told he'd ‘get the eight-times-gravity force on re-entry, he said: “Oh, that’s too much for an ‘old man like me.” conwood Road, Sherwood, Jume 7, 1965. | i The. first words from their He'll celebrate his 36th birth- wives, waiting in Houston, were 44y Thursday. more ecstatic. “I'm thrilled to That same day, the astronauts death,” said Pat White. “It’s all lous eae 8 soe Sn Pat Me- vith their wives and families Jubilant flight officials called 2% what will almost certainly the 1,609,684-mile voyage around be the beginning of a national 00-per-cent successful welcome a a In those last minutes of the | and proclaimed the astrensets | ast | flight officials heard BP Be seins ne ten IM et EMD WEATHER TORONTO (CP) — Tempera- tures: ‘ Lew Overnight High Monday RUN Lc cctaasias 48 70 Vancouver ..... eee WEEE Sec codes Calgary OE bi cidsc ccs Winnipeg ......... ORONO s ckescsive 47 50 30 43 47 Quebec Fredericton Saint John Moncton Halifax seaves Charlottetown Sydney Yarmouth It was in the 62nd orbit that jer the McDivitt called down to earth. {to serve guests which included “Don’t forget, I want to be 1 Gov. W. “Roger,” said the flight com-| ministers, Mayor Walter Cox, forces) are on the way. All you | | Retiring President Kingston ‘| generous donation from Mr. }and Mrs. Victor Travers in. deficit and achieve today’s quota as well. number for one day—can be ac- commodated it was agreed, if divided between the afternoon and evening hours (2-4 and 7-9). | _A quick glance at the results of the first day’s competitions for the various blood donor plaques revealed Smallman’s to be leading in the business firms | group; The Jaycees in the ser- vice clubs oection: Minceocke ja the inter-pari group: Young Adults (Church of Christ) linic Shows Deficit 385 Donors Needed — | SUMMERSIDE — A coroner's jury here last night found that | Charles Joseph Gaudet, 16, came |to his death on May 20 while en | route by plane from here to | Halifax hospital as a result of a brain injury received in a motor vehicle accident on the |Linkletter Road between the hours of 1 a.m. and 2.15 a.m. on that same day. Five witnesses gave testi- | mony including RCMP Constable Daniel Durling, the investigat- ing officer: Clarence Joseph | Poirier of seg eag net the —_ 7 : - + person to see the eased alive ayceties, | the night of the accident: LAC Dennis Bright of the local RCAF station who was the first |person on the scene of the ac- | cident; Dr. J. L. Saunders who | was at the scene and who later attended the deceased and his services division; and the Pub- lic Servants im the civil ser- vice section, Members of the Lionettes, Rotary . en- ettes, Kinettes, Ladies’ Auxiliary; have under- taken to telephone every home in Summerside to remind resi- dents of the need that exists for supply. : |al, and Everett Johnson, a me- Blood usage at the Prince chanic who checked the death County Hospital ranks the sec- vehicle for any mechanical de- ond highest in the province and | fects. places 2 responsibility on resi’ LAC Bright, who was proceed- dents in the area to do thet |ing along the Linkletter Road at in making it available for approximately 2.15 came upon Hl who require this type of the car lying on its side in the , said Red Cross offi- ditch and upon investigation /found that the occupants were important part in still m the car. He immedia the many tasks ly notified the RCMP who w with every blood ‘on the scene shortly after. Af laying an ting with connection clinic s of the Red Cross council! In his testimony Clarence Summerside aig school, | Joseph Poirier of Miscouche told of whom were also donors the jury that he had met the —some for the first time. Other deceased and his brother at a volunteers were drawn from the concert in Miscouche and that ranks of the Summerside Red jhe had been given a ride by Cross branch, the St. Paul's them into Summerside where | parish council of the CWL, the he is boarding. He said that| Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Royal aS the vehicle was proceeding “EEO i in the church group section; the “Hotel's New Terrace Garden Opening Marked By Gala Air Delicacies ‘in food and drink ‘lent a gala air last evening to the official of the Char- lottetown Hi new terrace garden. Chef Engle presided charcoal grill J. MacDonald, er W. R. Shaw, cabinet ; ‘ Sum. long the Linkletter Road it had Canadian. Lacie 26. Set : _run out of gas and the deceas-. : : ed, his brother, Tommy, and himself had returned to Mis- couche for gas. , He stated he had last seen: the deceased and his brother at approximately 1 a.m. and at | |that time, Tommy was driving. the public Tommy. who is # patient in s | during regular ing hours— 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.— Halifax Hospital at the moment, | throughout the summer. : was the owner of the vehicle. Heat is supplied to the area,| Dr. Saunders told of seeing which opens off the hotel's reg-|the decseased and his brother ular dining room adjacent to! at the scene and later at the. Pownal Street, by 12 radiant/ hospital. He stated that all heaters situated underneath the| Symptoms shown by the deceas- canopy. jed at the hospital appeared to In addition to seating space| indicate a generalized type of in the graden, the terrace seats! brain injury and a continuous were several mem- OUT OF GAS i ISLAND NEWS PAGE Inquest Is Held Claude Harkness and Arnold ian e Provincial coroner. Dr LE. Prowse, Charlottetown, presid- ed at the inquest with crown prosecutor George R. McMahon in attendance. In Gaudet Death Halifax sneec eee that death was due to brain morrhage. Dr. Saunders, who also at- tended Tommy Gaudet, said he didn’t respond as well as expect- ed ang when there appeared ev- idence of a wea ng of the in- jured man’s right arm it was de- ower to transfer him to Hali- ax. Asked what he thought-of the chances of recovery Dr. Saun- ders answered “I should think he shoyld recover completely | and inf short while”. _ ___ Constable Durling told of in-- vestigation the accident and said the two injured men weren't moved from the vehicle for over an hour after discovery because of power wires being jentangled in the vehicle. , : He stated that each time the ior Chamber of Commerce, said | blood to replenish the depleted brother at Prince County Hospit- vehicle was touched by hersons “they received a shock. After the Maritime Electric personne! dis- connected the lines, a tow truck was obtained and the injured men were removed. He said that on the night of the accident the pavement was dry and that visibility was good. He said the accident occurred on a sharp turn and, when ques- tioned, stated it would be a dif- ficult turn to manoeuvre at 60 miles per hour. He stated that he didn’t actu- ally know who the driver of the car was at the time of the acct- dent. He added, however, that Tommy's position in the vehicle | appeared to indicate he was the driver.” The. mechanic, Everett John- son, testified he had found no. mechanical, defects and assert- ed that the car was in’ fair mec-* hanical condition and wouldn't be too dangerous to drive. Members: of the jury were: Peter White, Foreman: Joseph Clark, Milton Mellish. Charles Craig, Herbert Schurman, ' Dates Given = For Air Cadef Inspections — SUMMERSIDE — Local air cadet officials last night release? the following dates and infgf- mation for the annual inspect ions of P.EI. air cadet squad rons f Inspection of Number 60 Chaf- lottetown Squadron will take place at the Cuarlottetown aim port_Wednesday,-June_9,-at-645 Pm t Inspection of Number 641 ash Squadron will de aeld .ea Foc7y, Jume ll, a- 7 p.m.-at the- Tignish Legion Hon:e. ae Inspection of Number 53 Sum merside Squadron will take place at nunber three hang#ar at RCAF Station Summerside, Thursday June 10 at 7:15 p.m. BASEBALL Naational League Los Angeles 301 700 210—14 160 Phila 200 010 600— 3 91 Koufax (83) and Roseboro, Valle (7); Burdette (03) Roe- buck (4) Mahaffey (6) Bald- schun (8) and Dalrymple. HRs: LA—Johnson (5). Phil — Stuart (7) Rojas (2). ; SS + SSS DS TLS LSA CING * Commodore Room ses ( recovery | members of city council and / 60 guests. |check was made on him inthe *; business people of the city. | The area is enclosed by a high pee Mg the next “six or || Main Brace : id i i : The terrace, said by hotel| fence and landscaping has ‘been | Cention: chart leter 2 carried out through placing flow- | er boxes on the rail on the ter- race and planting bushes - and small plants in the garden. | guests and other members of | | In the receiving line at the showed that the injury had lo- 7) calized, he said, and after checking with a neuro-surgeon ,in Halifax it was decided he be |! Rainbow Trio Jazz Group Vocalist Paul Gallant oS heh a ee | the new classroom for retarded |a letter to the chairman of the | Motion was also made to have secretary, Margaret Lewis, Mrs. Watson Mac- Naught, Mrs. Pierre Andrieus, Mrs. R. L. Mollison, John King- ston, Mark Arsenault and Mrs. A. H. Hubley. said fh his report that he felt children in St. Eleanor’s was a big step in the right direction and that he hoped the associa- tion would look into the pos- sibility of such a classroom for the Kensington area. He stated | that the association had done a. marvellous job. showing what) people can do when they really get out and work. Minutes of the last meeting were read and approved, the financial statement was given and various committee reports were heard. A substantial gain in donations was reported by A motion was made to send ‘schoolboard of Summer Street School asking that the class- room for retarded children in that school be maintained. A a plaque dedicated to the local Lions Club in the classroom it furnished. The meeting acknowledged a memory of. the late John S. Wright. There is to be a meeting of | new directors at the local Legion home on Monday evening. | St. Johns, Nfid. Boston .... New Yoru ...cc008 MOO sc ceceees New Orleans ...... Tucson .. Los Angeles ...... HALIFAX (CP) — The wea- ther office says as a disturb- ance, currently west of James Bay, moves southeastward across southern Quebec this afternoon, cloudy and showery weather will move across the district. The showers will be heavy occasionally. With a humid southwesterly flow over the district on Wednes- day, the outlook is for cloudy, but warm weather. Regional forecasts: Northern N.S., Eastern Shore Prince Edward Island: Cloudy with showers beginning im the SSSBSLRASRSAIIASZKSS2S2an WESTERN BRIEFS OUT OF REHAB CENTRE P. C. Martin of Miscouche, the Flowers of Hope committee. | Grude; Wendall MacKay, as- ior to his leaving burr holes sistant general manager of the Were made in his skull to. re- Island Development Company, lease pressure. and Mrs. MacKay, and Ove) opening were Mr. and Mrs.' taken there for treatment. Pr- 3: } The deceased died somewhere | TONIGHT .- DANCING 9 to 12 Pe Hansen, manager’ for the food between here and Halifax as he |. dmission & and .agricultural division of | was being flown there and a re- ** Members and Guests A 50c ; IDC, and Mrs. Hansen. ‘port from the RCMP division in + >; ==. == =S= _ SE_SE_S=E_ SS LS Free gifts Limited time only “When you Start saving © the perma Si. Des wool? nent way. Here’s all you do: Take $10 (or inére),march boldly into our new Canada Permanent office and open a Savings Account. It’s easy—and so rewarding. Your savings carn up to 4%, and you have your choice of: A handsome, jewelled-movement Travel Alarm Clock A famous Kodak FlashFunm camera well known veteran, has been released temporarily from the Rehabiliation Centre Charlot- tetown. IN PC HOSPITAL Mrs. Harold Laird, Kensing- | | ton, editor of Federated News. is a patient in the Prince County Hospital. IN WESTERN HOspP. Kenneth Ramsay, Alberton South, is a patient in the Western | Hospital. FIVE DIE ON FERRY | SFAX, Tunisia (Reuters) — |Five persons were killed, 10 | down! High tide today at Charlotte-| missing and 26 injured when a| jtown 7.08 a.m. and 7.21 p.m.-At Tunisian ferry boat carrying 104 town. Sun rises today at 5.44 said many passengers panicked ts the result of sn secident. Ray Hse | oe = gt qr McDivitt "say, “Oops,” a anaes ae - ote 9 seh year. Forwarded from the Reowey \hours and 57 minutes—set @| quickly asked what had bap cast 15 Low-high at New Glas- from weave, te funeral wilt bee |e wee alll thy of the mura. “We ‘were just taking 2 com T sed ot Chnttonetone Wann Church for Requiem High Mass at 1° thon Soviet feat of 119 hours in Ple of pictures,” McDivitt said. 7 Goshen 38 and 70, and at ee eee “That's what the ‘oops’ were Charlottetown 4 and 70. ora for.” Outlook for Wednesday—| ‘CLARK — The death occurred at the DROP LIFE RAFT | “Don't do that,” an earth Cloudy and warm. Western Houpttal. Alberton, en Monday, | Within half an hour after voice said half in jest. “You juss 7, 10m, Secon =" na: a tein" heart attacks are resting at the Rooney Funeral were dropped ls Home, Alberton, from where a private one of the recovery helicopters) “Oh, come on,” McDivitt re Rustico at 243 a.m. and 1.43 tourists caught fire Mond er eas ts ie Gan ha and White—who Thursday was torted, “if I were you I'd be p.m. Summerside tide eighteen after an engine-room explosion | Alberton, for service at 2.30. Interment|a human satellite in space—did looking for a little excitement minutes. later than Charlotte. at sea. A marine spokesman te the St. Peter’s Anglican Charch | few stand-up exercises. after a long night.” ree ae état —s so Command pilot McDivitt whe McDivitt and White got their am. and sets at 8.40 p.m. All’ ant jumped into the sea. The qrening at 8 o'clock jhad kiddingly asked during the excitement beginning at 12:44|times ADT. \ferry later was towed into Sfax. 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