SUbflidER8IDE letter car- I riers began training at the post - office yesterday morning in preparation for the inception of letter carrier service in town and St. Eleanors which be- gins next Monday. Seen in their S’side letter Carriers Preperinglior Service SUMMERSIDE Summer- side’s letter car commenc- ed training at t office yesterday p to cry service next Monday. _ The boundaries of the s l x routes or walks as they a re e ervise the work of the carr new uniforms, they are, left to right, Dennis Dolan, Kendall Godki Roy Crozier, Gerald Dalton, Urban (Sparky) Camer- on and Elmer Dennis. Two sup- he ervisory carriers, Donald Har- ris and Joseph Cormier were not present for the photo. mier. Mr. Cormier will relieve on all walks each week as the carriers day-off arises and Mr. Harris, who will generally lapp- rs will relieve during sickness and holidays. rermed were revealed yesterday by 0 aster W. F. Griffiths, as well as the names of the carriers who will serve them \ Walk 1, Dennis Dolan. covers the downtown business area be- Cameron, from Summer Street" No umberland between At- gyle and Highland Avenue:and walk 6. Gerard Dalton, cover- ing the Hillcrest area. _ The supervisory carriers are Donald Harris and Joseph C0!‘- S’sicle Driver Uniniured ’ Sl:IMMERSlDE —- HipD9fl- stall's Corner, on Water Street west. was again the scene of an accident yesterday when car driven by Robert Hardy of Summersldc was travelling in an easterly direction and left the road, striking several fence posas and coming to rest in a fie The accident occurred about 7.40 a. m. Hardy was reported to be uninjured. Damage _to vehicle was mostly confined to the left side. _ , A Vauxhail car overturned on the same corner Saturday eve- ning but miraculously resulted in no injuries to the occupants. Illegal Use Of Marked Gas Probed A wldnspivead crackdown against the use of marked as in autom biles, contrary to the Gasoline'- ax Act has been or- dered by the attorney general‘: department. Attorney neral Melvin Mac said yesterday his set aside for such an investiga- tion. and RCMP are conducting a ' ' Vancouver a cast: rain ending in afternoon; the early in evening; WEATHER TORONTO (CP) —- Tempera- res. Mm M-u wson . . - . - o - .- ~a=e2°<ssss Quebec . Fredericton Saint John .. 33932688383 described the condition of Gor-‘l ISLAND ‘NEWS PA Summersicle And Prince County The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues, Sept. 25, 1962. 3 Escape From Flames SUMMERSIDE- Prince Coun-,thour:ht the fire was under con- ty hospital authorities last night-trol. he tried to lift the stove, lost his balance. and the oil in Yeo. Summersidc, as‘the stove ignited, causing the _ inmroved". Mr. Ye0.|st0vc to explode. - manage_r- of the White Roscl The explosion caused the on- bulk storage plant in Summer- ly door to the office to slam side,t\\;lai—s iigiired 1 a lift?‘ that shut ‘and lock .on the outside. m:pSun:a° “light” ware °"5e Mr. ’Y.eo then ‘smashed a V Y _ ' _ window in the office and leap- it was not immediately known led through into the warehouse. Sunday night how the fire had Realizing it was useless to try begun. because Ml‘. Yeo W-‘island kill the growing flames, he found unconscious» near zthelsrnashed out another window in h|lI'l1lh_8 hlll1dlh8 When fll'0:|the rear of the warehouse, men arrived. ;’where he effected his escape. It was learned yesterday that The smoke. flames and shock an oil stove was responsible for appafehtly Overcame M1"- Yeo. starting the fire. Mr. Yeo had causing him to lose Conscious- lit the stove in his office when l 0355- vdon Gordon Yeo Describes ,lVisit To Strattord Festival ils Described At Kensington , .NSlNGTON - Miss _Lynn‘§to C0il"lSl of representative: llbiurphy. high SCh00l student. from rm-ee groups‘ pa-1-9mg’ was guest speaker at the o:ien- teachers and _ e,.5_ ,ij,,_ “'8 meelmg 0‘ me Kwsingl-0“ icuss‘on to be along the lines of r3l5t7l?t H0319 ‘Dd s°h9°l _*5' rteenagc-rs’ privileges. Miss Pat- ,’ sociat'.on_ held in the auditoriuni «,-icia poi,-re, was appointed to 79(];f_“‘lY-M mh as 1 trod d »procure a panel. “S5 " y .w n “Ce The new officers elected were :5 ,3" . studenfiwbty rpresideirt, Boyd Bearisto: vice- ane ."'°" "°°'pr§‘ ‘m ’ -‘president, Earle Carrier; see- who presided. She gave an ad- wtar, Mrs Keith ennedy dress on her interesting tripto ‘. . ' « - » - ’_ the Stratford Shakespeareanyigfasurer, MlSS Patricia Poir Festival. 5 ' . - mm n------. and r 2:5: enthralled with her experience,, ’ T trophy for tmdancé ihr°"gm the festival m we 837 went to Miss Thompson's room “he “called some °f the high ‘I The r-lualirriian welcomed two l"l'qh'S' The wonderful stage’ ' new teachers Mrs. Alex Don"- mer and Kate Reid, and that nla. S Tempest," and as a grand Cll-r were clearly Pobtrayed in Miss I P ‘I. also described, such as a to l ing Toby Robins’ wig which, was seen wearing later in iside Postmaster W.F. Griffith "The Taming of the Shrew.” man Prichard has been award- The problem of students tak-l he went to the plant and ap- parently some oil was spilled UN TEACHER AID lStamps D’azzlei Ti-Cats 38-21 By JACK SULLIVAN ’HAMILTON_(CP) - Calgary Stampeders. with quarter back Eagle Day mixing plays with the authority of a mastercrafts- man, ran and passed Hamilton Tiger-Cats ‘dizzy Monday night for a 38-21 victory over the east- ern conference leaders in a Ca; nadian Football League inter- locking game. ., The Stampeders spotted Ti- ger-Cats an early 6-0 lead, then wrapped up their fifth straight victory with a 20-point second quarter. With the game safely tucked away in the final 20 min- utes, the westerners eased up and Hamilton, with Joe Zuger call g the signals, scored two touchdowns. ‘ The Tiger-Cats; ineffectual and at times almost downright - bad against the fleet running of Ed Buchanan, the superb pass- catching of Pete Manning and te the powerhouse plunging of Lov- ell Coleman, had 22,109 Civic Stadium fans hooting at -them as time after time they clawed at the air in frantic efforts to halt the fired-up Stampeders. The loss left Hamilton with 11 in . three more than the sec- ond-place Ottawa Rough Riders the east. Calgary, with six victories and a tie in 11 starts, pulled to within one point of Winnipeg Blue Bombers. west- ern pace-setters who met Brit- ish Columbia Lions at Van-. couver Monday night. The Stamps are the hottest club in the CFL with five con- secutive victories. Buchanan scored two touch- touchdowns. Manning, Jim Dil- lard and Coleman each scored one. Larry Robinson kicked five converts and a 27-yard field goal with 24 seconds remaining in the game. Frank Cosentino, who started at quarter for the injured Ber- nie Faloney, rambled over from 17 yards at 4:59 of the first quarter. That was the only threat the Ticats made until Joe Zuger replaced him in the final quarter. The 22-year-old Zuger from Arizona State threw touch- down passes to Tommy Grant and Dave Viti Sutherin kicked two converts and Zuger added a single early in the third quar- r. Football c Standings By THE CANADIAN PRESS Eastern Conference L . Apt Hamilton 5 2 1 19115011 Ottawa 4 4 0 188165 8 Montreal 2 4 2 138178 6 Toronto 1 6 0 118194 2 628 Sydney ’ St. ohn’s . . . . .. 40 I HALIFAX tCP)—The weather office says overcast skies, high winds and ra will continue over the district today. Regional forecasts: Halifax and vicinity. south shore. Annapolis Valley: Over- continuing cool; north wide 25 with gusts to 35 diminishing to northwest 25 by evening. Low- high at Halifax 47 and 55, Yar- mouth and Kentville 45 and 58. Northern Nova scotia, East- ern shore. Prince Erward Isl- land: Overcast: rain ending continuing cool; nortlherly nds 25 with gusts to 35 diminishing to north- late in the after- noon. niw-high at New Glas- gow. Goshen and Charlottetown 45 and 55 rain at times heavy: continuing cool; northeasterly winds 25 with usts 35 shifting to nor-thwesterly 25 with gusts to 36 in afternoon. Low-high at Sydney 48 and 53. ' Eastern h of eastern NJ. counties. southern half of lower rain ending g morning: continuing coll: northerly winds .20 with guts to W northwesterly 20 by evening. Low-high’ at Moncton 43 and 9. Saint John 40 and 55. Western half of-eastern NJ. counties, northern half of lower St. John River Vail . Bay of Clialeur: mostly clo dy; contin- uing coolvnortii winds It dim- inishing to light by province-wide check in seach 1-0 It Ithlm 33 ll!‘ of cars Illllll‘ farm gas, Fredericton 40 and , RCMP a sample of the helm!!! 33 John-M V.“ _ colorodgaa is sufficient for a CIUMW St! h WI‘ In 3; conviction under the Act. but in °"f¥~_ -c 91'} I 33¢" a contested case the ‘s a in pi e $’;";n':§fimg°°t°- “'3” by Wm“ "°"“_ ‘ “'1"‘."" Low-high atldmundston as and m ‘ ‘ ' of Fundy: /north [ales as LAT! NOTICES dimlhlshlng to northwest winds 1 Cape Breton: Overcast with‘ Legislative Change Expected To ' By ALAN DONNELLY OTTAWA (CP)—A legislative change which it's hoped will open new export doors under government program nancing capital goods exports ed to the new parliament, it was learned Mon- y. On the face of. it. the change appears minor. . It would em- power the government to make loans direct to foreigh import- ers instead of to the exporter of capital equipment or serv- ic 9 re ‘.3 O- 9 es. ‘But the absence of such an arrangement, an official said Monday, has already meant the as of 0 potential overseas sale in th Middle East” The thinking in the trade de- partment which adminlsters the export financing plan is that the new arrangegient, by providing a line of credit to to i ers and especially foreign gov- ernments. would make possible export sales that wouldn't other- wise be m e. The change would put the Ca- nadian program on a" par with the facilities provided United turers by the American import bank. ‘_ - HAD GOOD 8'l'AB'l‘ ‘ The EXPOR- nninbafr of export to its credit. But there have N been no new ones for some months and the latest.financing angunent —‘ $40,000,000 regn buy- d States capital goods ‘manufac- ta Open New Export Doors boxcars to Argentina-has been deferred due to financial rea- sons in Argentina itself. So far the government has financed $55,000,000 in exports- mainly locomotives. steel rails and a pulp and paper mill in Latin America--and -has given commitments in principle for another $75,000,000. One informant said it isn't correct to say the government's program is in a slump. There were a ,substantial number of potential export deals alreacb cooking. But the exporters still had to close their deals with the foreign buyers—a process which sometimes takes ex- tended negotiations. Though Canada lost a pro- spective sale‘ of oil storage tanks to Israel, other projects are Shaping up involving that even been sought for exports to a few of the more developed coimtries, lncluding~Japan. As well, the government has earmarked lines or credit for its two big commonwealth ners in Asia this money could only be loaned through Canadian rs and not direct to the overseas gov- 20 by evening: cloudy; rain and mint a morning. visibility lo-rnles loirctng in rain and mint lg .-.-.t'.e., temperatures in -the par 50s. tide today at Charlotte- 5 High BASEBALL RESULTS Dy i-an Assocnrno nnsss xaasaa one that i :' g :0 aadéets at I: . ,~ V __ lggq pgojgcfi ayrnirassocra-ranritass zm Afisrlaulaagaa DAltil'|tOU'l'K. NJ. (GP) — W L Pct.GBL bsaa tbisNawYork Il.U.lI“«- waakforttiatirstpiiaaasfalliiineaota .‘ ugmm too..nItrov¢rsuIor¢Ihai.ouAnoue- -0! atom plantfos-NW6 Scotia Milt Chic 8370.58 9 lIICPowlI'ConpI§|IItlIIDétr:: -sivs.sio1o% 't‘_aft‘sOovaaraaot nrtii ldtlnssra 7001.04 la The till’ 2......‘ 1001.01 10 cam“ “is an ‘uh oaa ’i3.“Z’l."‘li pk. -' _ V ' II‘.I'lI..g -1 ernments. o Tank _Scio'ntisrt Given Asylum‘ . - in By Cuban owe HAVANA (Ari — A Cuban news U.S. govern- a “team of on the floor and caught fire. . Mr. Yeo discovered the floor “0I;":%[§uC‘:tli)l;;;I‘h§ iunélfqd Na‘; on me when he returned about |"lCultural Orggnizaticfnenis “headli- a" hm" lfner‘ .ing teacher aid, starting with He at first attempted to ex- the fall term, to strfe-torn Al- -Uhgllish the fire by throwing gerlri at an initial estimated sand and gravel on it. When he I cost of $200,000. Easy-to-apply Super Kem-Tmiedries in 30 minutes to a velvet finish, on walls and ceilings. And Kem-Glo, in exactly matching colors. goes super-smoothly on to the woodwork. Kitchens and bathrooms too, look fresh and bright again with Kem-Glo’s deli- cate lustre. Yet its finish is like the baked enamel on your new refrigerator. All done in jig-time, and fiirniture back in place to delight your guests—and Bored witlilast year’s colors? your Ke_m paint products dealer. rtwtrebwurt-‘r~it>«ré~awH*«e~e~°=r~«= “he "Cling M Christopher Plum‘ l ias anl Mrs. Maurice Cousins. . . H ;The sum of $12 was voted to which moulded Thellllrs lloiiglas for the purchase max. “Cyrano dc Bergera:"i"f Cal’“'l°5‘ Murphy's address. Maiiy details of the trip were of the theatre when a man was C L c ‘ “’i ontra r et interrupted in the act of comb-I ' C SUMMERSIDE she the evening while playing in iannounced yesterday that Nor- Tiw gpegker was thanked by led the contract for parcel post borne Moase. ing part in outside activities on l the evenings of schools days,. was aired by several members. Specific activities cited were public dances, and hockey games in season, using up hours better employed in study and rest during the school week. It was suggested that a panel dis- cussion be arranged, the panel INC Borrow the Color Harmony Guide free froml Summer- Tuesday and Wednesday. September 25. 26th. "M‘IDN’IGH'|' LACE" Starring Doris Day. Rex Harrison. STARLITE DRIVE-IN THEATRE SUMMERSIDE EAST P. E.l. rdeuvery in Summerside and St. Eleanors. ' Canada post office called for ‘tenders some time ago and the ‘contract award was made from Ottaw , The scheduled date for the in- iception of the mail delivery ser- ‘lvice in the Sumrnerside and St. 1El$inors districts is Oct. 1. Mr. ‘Gr fith stated that any mail ‘weighing over two p o u n d s .would be delivered via truck, while the carriers will handle the remaining amount. jKinkora Horse is ,'Da-sh Winner rA.t Fredericton - FP.ELIERlC.'l‘ON (CF) — H‘! Lee Dean and Diamond Dillard shared the fastest time of the night honors at Fredericton -Rae-2'.\'ay Monday night. ; T‘r= two horses were clocked tin 211 in heats seven and eight rof toe eighuiash harness rec-' ling rzrogram. Hy Lee Dean is ‘owned by Stanley Mayhew of Kinkora. P.E.l. and refined ‘)5’ ‘Blair BC-riiard. The Dillard horse rwas driven by Tom Etter ll-‘redei'icton and is owned by ;N. A Rentoii of Moncton. 1 Other ‘were: single dash winners June Woolen. Johnny Thuiider, Pearl Mac, Bank Song, Grand Chief C Pointer. and Harvey OLOR p A beautifiil new room between breakfast and dinnertime A iliatéllfebeetitif or Super KEM'T0NE and KEM-GLO! tiabbergast the Man-About-the-House! Next time he'll want to help—or do it all himself. Together yougcan plangnew decorating schemes, using the NEW 1962 Color Harmony GurIde—the cievei-est device so far developed to help you choose fresh harmonies you'll l'ove—and be proud of.