HAPPY TO Prince. Edward —judging by the broad smiles — are three of the 12-member mobile Red Cross blood donor team shortly after their arri- , val in Charlottetown from Ha- be back in Island again lifax last evening. Left to right, — Mrs. Eleanor Mon- tague, nurse’s aide, Ellen Clark, RN, and Mrs, Ruth Blood Clinic Series a testi facGuigan Undecided mete | WEATHER TORONTO (CP) — Observed | "sland News Page travels in three white vehi- cles well marked with the Red Whinton, driver. The noms | (they were formerly | Cross painted a dark blue) and | make an impressive sight as . they travel through Nova Sco- | tia and P.E.I. to collect blood | for the two province’s ‘co-oper- | ative effort. | } Gets Underway Today : The third of this year’s series of five Red Cross blood donor clinics. gets underway today) with a minimum objective of 1,- 080 donors in the four days at | eight different cenfres inthe | province — Hunter River and | North Rustico today, Kinkora and Eldon, tomorrow, Morell and Souris on Wednesday, «and Caardigan and Montague on Thursday. Branches of the Royal Cana- dian Legion at six of the eight | centres have active blood donor | committees which.are sponsor- | afternoon between 3 and 5 under| damages estimated at $100. ing these clinics, and holding | them in their Legion homes: Red Cross officials last night | stressed the importance of hav- | ing each centre reach its full) quota in order to meet the ever- | Impaired Case e e- is Dismissed John Clifford MacDonald of Upper Montague had a charge | of impaired driving against him | dismissed Friday ~ “in Queens > Magistrate James B. ~ John- ston. QC, fined Lloyd Peters of North Rustico $26 and costs for causing a disturbance. Three persons were each fined | $20 and costs or 30 gays for) ‘illegal possession of liquor. $20 Fine Levied | For Bad Brakes William Roy Metcalfe of iw nandale was fined $20 and costs | in city police court Saturday for operating a vehicle with defec- tive brakes. The case of Barry Bradley of Charlottetown, charged with driving without due care and at- tention, was adjourned fo Aug. 9, as one of the Crown witness- é5 was absent: Four persons were fined for being drunk and incapable, and _...one.. Peceived_.a_suspended_.sen- tence on a similar charge icosts ‘and that as many donors as pus- | sible in the O-negative group ‘Moon Dust Seen Cause % etree aoaobaa! | ports. One person was fined for il- legal possession of. liquor. increasing needs of patients in ‘our hospitals requiring this type of treatment. It was also pointed out that \former donors should bring their | blood" donor cards with them in | order to save both time and the | involved in re- -grouping, | are urgently required, as well as i those of every other type. Today's clini¢s will take place~ at the Central Queen's regional: |high school at Hunter River tls | the sponsorship of the Hunter Ri-/ ver women’s Institute, and at ACCIDENT DAMAGE $1,540 DURING WEEK IN CH/TOWN Total damages in abeidonts reported to city police for the week ending Aug. 5 amounted to Pe oa t and run incident oc- samen . front of the Basilica Recreation Centre on Rich- ine cars occurred on the same day, The first accident occur- ed in the Charlottetown Hotel driveway with damages amounting to $50 and the sec- ond at the intersection of Eus- ton and Hillsboro Streets with onstrated for higher salaries in the U.S. metropolis a week ago. American postal workers are underpaid “but you’re way be- Jow us,” he said in talks with Canadians. He was visiting Montreal by chance when he read of the local postal strike. Montrealers Saturday had/| their first chance to get mail since the strike started. There | was no delivery, but the post office hired temporary help and citizens were able to pick up their mail at post offices. mond Street Aug. 1 with da- mages around $300, Two cases of hit and run and rash of two-car. collisions made up most of the accidents reported to the Charlottetown Police for the week ending Au- gust 5. Total damages -were estimated at $1540. The first hit and run incident occurred in front of the Basil- ica Recreation Centre on Richmond Street August 1 with damages: in - the: vicinity of $300, The second accident occur- red Sunday August 3 at the in- tersection of Grafton and Queen Streets at 11.45 p.m. with no damage reported. A car-truck collision occur- approximately $160 damage resulting. Three two-car collisions oc- curred August 3 at the follow- ing intersections” Great George- Fitzroy, Elm Avenue- Connolly, and Grafton Street between Hillsboro and Wey- amouth streets. Estimated da- mages in each case were $253 $250 and. $150. A two-car collision on Fitz- roy Street in back of Eatons Wednesday, August 4 resulted in about $80. There were two accidents reported for the last two days of July. The first was a_two- car collision at the intersec- tion of Grafton and Prince streets with damages estimat- ed at $100 and the second ac- Local Scouts In Toronto 4 | temperatures: Low overnight High Sunday .= panegesie® s m _ Eastern and Central Districts ara Vancouver ........ a) | The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Aug. 9, we 5 o} Victoria. ....c0...+00+ So. 60 Edmonton .......: 50-80. | main over most af the ‘district with a few clear caine A A few Dr. Mark R. MacGuigan last Calgary .--.+.-+-+. 4 81 | today (Monday) and then show-| showers and isolated thunder night said he is mot yet ready Reging «+ 6eeeesse 50-83 | ers and thundershowers are ex- showers beginning this after- eed” to malo a decision to offer as a WARNE © +-~+-20 43. 85 pected to recut over New Bruns-, noon.. Very. warm. Winds. light Liberal candidate for Queens OUAMO: «.-2-2000009 66 79 | wick and Prince Edward Island becoming southwest 2 this in the next federal election. Montreal ......... 69 77 | iste in the afternoon and even. morning. Low-high at New. Glas- He admitted the subject of NEE +++ 1200s 62 7 | img. Fog rolling in along the gow 60 and 8. Charlottetown 60 his possible candidacy had been Fredericton ..,... 64 _ 88 -| Fundy coast and southern Nova| and 80, Moncton 58 and ,88. maised but said he had not. yet Saint John ........ 54° 66 _| Scotia shoreline during the night High tide today at Charlotte- given it full consideration. ' Moncton ......,... 59 = 87_—s | will give way to sunny and hot town 8.36 a.m. and 10.53 p.m. At Rumors have been circulating Halifax ........... 56 76 | weather late Monday morning. | Rustico at 4.06 a.m. .Summer- in Charlottetown for a number Charlottetown ..... 63 85 | Regional forecasts: | side tide eighteen minutes later of “reeks that Dr. MacGuigan Sydney : 54_* 79 | Northern Nova Scotia, Prince |than Charlottetown. Sun rises would seek the momination. Yarmouth ........ 58 _ 68 | Edward Island, Eastern New| today at 6.18 a.m. and sets at He sei however, “I have a ae OND Gt accsce 50 68 || Brunswick Counties: Cloudy ‘8.18 p.m. All times ADT. particular interest in the af MN oon ec ccstas 69 - fairs of the Island and its prob- New York 14 3s MaRS LA LL Ba Bae LO. lems ° {oun te hese Sirens + soa hN shee * 8 | interests in _ politics here | lew Orleans ...... 39 and in Ontario.” Dr. MacGui-| Weekes i... :.:, a = Ge THE COUNTRY DRIVE-IN gan is assistant profesor of law HALIFAX (CP) — The wea-| : at the University of Toronto. ther office says a record high STURGEON He suggested a decision _ temperature for today of 91 = way or another would come wit grees at Greenwood, N.S., Sun- the announcement of the federal day as, otiumid” air covered Tat? a Guys wee SEEKING OAs. ie election date. fa most of the Maritimes. “I am very concerned about i New Brunswick and Prince (Liberal) party unity’, he said, "™- MARK MacGUIGAN "| piward Island experienced | EVERY LEAP! and would “not want lo be a'—DrMacGuigan™ts~a~ son of | Showers. and_s:fow-thundershow-- prea eds te toe dee Roman-MitJustice Mark R. MacGui- a aoa Catholic elected in Queens since ee ot | district Sunday evening. confederation. , PE. ee | The hot, humid air will re- | Gena, ap, well, 8 te era : gi . first vice- president of the New York City ON F g Postal Clerks’ Union which dem- Cc FED RATION | ie Ot ERC TOMLIN- MARCIA KVGHT TONY CARDIZA© sare 001 an FRANCS ins ANTON CRBORS | “TONIGHT ONLY Admission 75c; Children under 12 free Canteen Service. CSHB BBIIISSPBIIaLIOL kk kK KK Kk KK THEY'RE REALLY THE GREATEST! CENTRE WHAT IS THE BAHA'I FAITH ? In answer te your many requests for infor- | mation MRS. TERAH COWARD-SMITH educator, international Baha’i lecturer, speak on the above subject. ae a ee THE LECTURE THEATRE MONDAY, AUGUST 16 at 8:15 p.m. will | Tiber toe Tt fall ont; For Regatta Two Island crews today begin the week-long competition for the Stevenson.trophy at the 5th | National Boy Scouts Sailing Re- gatta at the Royal Canadian Yacht Club in Toronto. i They are Peter — and Donald Simmonds, and ‘David Hume and Bill Simmonds. | The boys left Saturday and were guests of Toronto scouts over the weekend. ~ red in the Charlottetown Ho- cident_of a similar--nature_oc- tel driveway August 2 with curred on Kent Street...with damages again estimated at Skid Row Two other collisions involv- $100. Stella Marris Hall in North Rus-s tico this-evening from 8 to 10, under the leadership of the lo- cal branch of the Royal Cana- dian Legion’ ‘am. Saucers = ‘aa NEW HAVEN, Conn. |A professor at Southern Con- | | necticut State College says} | moon dust raised by the crash | back to normal ‘“‘very soon.’ lof Russia’s Luna V may have) |caused recent flying saucer re- Prof. Robert L. Brown said ‘spoke to the union leaders of| |CITES LESSON whelming show - of - hands ap- proval to a slate of concessions their leaders said they obtained in Ottawa in separate talks with ers’ salaries ranged from $3,960 | Judge Anderson and with the |to $4,380 cabinet ministers who have been - understand Judge Anderson/ handling the postal crisis. One was that there will be jan adjustment over postmen’s/ no reprisals against strikers—or MONTREAL (Continued from page 1) | boots," the minister said, but | against non - unionized women | ‘added that the government had! | workers who stayed off the job| Mot yet been officially informed | in sympathy. lof the recommendation. ithe strike would be spread The BF cones general was jamong .all strikers, even in “thatthemait; cities. ‘where ‘there was a return]: ble reatenanie 9 =. and cow this lesson from it: with Judge Anderson's recom- We must create the machin- mendation of a general $360 ery of collective bargaining for raise to be retroactive to Oct. oo eupplaxers. Then 4 1964. for the right of strike, Their inability to get more He hoped postal service 1M|retroactivity than this was one) \Canada’s largest city would be of the things the strike leaders \ealled ‘‘unsatisfactory,” but The postmen, meeting Satur-| |they also promised negotiations | day at Plateau Hall, a college’ \for new salaries in 10 ‘months. | auditorium in east Montreal’s| “By that time the lemon will Lafontaine Park, gave over have had time to develop a a cloud of lunar dust could re- act with the earth’s atmosphere | to produce a luminous “uniden- tified flying object.” : As Brown explained it in a lecture and _ interviews last week, some lunar particles could carry a special charge, since the- moon’s-surface~is be- lieved to bear a positive charge. These..particles,hesaid, could produce a persistent, luminous reaction as +they entered the upper atmosphere._ ‘_The-reaction, he said, might be similar to one caused by particles of anti-matter meeting little more’ juice,’’. said William matter. When two such sub-/ Houle, Montreal president of the atomic particles meet, they an-|Canadian Postal Employees’ As- nihilate themselves and release | sociation. energy. The Ottawa talks, held ex- The latest flying-object sight-|clusively with the Montreal Picture Grim, _| sketched the outlines_of a skid | Another was that the cost of) SpE Tulyt ings, Brown said, could be dust | kicked up by the Russian space voyager which— hit—the—-moon May 13. He said Luna’s land- ingrockets..stirred up a giant dust cloud some 145 miles long and 50 miles wide. _Some_of this dust, he said, could have escaped the moon's gravitational pull and been al- tracted by the earth. Transportation Is Solved To Columbia River Project: VANCOUVER (CP) ~ * mail, truck and barge has solved the transportation prob- lem to the remote Columbia River dam projects in south central British Columbia. The operation is required to ship more than 300,000 tons of cement and bentonite to the three dam sites which make up the $50,000,000 power project. Canadian Pacific Railway has integrated railway hopper cars with barges and specially de- signed highway bulk carriers to move the needed supplies in+a continuous stream. Thic stream started flowing this spring between. Bentonite Spur, Wyo., and the Duncan Dam site, 70 miles north of Ne!son B.C. The bentonite a cement strengthening additive — is shipped by rail from_ Bentonite Spur to Proctor, B.C., 6n gkoot- enay Lake. From there the hop- pers are shipped 40 miles up the lake by barge to Lardeau, a village nine miles south of the te A smooth - running operation by | At Lardeau, the bentonite is transferred to one of two cigar- shaped aluminum trailers de- signed specially for the ship- ment by road of dry, granular cargo. To supply the second dam, ithe $130,000-000 Arrow, the CPR has rerouted three miles of track to the site and has built a special platform for the de- livery of heavy equipment. This dam, 170 feet high and 2,850 feet long to be completed by 1969, will require 100,000 tons of steel and cement—10 |leaders—‘‘we told national prés- along without- him,” said ion leadership the Montrealers fegard as disloyal to the~ strike —also brought asstrance of bet Salaries would be reviewsd annually instead of every two | years and the government would Decarie, repudiating postal un:} ter arrangements for future sale “hary bargaining; L |study legislation to make the |talks actual negotiation. - cannot negotiate with {ty em- ployees under present law. “As you know, we didn’t negotiate in Ottawa last night,” joked President Louis Laberge of the Quebec Federation of Labor, a regular member of tie postal union spokesmen’s frent during the strike. HAD U.S. SUPPORT The Saturday meeting had platform support from outside nearest rail line, has _ been opened up by a_ newly-con- structed highway. Ottawa has always insisted {t |. Revort Shows VANCOUVER (CP) ~ A city | planning department report has | road area—and the picture is | not a pretty one. Part of the 50-page report contains facts and figures on the | 12-block area on downtown Van- couver’s eastern fringe. It Says: | Skid road produces $200,000 | in tax revenue—and it costs. more than $4, 000.000 in police, | welfare se pees —Two per cent of the city’s population lives there and 33 per cent of all police arrests le Tne are made there. sign x ME siiit co-stansine saa VisTauibion pa Celeste HOLM - John LUND wi [ouis ARMSTRONG “2.3 STARTS TODAY Alex Eptimoff, Folk Singer Appearing now at the Horse and Sutky's _ GRANADA STEAK ROOM KH XH OF kk kk STARLITE TONIGHT ONLY “FLAMING STAR" | . In Color. Starring Elvis Presley, Steve Forrest,' | ident Les Hood we could get | Dolores Del Rio, John McIntire and Barbara Eden. ae DRIVE-IN STARTS “TODAY — Show At Dusk =. N ae hw ro « ff ari & Tues ‘fa ROME ESET ‘The CPR has obtained the! trucking rights to carry supplies | over this highway te the dam,)| FILM PROCESSING Black, White or Color. the largest of the’ three at: 760) weet 5 feet high and 2,540 feet long. | GEORGK WOTTON The trucking rights will be good | PHOTOGRAPHY until completion of the dam, & a pore Scheduled ‘for 1973. can Dam. 1,000 was a monster—with spuds car, trucks and piggyback. |. The biggest challenge to the tion of more than 200,000 tons | of cement and steel to- the $250,000,000 Mica Creek dam. The ‘site, situated 92 miles jmorth of Revelstoke ~ and the’ 3 times that going into the’ Dun- j3 ton hydraulic dredge. The railway hauled this | 800 feet ¥ high—from Vancouver via flat- ¥ railway: will be the transporta- |\3 ae HIGHLAND DRIVE- IN; | «y, COLLEGE ( North Rustico, P.E.!. presents ' : = i MIRISCH CORPORATION presens | - Scottish Festival A A BLAKE EDWARDS “acces” of) | PETER ELKE | a_i | 4] SELLERS = a Daily c@certs at 7:30 pm. ] This is @ | Augué 7 till August 22 reel hgh ‘ Also Wed. Sat., and San. at 4 p.m. ( [comecy! seit LIFETIME... HAVE YOU EVER SEEN, OR PROBABLY WILL EVER SEE A HUNDRED INCREDIBLE WORLDS WHERE THE CAMERA HAS NEVER GONE BEFORE! THIS SNOT FOR THE FAINT OF HEART, NOR _ FOR THE UNBELIEVING. [. EVERY SCENE, EVERY CHARACTER, 1S REAL! IF §T IS SHOCKING, IT IS BECAUSE THERE ARE MANY ASTOUNDING AND UNBELIEVABLE Bi ST TREMBLE sme set seer nt te fr hm 1h mec of man pit git sed sy i is Bd French manner of panting vung female backer instead of brirshes, beach mendans of herria whe could turn a drowning into 1 delight Gazing Rrtert ire sanoie Ht plersares, ‘a8 you see the Get of s srttng nit. WALK spe sam st itso he South Pcie sid tm mms roto 5 KX KKK KTR | jpn