More Potatoes Shipped This Year Potato shipments from the province this year continue to be ahead of last year's ship- ments. ‘ As of March 29. 466 more car- Col. Enrique Peralta Azurdia's took the latest coup calmly. Agriculture Minister An drew .Monday to crack down hard on llast year. ' lany Communist demonstrations “"— ‘against it. o o l n l The army was placed on the ‘ 0d o l I I Summersn 9 And Prince County , I r . , . l The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues, April 2, 1963. 3 a y loads of the past crop year wero ‘ l sh m the province up to . GUATEMALA CITY (APl— revolt plots in the last 20 years, the same date last year. new revolutionary government, Business went on as usual. M30330 said yesterday that acclaimed by most political par. —"— ———“—""“—*—‘| the Maritime area is 4.274 car- ‘ties in uatemala, threatened S . M aloads ahead of the same date :alert to crush disorders. which d f‘v'm'muedt.Fm¥;} trig; b1) . .th d f . . . , ecnce ques ion. a a een SUMMERSIDE .— A five per Last year at the end of March plghhgdelhc; glehnlztglpfild “ere OTTAWA 4 (CP) —- Canadian shown clearly by American evi- servicc men at posts around the dence that the Bomarc anti.air. world began voting Monday. craft missile was useless. The)! were marking th‘r bal- Under Conservative rule. ts far from homefat the kib- French-speaking Canadians and hull of Rosh Pina in Israel to Quebec had received “the rights san-drifted Sharm-el-Sheikh on ‘denied them throughout the the Gulf of Aqaba to the jungles years." of The Con o Suddenly the Liberals had Members of the armed forces discovered Quebec after pm cast their ballots during the longed neglect. week preceding election day, —“ usmg a variety of polling sta- cent reduction from the previous ,there were 2,104 persons regis- u - - month in the number of regist ftered for employment -— about ‘ bf. 3150,33;,fiaitgfmfiigsv-7.2!; ered unemployed at the Sum- iffive per cent less than this .m'ihistry warned in a bmédcagt merside National Employment} ear. statement 5 '0 Office was reported yeSterdayl Turning from the figures 0"} The whereabouts of ex-prcsl- by the manager, Earl G. Can-:the registered unemployed tome“, Juan Jose revélo re. non' . e unemPloyEd Who are reed?" (mained a mystery. He is thel "1g benehmv Mr- Cam‘m‘ 5a“! leftist exile whose secret return- that the. Ma?” total 0‘ 2'853 1" .to Guatemala Friday apparently almOSt idem”! “"th the Maren prompted the military coup that figure 0‘ 2351 0‘ one year agn‘ tovcrthrew President M i g u cl ‘ Of those receiving benefits this ‘leiEoras Fuentes. A total of 223 persons. not in- cluding 900 fishermen. were registered for employment in March. compared to the 2.336 in February, ‘Vancouver, a deputy returning past March only . were re- Arevalo vanished after twin “Oils; some FlatiODKI‘Y. uthers officer. will cover some 2.700 .W x . siding in SummerSide and vlcin‘ l reponers here he was goinh tgzmgblle- ' I ' miles in 60 hours. flying into six ' I ity. and the other 2.366 were ;hve with peasants on the Pacific. o .(0\ er CCanadian SPII‘YlCP detachments in the 115 - degree THREE ISLAND tobacco from the remainder of the - met! in out-{0. a Lnitcd heat and humidity of the Congo or Agricunure' about pmblem county. and included fishermen. ‘EgiitédTgfigro affix; 5:0: 13:52:? interior. . u growers (right to left) Doug relating to the tobacco indus- . h E ' ' h For the fiscal . . ‘ . . year Just ended . . . p as a polling booth and \le The ballots are cast, each in Romson' oceanyk’w' Albert try on the 1518-nd' 16 wand there Were 4.958 claimants at her presmemlal elemon' Are' “5' into base camps where the a double-sealed envelope then Pauhley. Oceanview. and Boy growers met w1threpresenta- . the Summerside office compamd’valo denied he is a ‘Communistscanadians are stationed flown to Ottawa bv calmer by Gibson. Greenfield. talking tives from the agricultural de- of to 4,961 for the 196th fiscal said he is a spiritual SOCIal-t LL R. H. L_ Machale of west 1 the end of the we‘ek. with Keith LeLacheur (with pipe) of the Federal Depart- ment of Agriculture and Lin- coln Dewar of the Federation Problems Ol lobacco partments yesterday noon at the E x p e r iment 1 Farm to discuss tobacco grow- ing on the Island. year“ a d'ffe‘rence of only three’ 1 Communist political activity! ‘had been tolerated under Ydi- I goras. even while he fought for- ~ eign communism. ° .jINS’l‘AL NEW PRESIDENT 1 To A'd ‘Reta‘rde ‘ The armed forces ousted Ydl-I lgoras Sunday and exiled him to SUMMERSIDE — The retard"Nicaragua in a coup that in-l ed Chlldre“ 355mm?“ 1“ thelstalled Peralta, his 54-year-old ‘ provmce Wm recewe furtherldefence minister for more than SUM-MERSIDE —— A fire which may have been deliberate- ly set according to Summer- s'ide firemen who put out the blaze, did damage to a wooden boxcar close to wooden build- ings by the track between Hol- man's and Smallman's stores when the fire was discovered Rev. Edward J. Fiander, BA, of the University of King’s Col- lege, Halifax. N.S., has been ap- pointed by Rt. Rev. R.I-I. Water- man. bishop of Nova Scotia. to Fiander received his ba- the New London Parish effective chelor of arts degree at King’s—- y 1. Dalhousie in 1961. and was or- Mr. Flander. son of Mr. and dained deacon by Bishop Water- man in March 196 London upon completion of his priest’s examinations and subse- quent ordination to the priest- Biridge Party liberal Meeting MORELL COMMUNITY 5“ S. L. E. damage from the fire was con- fined to the floor and wall in one end of the car. When the alarm was received Mrs- JooePh Finder Of Louis- 2. h l v monetary assistance through theitwo ears, as chief of state, ' I burg. N.S., succeeds Rev. Ron- As a student he has served in :vgtiggbefom 1° Odo“ “St efforts of the Ladies Auxiliary] Ydllgoras seemed to agree ald Parsons who becomes rector the parishes of Port GreVille. The boxcar was empty. and of the George R. Pearkes VCiwim their contention that, with H of Tangier May 1. ow In ea- New Glasgow and St. ark's. Branch, Royal Canadian Legion'lperalta at the helm. they could con’s orders, Mr. Fiander will Halifax. Following graduation in inducted as rector of N e w ' May he will take a pastoral clin- ical training course at the Nova Scotia Hospital, moving w it Summerside. which is sponsor-loo a better job in combatting ing a bridge and auction partleommunist infiltration and sub- Wednesday evening at the le-‘version, gion home. The 67-year-old former gen- A joint meeting between the other problems discussed. TueSday, 2 8 p.m. provincial and the federal de- partments of agriculture and the Federation of Agriculture, was} held yesterday afternoon withl 16 Island tobacco growers at Birch Court of the Experimental The meeting was chaired by Doug- las Roloson of Oceanview. Most Island tobacco growers just broke even last year with the crop, it was stated. The lack of warmth and sunlight and the were v' . Jung the greenhouse was discus- . bacco. however all agreed that the tests and received the dance . or more and the ideal tempera- Farnm. ; heavy rainfall last year was the Keith LeLacheur of the Can- I T9350" for the poorer amp of ado department of agriculture Island tobacco, it was stated. commented on the need for heat Growers are planning to start in the greenhouses for the to- seeding “11? W week to bacco seeds to grow. He said, 50 they Will be able to trans- that glass greenhouses were‘ Plant by May 20. From 400 maj y used in Ontario but he,500 acres. of tobacco will be thought that double-walled plas- ! planted this year on the tsland. tic houses would do here on the 3 Island, but that plastic green-I I 0 houses became damp and thatl S e good ventilation is a necessity! In the discussion that follow-; S d ed many problems in the to, bacco industry on the Island,l The matter of heat- = ‘ S ted and many Island farmersl were planning to use open l SUMMERSIDE Nelve burner propane heaters but ! Summerside dance students of caution was needed to make} Evelyn Edgett received can- sure all the gas burns to pre- l tiificates from nationally-known ven poisoning the plants. dance instructor, Gunter Boots, Ways and means of obtajim'ng j who conducted dance examina- vermiculite, a substance that; lions in Summersidfi. under a some heat retaining char- ' standards of the Canadian Dance Ictistic-s was also discussed. Masters Association. The growers expressed many ideas on the seeding of the to- . Maynard Schumian and lHarold Mitton rated highly in for a 100-foot greenhouse one 3 masters bronze medal awards ounce of seed for a 1.800 square in tests judged on dancing a foot section is the. best ratio. , total of four international dau- Bedding for the seeds should l ces. have an acidity count of six:‘ Ten other dance students re- ceived certificates of W 90 v fit‘iem‘y judged on one dance, green. {and these wene Alan Savidant, Watering. fertilization, a n d 5 Judy Doucette. Ron-aid Ramay. transplanting were some of thel Gwenvneth Fel‘gwson. Ronald ture for the seeds is about A 1Duggnn. Marganet Clark, Rob- ert Keezer, Louise Powell. Chan‘- les PANDEMOINIIUM (Continued From Page 1) rose and swept back their jack- 5. e Each wore a white vest with a red letter spelling out the words: “No nuclear arms." Mrs. Fiander (the former Glor- 1a Butler of Sydney. N.S.) to St. Mark’s Rectory in Kensington at the end of June. In addition St. Mark‘s he will serve the con- gregation of St. Thomas. New London (French River) and St. Stephen's. Burlington. about half a dozen firemen hap- pened to be present in the fire hall and were able to be on the scene very quickly with the 0f PEI t° pumper tnuck and extinguish- ed the fire which could have res in serious property damage if it had not been dis- covered early. The proceeds will go to th e eral told reporters in Managua. Retarded Children's AssociationlNicaragua’s capital. the devel- . .. .opments were for the good of The bridge and auction will be ; both Guatemala and the rest of held in the spacious auditoriumICentral America. Meet JOHN MULLALLY and other guest speakerso of the legion when a large num- This agricultural nation of ber of tables are expected to be 3.800.000 largely Indian people. in play. lwhich has experienced about 60 P.E.I. Liberal Association Cheers and boos rang out. Mr, Pearson stood silently. The crowd screamed “We w Mike." Photographers left the platform to photograph the crowd scenes. Three times Mr. Pearson called out over the mocro— phones: {‘Mr. chairman . . .” each time the anti - nuclear oup stood again for the cam- eras and again Mr. Pearson was drowned out by screams from the audience. e said “ladies and gentle- men. I hope . . ." Twelve minutes later he was still trying to speak_ “The Liberal party does not need the kind of support . . .” m D co- G. L. Monkley Has Comment SUMMERSIDE_-- The follow- ‘ ing statement was issued yes- terday by G. Lorne Monkley, Clonservative candidate in Prince ,:~ 3 Count . y .. ” Mr. Monkley said: "Consider- .- able discussion seems to have 2: arisen in regard to running a g». : clean election. I simply wish to _ ‘ state that I have been nominat- ,- Canada : ed to run under the Election Act. and I intend to run my said Act election according to ; he said. then “we want peace . . .” only fragments of his words could be heard through the pandemonium. When he could make himself heard about 15 minutes after striding to the platform. be about : “I don't want to boast. but there's nobody in this audience tonight who has fought harder for peace than I. I have fought for it in war and I have fought for it in peace and I'll go on fighting for it. . . ." CLOSES DOORS he orum. a hockey rink that usually holds 5.080 persons for games. was ordered closed by the fire marshal one hour before r. Pearson arrived, with more than 7,200 in the Credit Granfers Seek Members P.E.I. Credit Granters ': Hotel last night with president William Jay. Summersi'i as chairman. Mr. Jay reported on his at- tendance at the 17th consumer credit conference Halifax recently. Committees were formed for publicity. program and member- ship. and it was decided mem- bership applications would forwa annual ;_ m ;' be to all business estab- ., l d d 7 so hant d Be Ma b Be Williajml: an “y c. building lishments ln P.E.I- shortly. Dies Suddenly} KENSING'I‘ON — The deathl of Mrs. Ira Fraser. Bedeque. occurred suddenly Sunday af- ternoon in Charlottetown while visiting at the Provincial Sana4 forium where she intended to visit her son Allan. who is a patient there. She suffered a heart attack These tests conducted by Mir. Bucta marked the first time in Prince Edward Island that dancing tests and awards have been made undies- the standards of the Canaian Dance Masters Association. and in Chadiot'te town on the previous evening a~ conducted there. Outside milled half-adozen ban-the-bomb contingcnts. aug- mented by a group of Sons of Freedom Doukhobors. Inside, party workers and firemen! l Ford Cuts Price On Two Models OAKVILLE. Ont. (CPl—Ford iMotor Company of Canada Ltd. onday announced reductions of $494 to $748 on its Lincoln and Thunderbird models im- ported from the United States patrolled the crowds. uch of the audience appar- ently came to heckle. Half-an- hour before Mr. Pearson ap- peared. noisemakers began to rattle in the stands. When the orchestra played a South Ameri- snd passed away almost immedi- ately She was the former Gertrude Dammerell. of Freetown, and is urvived by one daughter. Eva. rs. Arnold Hill of Borden. and Allan. Also surviving is a nd two sisters predeceased her. Resting at the Davison Fu- eral Home until Tuesday. April . then to North Bedcque United hurch for funeral service at 3 .m. Interment in North Bede- ue cemetery, DEATH NOTICES (Received too late for Classified Death Notice column). soDONALD —— On Monday. April 1. 1963. Miss Flora Mac- Donald. in her 73rd year. Rest- 128 at the MacLean Funeral 0 Vice commencing at 2 o'clock. Advance Polls Held In P.E.l. d s heckler ‘ lster Nettie. rs. ustace Advance poms we“ held M “ed “Y , a“ " uation. eeve' Norbom' Her humane] terday and last Sawrday ll“ 1!“ yeIn frontogfutlllfesdtajgte were 15 three constituencies in the prov- i . tague a total of 76 casts ballots in the two days with 47 on Saturday and a; Mondhy This was fewer than in the last ion. In Prince County 44 cad man- ballots in advance of the election day. With 30 of that number voting in . One advance poll is not includ- ed in that number for the wan- t y. in Sourls as voted Sat but no figures are available in the number voting yesterday. In Chan'thown as voted day but other totals wcme not available last night. , The counting of the votes cast in the advanced polls will not Satur- I as a result of the lifting of the surcharge on imported vehi- cles. No price cuts were announced on vehicles imported from the United Kingdom. but the com- pany said it is studying the lit- selection a voice yelled “How about Cuba?” The orchestra s w u n g into show tunes and s o m e bod y yelled “Play 'Yankee Doodle." The band played “with a little bit of luck" press tables, all filled. Five ers on arrival here. He looked newsreel cameras recorded the n ' rested and t GWEN TALKING STICK Mercury 400. 2-door sedan, one of the Ford family of fine products. built in Canada. ...,.,_L.. t scene. Mr. Pearson was picked up on eight moorophones. council member and a repre- VANCOUVER (Cpl * le' ‘sentatlve of the Squsmlsh 1n- "81 Leader Pearson mlde his -dlan band, presented the Lib- .elltnnce ‘0 vamuv€r 54°an3’ leral leader on arrival with I Will! '1 Squaw!" ind!“ linking lceremonial talking stick that he stick and a lS—mile processionispent two weeks carving from tn which ban~the-bomb demon-' eglow cedar. Istrators competed with pretty percy i, the only ,0“ of “1. him“ in We“ car" late Chief Andy Paull. famed as I“ ' Scene reminiscent of, ‘ a fighter for Indian rights who lmmer Ken“ movut “m'mften represented Canadian lyo‘mg me“ and “mm” jammed ltrlbes in representations made into a small British-make car lto Ottawa lshunted. raced and manoeuvred . ltheir way into the procession that [after Mr. Pearson's arrival stl lthe Horseshoe Bay ferry termi- en r. Paul] explained the carving depicted the legend of I famous medicine man who spent five years slay- Gvrade IX 2. Allan Coffin 2. Elaine G a trldse: 2. jun! grades, Sterling Coffin 87.5 per cent PISQUID WEST SCHOOL Grade x: 1. Anne MacDonald. d : 1. Louis Ostrldge: Grade VIII: '1. Cynthia Mac- Klnnon: 2. Theresa Ostrldge; 8. Wayne Burke '1. Sterling Coffin; de V: 1. vim Mockin- on. Grade IV: 1. Gayle Burke. Grade 111: Carl Ostrldge, Grade 1: 1. Karen Macxlnnon: Ostrld in senior Mscxlnnou Grade VI: lfighest liver-age in or 1. Lawerencc Os- 1' failed. Fenders and bumpers} clashed but no dmnaige was and Mr. pears”, em "37°" "Hum" H‘Vmg' Mr. Pearson also told report- won their place near the head 9”. 0‘ t e m" proce‘mon- “'9; "We're not slacking up in the “#:1231231 kggiit‘h” Mist alsst week. I can assure you. ' ' ‘ Some people said we tailed off and with “new?” '1‘" a in the 1962 campaign. We're not “‘9 "m '9“ “"59 Cal?“ tailing off this time. We're on the 51st state—vole Libero . ' “he way up” mm" "°""°" “We” “3 It is an Indian tradition that o m b he“ “9 the man in possession of Mom” talking stick holds on honored place and has the right tol speak. He is honored at tribal lcouncll meetings. l CUTS INTO HISTORY I - The 25 - mile long Olduval at a Game in Tanganyika cuts son cum on Vancouver Island when: feet down into earth's history “And we’ll slay him. added Mr. Pearson‘s 13m the cavernous forum. which seats close to 7.000. ‘ speech also will be carried closed - circuit television to a nearby hall with a capacity of 5,000 as? Pearson spent the week- end holiday lodge It Quali- Pa't Ham. hectic. he was recovering from I head Iexposing fossils of more than ' cold. "It’s IOU." II told me lmcfxdnct animals. Percy Puall. North Vancouver '1 H l H I A ' It’s on display today! It’s the car that makes the low-prlced three a foursome! It's the exciting new Mercury 4001 Look at It closely. Compare It wlth the meanlng In the low-price class o Exclusive reverse-slant rear window that stays clear of rain and snow o Full 120” wheelbase for Fashionable interiors particularly suited to a car of Mercury's calibre a Choice of interior colour schemes MERCURY/ 400 Cushion Link suspension that turns superior ride and extra rdominess And your Mercury dealer has full with matching floor covering 0 Performance and handling ability that makes you the master in any driving situation ruts and bumps into Inter-m i th ch rch Med m “81- ' , . . ‘6 will“ n e u be [Sir mug“t 3:3; mlgzmufigll’mh “fig!” “lei! ‘0 32?... ‘ serpent m Pearson caryouwerogolngtobuy.Forlessthanthreethousand mere ripples by allowmgwheelsto move back-and-forward - . , . , oc em 0 a ersections u - y A" “suddenly " “‘3 "°“‘°' "'gh“ Mm! 3‘ “d 0" “W” "mild"! bulldenlvall. 3:33!“ ' week to dollars,the following features give valueawhole new as well as up-and-down o Mercury 5 famous economy- conscious six-cylinder engine o 32 cubic feet trunk Extra sound-absorbing insulation o Self-adjusting brakes details of Mercury's 24.000 miles or 24 months Total Warranty 0 Move up to MercurleOMthout movlng out of thelow-prlce class! 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