I IISIAND NEWS PAGE Charlottetown and Queens County! The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed. April 10, 1963. 51 Legislature Did Not Sit The Legislature did not sit yes- terday afternoon. Premier W alt e r R. Shaw said that in view of road con- ditions. which may prevent ou‘ mrbers from getting to h the Legislature I will not meet until this afternoon —V"l-I .wwrv- AVON ANDREW. (r i g h t) diving at the luncheon meeting of the CourseUnd A total of 25 persons are tak- ing the eight4week skin diving and scuba diving combos being held at the Charlottetowa YMCA. They include some members of the Burden, Semis, Charlotte- town RCMP detachments and members of the Souris tire de- pertinent. The course is being held to acquaint them with the proper use of . . . in the course 16 have passed The child custody case was adjourned to this morning after the completion of evidence yes- terday by Mrs. Alice Russo Menasce of Congo, the mother of the boy, ._‘ H... J.“ is i“- .3 i been heard by Mr. Justice Tweedy and awarded to Mrs. Menasce but this ruling was again as new evidence was said available. She is asking the P.E.I. Sup- reme Court to award her cus- todyoftheboyf‘mmthefaflier. y Dr. Benison Menasce. r) Results were received yester- day from a number of Queens County polls that did not re- port Monday night due to the storm. In poll 100, Sherwood, Con- servative candidates MacLean and MacQuarrie received 137 and 134 votes, respectively, while Liberals Gillis and Lewis received 79 and 84. NDP candi- dates Arsenault and MacLean received three votes and five votes. For poll 100B, Sherwood, 129 and 127 votes went to the PC candidates, and 91 and 101 to the Liberal candidates. NDP candidates had six and eight votes, respectively. South Granville. poll 7, gave 45 votes each to Conservatives Machan and MacQusrrle, and 38 and 40 to Gillie Lewis. Alex MscLesn, NDP. received not figure in the results. es went to the NDPs in ad- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joe Pepitone, Moose Skow~ ron's replacement wi N York Yankees. opened with two home runs meson: as the Mother Testifies In Seeking To Obtain Custody Of Child The tody taken Queens Co. Polls Nearly Complete Giants, Yankees . Snare Victories Is lraiiic In The- long-rumored promotion for Staff-Sergeant A.J. (Gus) Dowling. last night became a reality, when he was elevated to the post of Inspector of Traf- fic at the regular meeting of the Charlottetowu City Council. Inspector Dowling was born town YMCA yesterday at noo presentation Claude Whitenect, president ' tors. tithing erwayAt‘Y' their skin diving tests and 10 have passod the scuba diving. Avon Andrew is conduc n. is of the Skin And Scu the curse as part of the Char- lottetown YMOA's aquatic pro- gram First year students at PWC ting town Driver Injured In Head-On Crash One man is in hospital as a re- sult of injuries sustained in a head-on collision on the Trans- Canada Highway a short dis- tance west of St. Dunstan's Uni- versity, Monday morning. In t e P.E.I. Hospital with head injuries, a fractured jaw and lacerations is William MacDougall, Nine Mile Creek. He was the driver of a car which crashed with one driven b y Ralph Gregory, C h a r lotte- Gregory was released from hospital after treatment of minor in uries. Visibility at the time was very poor. and educated in Charlottetown. and joined the local force in 1937 as a constable. Earl 'n th e 19505 be attained the rank of staff-sergeant and was placed in charge of the traffic squad. He is credited with being in- strumental in having a number of improvements introduced in controlling the flow of traffic in the city and for his work in helping to solve some of the ser- ious parking problems. In his new post Insp. DowlingI particularly in the n ext few months, will be called upon to handle the knotty problem of en- suring that ample parking space will be available for the heavy flow of tourists expected in th e city in 1964 for the centennial celebrations. Among the problems are th e Staff-Sgt. A. l i I J. Dowling i H se me C ariottetown. at 230 Iiis Honor, ernor F. Wal scheduled to receive the ad- ' the Speech pm. today. Lieutenant Gov- tsr Hyndman is dress in rep to from the Throne at 3 SDBCIOI INSPECTOR BOWLING establishment of m untci pal parking lots, and the expansion of the metered areas, whic eventually will be more than double the size they are now. At West A howling spring storm which snarled“ communication s 11 Prince Edward Island, Monday also brought death to two Char- h. have just recently completed a 5_ . . 1 g cause at the ‘Y' as part of their physical education training. The cornea consisted of the YMCA’s five- card swimming tests, which are for both beginning and ad- vanced swirmnrers. The 200 students taking the course were instructed by ‘Y’ instructors. Te ing yesterday. Mrs. Menasce told of her short mar. tinge to Dr. menasce and of her long struggle to gain cus- of the boy who had been by the father in 1959 single in a 3-2 victory over Milwaukee. Although Don Drysdale gave up 11 hits to Chicago Cubs, Los Angeles Dodgers' 25-garne urin- nor of l962 got off on the right foot with a 5-1 decision at Wrigley Field. Maury Wills. fleet Dodger shortstop, left the game because of an injured on SHUTS OUT METS Ernie Broglio shut out New York Mets with only two hits, 7-0. while St. Louis Cardinals bombed Roger Craig and two successors for 14 hits at the Polo Grounds. Brogllo retired 20 in a row from the second to the ninth and. allowed only one hit—a lead off single by Larry Bur- right i the first—until Bur. after the separation even ttwugh she had been granted custody by the court in The Congo, she said. The child, an eiflit-year-old boy named Manic, was born a year previous to the separation. Acting for Mrs. Menasce is John P. Nichol-arm. Gerald R. Foster, QC, and K. A. Martin, QC. conducted the cross-exactn- nation. acting for Dr. , who is at present practicing dentistry in Souris. y right opened the ninth with a double. Pete Ward. the rookie Chl- cago White Sox acquired from Baltimore in the big deal for Luis Aparicio and Al Smith, came through with a three-run homer in the seventh that gave the White Sox a 7-5 edge over Detroit. Cleveland ripped into Camil Pascual for four homers. ing Minnesota 5-4 on a two-run blast by Woody Held in the sev- enth inning. The largest crowd of the seven days ames was the 37,- 781 that turned out in chilly De- troit Baltimore and Washington were not scheduled. Two openers were scheduled at night, Boston at Los Angeles in the American and Cincinnati at Philadelphia in the National. beat- te lottetown men. Lowell Elmer Ling, 19, of 23 Kirkwood Drive, and Wendell H. MacPherson, 35, of 51 Upper Hillsboro Street, were asphy- xiated in the cab of a truck at West Royalty. The truck owned by Central Creameries Ltd‘., was found in a snowbank on the Lower Mal- peque Road about two mile 5 west of the Queens Arms corn er about 6 am. yesterday. The bodies were found by a motorist whose car became stal- Heath Macquarrie. of parliament elect tor Queens is leaving this morning for 0t- tawa where he will deal with a variety of constituean mat- tors. The Queens member, who ’ ounth elec- He said he would not be at all surprised, owever, if the Liberal leader would before lens have an opportunity of form- ing an administration. In that he believed that every in the national welfare and to al. low for the implementation of vance poll number three. The other candidates each received three votes, P 3, Westmoreland, gave 41 votes to Gilli: and 45 to Le- wis; 38 to MacLean and 42 to MacQuarrie. The only NDP votes were. two for Alex Mac- t" can. Pleasant Grove, poll 43, re- corded 35 votes for Gillis and 33 for Lewis, compared to 34 for MacLean and 33 for Mac-Quar- rie. NDP again had two votes for MacLesn. Poll 61, Grand View South gave no vote to Arsenault; 29 each to Gillis and Lewis, one vote to Alex Machan, 41 votes to . Angus MacLean. and 42 votes to MacQuarrle. Reports still appeared lacking tor tWo advance polls. Go the basis of returns already in the new totals a : Arsenarult 281: Gdllis 3,899; Lewis 9,023; Alex MacLean 556; J, Angus MscLesn 11,499; Mac- quarrie 11,456. . Yanks thumped Kansas City 8-2 behind Ralph Terry. San Francisco Giants. de- Ifcnding dromps in the National ILeague. fell back on more EASTON FUNERAL — The funeral for Miss Maria Eoston was held Monday, April 8 from the MacLean Funeral Home to St. Peter's Cathoth-al whee ser- vice was conducted by Arch- deacon J.R. Davies. Pallbearers were Wendell Wood. Frank Gil- lis. Major Mack» and Edward Boston. Interment took place in Ironwood cemetery. familiar names to bash Houston 9-2 with the aid of homers by Willie Willie Alou. Pittsburgh cashed in Its first dividend on Bob Bailey, the “H.000 bonus baby, when Bailey clogged his first major VI. . McCovey sod Felipe SEEK SMOGLESS AIR LONDON (CE—Three Cana- dian army officers stationed in Britain have advertised in the personal columns of The Times seeking suitable shooting ter- rain within 50 miles of London. They style themselves as expe- rienced guns who “want an op- portunity to breath something better than smog from time o v: E to SEND CUT league home run and a big this EASTER Lilies $1.50 UP llyirangoas $3.00 UP affortlls 82.50 UP Tulips 82.50 UP Azalea: $4.00 UP Potted Mlns $3.00 UP 'I'IONS. FLOWERS WIRED ALL OVER THE WORLD wcslmrnn Delivered anywhere on the Island We now our own pints. Greenhouses " moron REWINDING & REPAIRS Storey Electric Ltd. 136 Prince SL. (‘h'iown our. 4-7341 III! fi-HOUR SERVICE I R' W; Imam; . c" -: F;- FLOWERS. ROSES CARNA- DAFFODILS. TULTPS Phone 4-3525 open for inspection. TwoAsphyxiated RoyaHy times 105-52. Neither Coach Will Concede 0 Inch In Series WINDSOR. Ont. Neither coach Harry Watson of‘ Windsor Bulldogs, nor playing-‘ coach Doug McPhee of Moncton Hawks will concede the opposi- tion an inch in the current Eastern Canada Allan Cup final series. The best-of-seven set is tiedI at 1-1, and the third game is on tap tonight. To date. it has been the outstanding play of Moncton goaltender Jean-Guy Morissette and the overall strength of the Windsor club that has produced the series deadlock. ‘ Windsor has outshot the Mari- (CPi— : Lewis Perinbam, centre, is seen talking with Miss Helen Yeo (left) and Douglas Boylen before addressing the P.E.I. United Nations Association at gomery Hall last night. Mr_ OFFICIAL ADDRESSES UN ASS’N Perinbam is the secretary of the Canadian National Com- mission for UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization). He i is speaking on the topic “Can- the annual meeting in Mont- a nations". THE CARD SHOP da and the developing and they out- scored them 8-5, but Moris- sette's brilliance threatened to steal oth games until awks went sour in the second period of Monday’s second con- 1-9 0 m c-v- McPhee, with a number of minor injuries plaguin g his charges, contends “my players have not been skating as well as they can, but ' be different tomorrow night. He slammed his club through an hour - long drill Tuesday morning. just 10 hours after they absorbed a 6-2 lacing at the hands of the 'Dogs and is determined to step up the tempo of his club's attack. led behind the two-ton truck. He notified the RCMP. The motor of the truck w a 5 still running when the victims of carbon monoxide poisoning were found. Dr. L.E. Prowse, coroner, announced no inquest would be b‘ eld. A highway plow was dispatch- ed to aid an ambulance and pol- Ford’s Miseries Have Vanished ' KANSAS CITY (AH—Whitey Ford‘s shoulder miseries have vanished. Manager Ralph Houk heaved a sigh of relief Tuesday andrnamed Ford as his starting pitcher for Thursday when New York Yankees open their home Heath Macquarrie Leaves For Ottawa This Morning czar“...“artisan: IIIENMW th Progressive Conservative ice in reaching the scene. The men were returning to Charlottetown from New Glas- gow after making deliveries for season at Yankee Stadium against Baltimore Orioles. “Whitey worked three innings Power, Phone Lines Being Restored cd by late yesterday afternoon, but many secondary still blocked at press time last night. 0 Greeting Cards rday morning due to the fact O Art Supplies that there was no traffic. . Games All main highways were open- . Good Books For Children I: Adult! mails We 103 Grafton sr. Dial 4-9974 Communication 3 nd poWer was gradually being restored to many parts of the Island last night as crews worked around the clock to repair broken power lines and clear1 blocked roads. in wake of Mon- ‘ day’s snowstorm. Telephone crews were workw " in the Southmt district‘ and on line damage on the“ Hillsboro River bridge. Com. munication with Montague and} most points east of Southport‘ was restored by last night. Jack ower of Maritime Electric said that all line crews ‘ were w ‘ on the broken power lines and that nepairs‘ would depend on brow soon the roads were opened by snow- ows. The CNR dispatcher reported‘ the Borden ferry did not‘ In Memory Of PETER W. PATE Always Loved. Always Remembered. Wife Jean, daughters Marcia, Norma, Elizabeth and Patricia. Passed away April 10. I961. make her first crossing yester-I Sunday and his shoulder didn’t bother him when he warmed up Monday," said Houk. “I wanted to wait to see how he felt Tuesday before I made it offi- cial." Ford, 34, had a 17-8 record last season and was 25-4 in 1961 their employers, Central Cream- eries. Mr. Ling is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor S. Ling, 23 Kirk- wood Drive. Mr. MacPherson is married and has three children. when he won the Cy Young award as the majors‘ outstand- ing pitcher. ART’S TAXI LUCKY NUMBER THIS WEEK 26625 lllAt. 4-5586 Isl. Chev. Olds. Ltd. A ‘ fl. A /" r w EL MngNT-END8: HE party with its large number of seats tln'oughout the "country wm still in a strong position and there was no reason tor any supporter of the party fiecling chagrin over Monday’s results LED SUNOCO PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Jo- seph N. Pew Jr., 76, chairman of the board of Sun Oil Com- party, died Tuesday. Pew and his brother, J. Howard Pew, di- rected Sun Oil since the death in 1912 of their father, Joseph N. Pew Sr., the founder. The Pcws were long regarded as major powers in the highest cir- cles of the state and national Republican party. /,/" Stops tire ware and faulty steering too . . . We realign front ends to new car specifications . . . See Us Toda 203 Fitzroy St.. 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