SHAW: WATSON MACNAUGHTS ADMIRE SCISSORS GIFT Official Ceremonies Open | Mr. Acharya, whe took over Gulf Garden Foods Ltd. GEORGETOWN, A at the Gulf Garden. Foods Lid. plant here Saturday as Premier Walter R. Shaw cut the ribbon to officially open the new plant. The ceremony was opened by C. A. Davis, president of Gulf who also Garden Foods Ltd., acted as master of ceremonies. The platform party was met large aumber of citizens was on hand held on the wharf at the south end of the building, where the platform party was seated. The west side of the wharf was lin- ed with flag poles from which flew the flag of Canada, the Union Jack, the proyineial flag, the flag of Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Switzerland. On the east side of the wharf the steel draggers Gulf Gull -and at the main office door of the Gulf Guard were docked and plant by W.C.- Bennett, vice president of Bathurst Marine Ltd. © The opening ceremonies were fully dressed in flags. ADDRESS GATHERING Addresses were given by Mr Davis, Premier Walter R. Shaw. Hon. J. Watson MacNaught. EASTERN BRIEFS Hon. Leo F. Rossiter, John |Mullally, “MP, Kaare Graesdal. of Norinvest in Osle, Norway: Laus Nergaard, Aeting Norwez ian Consul General in Canada: Dr. M. L. Bonnell, and Jens Moe, chairman of the -board of directors of Gulf Garden Foods Ltd, = All stre3sed speakers the magnitude of the new plant, Its |trawls, as they would in- actual | "modern construction and equip- ear aE PARA TT ATT ment, and the important place . MAJOR SURGERY - . jit would fill in the Zeneral eco- OCoreane Lavers,. Georgetown, nomy of the. whole province. mmderwent been taking place in this pro vince. With the population explosion in the world this province has a large place to fill in feeding a hungry world, he said OPEN FOR INSPECTION Following the speeches and ribbon cutting ceremony,’ the plant was open-for inspection. The official party and invited guests were later entertained on ithe plant’s second fleor with re- ~freshments and a buffet and the general publie was served coffee and sandwiches in the A teenagers’ dance was held in the plant in the evening, un- der the sponsorship of the day the trawlers Gulf Gull and Gulf Guard took a large num- ‘ber of visitors and guests on a sail off Georgetown harbor jwhere they were shown how the jtrawlers drop their nets or isting . operations. : During the afternoon's cere- mony members of the Royal Canadian..Mounted -Police and this’ Premier Shaw said that the |the Georgetown Police were in major ‘surgery past week in the Prince Edward ipeople of Georgetown and the {hand to assist in handling the Island Hospital daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Lavers. IN HOSPITAL Mable Fraser: Montague. is a place in the province to aug- was read by Significance of the great project and that it was only the seed jie a-great and expanding indus- ‘trial development that will take She is the |province haye caught the great-terge crewd/ | A telegram, received from | Dr. A. Kennedy,.. former Mayor of Georgetown, who is presently |hospitalized in Charlottetown, Mr. Davis. Dr. ground floor area of -the plant. | Georgetown Lions Club. On Sun- | ~ Island News Page Eastern and Central Districts ‘The Guardian. Charlottetown, Mes. Aug. 2, 1065. |< TT High’ Commissioner Of India Visits Island India's Re commmenionet te Ca , B. K. Acharya, is cur- Mow on his first tour of the Maritimes. arrived in Charlottetewn from Frederictun, N.B., Saturday, but will be leav- ing for Halifax this-afternean. Although his visit to P.E.1. is a short Mr. Acharya says he is enjoying very much having mixed a little with his husiness eplicas \P.E.1, Wildlife Park at Rustica and got a first- look at the Island countryside. Today he will pay orto Ww ing this he leaves by for S cat ay PRO & This visit to the Maritimes B. K. ACHARYA marks a continua’ a an f ee es eommissioner's efforts possible prom every prevince in Canada ut} geodwill between the countries. ing his tenure of office. He say6| While im Halifax this week he he hopes te visit each provimee| will meet with Indian university atudents = ba weenes any problems might have. In the world of trade, the commissioner pointed out that all the -tea~ Canadians drink usual term of office for a comes from India or Ceylon, proximately commissioner. “‘So I eobably particularly India. Although In- |More CS Members |Ask Pay Increase <a OTTAWA ‘(CP)—Another 65,- 000 civil servants will be knock, ing on the government's door if! changes are recommended is pay revision machinery as a re: sult of the current postal dis- pute. This notice was served on the government Wednesday by Claude Edwards, president of Canada. Mr. Edwards made the point ip a statement issued following | a@ mee! Tuesday with Judge) q, C. , government-ap-| commissioner to look! into the pay dispute that touched off a string of walkouts| by postal employees. | Judge Andersen is to make! recommendations on recent pay| raises announced by the govern- ment for civil servants in Group D, the category including mail | workers. He is to tackle the) postal workers first, then study | the other civil servants in the! group. | RE-SUBMIT PROPOSALS Mr. Edwards ‘said that if the) proposes ‘“‘some new sys- | | | | | item affecting the pay revision} machinery to Group D elasess, | the federation would go back to) the government with submis-: sions on behalf of the last group~salary-—-revisions wg were ‘also far helew what federation considered were ade- quate raises.” Group B is the largest pay | grouping with some 65,000 civil) servants, many ef them in cleri-| eal’ and administrative positions. | Aug. 20, 1964, the government announced increases averaging 2% to 3% per cent for -hem, retroactive te Oct. 1, 1868. There are 56,000 employees in Group D. Their increases an- nounced 16, and retroac- tive to Oct. 1, 1964, averaged 7.3 per cent. - jwill be back here aboyt this| dian textiles have found a good same time next year’, he said'market here in the past, he last evening. ‘said, more emphasis has been Refore coming to Canada Mr. | placed on simpler manufactured Acharya served as deputy high} items such as transmission tow- commissioner in Pakistan, as|ers which India has sold to Al- minister in Cambodia and as|berta. ‘We have hopes for trade COIN WAS TOO SMALL The United Gtates issued the first nickel coin when the price of silver rose so that five cents’ worth was too small for convenience. ambassador to Czechoslovakia} such as: this in the Maritimes znd Rumania. Such diversified | too’, he said. travels have given him com-| iF jmand ever such languages as ‘English, French and German as) well as those of his own country. | Long, Hard Road SPOKESMAN FOR INDIA i Among his duties as high com | Seen Ahead In missioner to Conga. ee Ac} Viet N c flict arya is responsi or the af-| fairs of all Indians here, is the | t am cont official spokesman for his coun- | itry, and assists in whatever way | ae stie, DA NANG, South Viet Nam (AP)—Maj.-Gen. Lewis W. Walt foresees a long, bloody road to | victory. over the Viet Cong and declares that in the end Viet namese not Americans— must achieve it. Walt is the husky, soft-spoken ;commiander of 23,000 U.S.-ma- rines in Viet Nam. He was a jtop field leader in the Second and wished Gulf Garden Foods Ltd. every success. {OFFICIAL PARTY The official _perty included: Premier W. R. Shaw and Mrs. Shaw, Hon. Leo F. Rossiter and Mts. Rossiter; Hon. Lloyd Mac- |Phail and Mrs. MacPhail?>‘Hon. |Andrew MacRae and Mrs. Mac- | Rae; Hon. Henry Wedge and | Mrs. Wedge: Hon._Dr. H.B. Mec- | —MeNeilt;—Hon- ; t Mrs. Farm- |is different ., tet in any ler: Dr. L. G. Dewar and | previous war,” said Friday. ‘Stig Dewar. Hon. J. . Philip |‘"The battle here is for people, Matheson and Mrs. Matheson; | Not for terrain: Our whole ob- Hon. J. Watson MacNaught |Ject is to get the people out of and Mrs” MacNaught: Hon. J. }the hands of the Viet Cong and Angus MacLean and Mrs. Mac- |deprive the Communists of their War. ‘Neill and™ Mrs: M. A. Farmer and Lean; — Heath Macquarrie and Mrs.| “Guerrillas can't exist with- Macquarrie: out the support of the people Senator Elsie Inman: Jon jand the food, World War and the Korean —:The-objective in. VietNam. intelligence, re-| the Civil Service Federation of sa sop: MRS. JOHN MacNutt pres Dr. fithl, looks on. Mrs. Ar- ; ents a gift to Dr. Benson Rieh! as a token of apprecia- tion from the Women’s Insti- tutes in the Kensington region for the outstanding leadership he has given in the promotion of the Day Camp. Mrs. Frank MacNutt, co-chairman with thur Campbell, president of P.E.1.. Women's Institute spoke at the closing ceremonies and expressed appreciation te the Red Cross, the Kensingten Lion’s Club and the Depart- ment ef Education. Badge: Presentation Marks Day Camp End Dr. Benson Rieh| and Mrs. Frank MacNutt, co-chairmen [hundreds of beginner, junior, in- | termediate and senior swim- of the Kensington region water mers on Friday at the Day safety committee presented Red Camp which operated for 10 Cross Water Safety badges te |days at Clinton on the private Shacks In Rio De Janeiro © : ‘Giving Way To Small Homes | RIO DE JANEFRO (AP) — This Brazilians’s eity's favelas, colonies of shacks built of wood scraps, eld sheet metal and flattened gasoline drums are gradually being cleaned aut. Of- ten their’residents move reluct- antly. As part of Governor Carlos Lacerda’s campaign to clean out the favelas, two suburban cities have been built some 20 miles to the north of downtown Rio. | They are financed by the U.S. |backed Alliance - for - Progress Many ex - favelados look at their homes and distrust. and resent the long commuting to their old jobs—often two hours each way, but others are enthusiastic. Says laborer Jose Soares, 35: ‘‘There is just no comparison. Now my children will be able te live like human beings.”’ At. that moment Lacerda is aid program for Latin” America: new brick and cement |property of Sutherland Montge- mery. A total of 446 youngsters from 21 school districts attended this camp. . Each day they had physical education and aquatic training. Each child was tested fer phy- Pirate Ship Fitted Out | ST. HUBERT, Que. (CP) The Marechal family of S&. Hubert is turning into a crew of pirates these days. Gilbert Marechal, 38, baught an old Gaspe fishing boat three years ago and is converting big craft into a pirate ship, eom- plete with masts, rigging, quate ter-deck, crow’s nest, bowaprit and all the trimmings. “I’m just making the cannon now,” he says, “seven for each side of the ship, 14 in all. We'll use firecrackers in them ag ammunition.” Dead-End Road For Dropouts “If someone had only oe me—”, That’s the refrai ted over and over agai panded until its population | .i-31 fitness and the results will rary ey eee jbe used as a basis for further : ! et physical education in day camps moving at the rate of 30 a day-| Which are sponsored jointly by As the favelados move out,! the department of education demolition men tear the shacks | aaa a PEL. Red Cross. Wat- down’ to prevent others from | 5, Safety seevice moving in. i ‘ : | W.A. Currie, president P.E.1. While far from luxurious, the Red and Iphe Ars houses in the new cuburies are| Cress, Iphegenie clean and comfortable. They enault addressed the large are sold on credit by the state | STUP of interested adults who : were present for the offigial — with 15 years to closing of the 1965 camp. _ ~~ hy who said, | different. I can make it, | Read in August Reader’s | Digest how discouraging it is | to be “last hired, first ~ |and going nowhere.” Is it }really that bad? This impor- tant article says, “Much | worse”! Parents of all teen: | agers should read this article. Get Reader's Digest today! One-.-_bedroom -— houses - cost | i about $5 a month (15 per cent * *« . * he * of the minimum monthly wage): | The two bedroom houses cost 16.5 per cent of the minimum wage. Onsen . Scattered in the suburbs as well as im the heart of world- famous Copacabana, the favelas and their 500,000 inhabitants have long been a headache to} Rio’s city fathers. : | By re-settling the favelados| AND SHOWS THEM SHAMED! TOAY - TUESDAY x*x«w*t«* * TIONS OF A TOWN AND ITS PEOPLE BRAZEN AND UNA- SHOWS 2:30-7 - 9 and tearing down their - esti- Mullally and Mrs. Mullally; Dr. |cruits and protection they caM|cleaning out the city’s most in- — al eo aneRe patient in the Kings County | ment the other phases of indus- Kennedy expressed his regrets M. L- Bonnell and Mrs. Bon- | provide.” Inell: Mayor Howard S. Mac- Memorial Hospital. trial development that have 'in_not being able to be present 2 AUG. 4-5-6 ousillvenings-@t 8.p.m. | — Matinees Aug. 5 & 6 at 2.30 INTE Lean-and- Mrs MacLean; Klaus.| Viet.-Nam -support._ this , Nergaard: Mr. wand Mrs: Jens |of unconventional warfare with | Mr. and Mrs. T.W. Sanderson. of the French Indechina war | president. Bathurst Marine Ltd. | might be considered to bear |Mr. and. Mrs. Ernst Tengbweg- |him out. = -Hansen,__production _..manager. | Gulf Garden Foods -Ltd.,.. .. + ) tae Mrs... Bishop... sident Monstrad and Co. L Not all U.S. senior officers in| theory /Moe: Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Davis: |the same fervor, though phases| Nearly 30 years old, it began Walt said he believes his ma- rines and the other U.S. troops can only serve as a deterrent / . | against major Viet “Céng™ mil] famous favela Esqueleto (the | Skeleton). |3,200 FAMILIES INVOLVED mated 180,000 shacks, Lacerda hopes to end the problem; and at the same time put a dent in the city’s on disease and ignorance. staggering “statistics |=” She Strikes Bie \in the’ abandoned concrete skele- \ton of an unfinished hospital -The Canadian beaver gnaw through a six-inch birch tree’ in 10 minutes. can |; * |building and gradually ex- Bu ry La |Montreal; Mr. and Mrs.'O. Kap- jstad, president M. K. Interna- |tary moves aimed at chopping jup and taking over the coun- -— Charlottetown Rotary Club Presents 2-HOUR MUSICAL REVUE IN WATER AND ON STAGE eS Presented in World's Lergest \Mrs. Kaare Graesdal represen- | try. iting Norinvest of Norway; Mr. | land Mrs. R. Paulsen represent- ing Findus International of Swit- |Cong control must be handled zerland; Mr. and Mrs. G. Kris- by the Vietnamese with US. tinsson, president Commercial | support. M arine Designers, Montreal; WEATHER Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Bissonnette, | Secretary Gulf Garden Foods | * td. of Montreal;—Mr.-and Mrs. | T. Foss, president Fjell Naviga- | tion, New York; Lorne Baker, |tures: area director of fisheries for. the | Vancouver ...----- 64 82 Maritimes of Halifax. Victoria .......+.- 59 77 |Regina .......---- 52 86 Winnipeg ......--- 52 77 : | Toronto ....:.---+ 63 75 | Ottawa yes 52 79 Montreal euler 81 | Fredericton -.---- 7 = | Quehec _..”...-.--- _| Saint John .....--- 47 77 ; Moncton 48 82 | Halifax. ..+--- 52 73 Es : +Charlottetown <---> 52 7 Sydney 49 7 Yarmouth ......-- 50 76 St. John’s ......--- 4 = Boston ...-. 2.00 VISITS CITY New York ...--.--- 67 73 Rev. R-R. Cunningham of Van-|Miami , ...--- 7 «88 ‘ouver. who has been special |New Orleans a 88 guest speaker for the past week | Tucson 78 100 at_the United Church conference | Los Angeles . 68 71 in Berwick, N.8., will visit Char- lottetown today and tomorrow.| HALIFAX’ CP) — The He ‘feels the job of establish- the wide areas now under Viet TORONTO (CP) — Tempera- re = 7 =a See aOTOeDs. Portable Pools and Stage! Mir. minister--of St. Andrew's Wesley United | Church in Vancouver, will re- | turn to that city by air Wed- | nesday. While here, he will be office_says a high pressure area | will drift slowly off to the east) and a disturbance over the Great | Lakes ‘wi!] move along the St. Lawrence River; Valley today. | Clouds wil! spread to ail but) THE COUNT STURGEON - EX Ev Matinees at 2; TICKETS | From the door en hibi enings at 8 Rota ee Funniest Diving and Water Clowns) C 0 : I seu m m,—Adults $1..50;; Children 1.00 Aug. 5 and 6—Adults 1.00; Children 50c, |a guest of Mrs. Margaret C. | Worth, Euston Street. -— TAKES OVER Weston “Bucko”’ Trainor will be in-charge of the Charlotte- | town recreation department pro- | Cape Breton by day’s end. Show- ers and a few thundershowers will develop over New Bruns- wick. Regional torecasts: Halifax and vicinity Club members ex Hughes Drug Store, Ellis Bres., or at ight of Show. - x c: | gram for the next two weeks | while Jim Fox, city recreation | director, is away on annual holi- ; days. ing. A little cooler. Light winds increasing 11 LOSES FINGER - w y-hig i- Jimmy Birt, 13-year-old son ot ee ae ae | Mrs. Richard Birt 40 Confedera- | tion Street, Parkdale, suffered ithe loss of the index finger to | his left hand and injury to his | :taumb and another finger Thurs- | town 3.26 4 ™ Goshen 5 and 78, Charlottetown 52 and 75 \red When the young lad was (p.m. Summerside -tide eighteen jin the backyard of his home. He | town. Sun rises steday at 6.11 was taken to ‘the Prince E4- | a.m. and sets-at--8.26. p.m. . All 5 + times ADT “ North- | fax 50 and 70. New Glasgow and | High tice today at Charlotte- | t s and 3.29 p.m. At | iday evening. The accident recur |Rustico at 1017 am. and 11.30) cperating an electric bench sa¥ | minutes later than Charlotte- | With a SINGLE with a BACHELOR « a he Dera ACHeIO Sponsored by the Sturgeon W.I. Admission 75c — Children under 12 free hhh hhh eka tet. &—® xt - TONIGHT ONLY Mel ANN-MARGRET Mala a 1 es Seas) Ye CK iN [OWN RY DRIVE-IN girl can have Hi can have a ball e . . eee § . . : . with AGNES MOOREHEAD % _JONIGHT - TUESDAY THE ONLY THING GREATER THAN HER HATE WAS HIS LOVE! - SHOW AT DUSK * OTTO KRUGER- GREGG PALMER * *