' - on - , z este. alk yee en — p : Se thseie> chee : nm: S r i 0a) pw ¥ Y omenagnal 2 feuds ? ers fine 8. RN te rote teteterer: ‘ |16 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Oct. 20, 1965. “By 1988, 1,000,000 barrels 2) e liquids will be moving from . Source Of Electric Power manne the Won selon T | Considered By 4Experts sii, sire" i. 5, q onto. ; nag jet (CP) oy - areas are: réve power brought. As for gas, forecasts showed uels a uranium will pi a in over a distance of 500 miles that domestic supplies would major role in the supply of Ca- or more; coal brought in from provide some 3,700,000,000 cubic FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29th jnadian electrical power im the Eastern Canada or the United feet a day to Canadian markets jnext 20 years but British Colum- States; gas brought from West- from the West Coast to Quebec. bia, Manitoba, Quebec and the ern Canada or oi! brough! from Maritime provinces should still Western Canada or the eastern DOUBLES POSTING a be able to depend on hydro-elee- seaboard.” OTTAWA (CP)—Appointment : trie power, four energy experts Coal will ‘he Canada’s only of Ross Campbell, 4, as Cana agreed at 2 symposium here. major solid fuel in future years, 4a’s first ambassador to Al- c f ae a ogee a. said W. A. Devereau,. manager, Seria, was announced Friday by The Monta R Hi b ] nae t ee adicind’ than for |Canadian business dovelogquent the external affairs department. n al g British Columbia will aanel that Montreal Engineering Co Mr. Compa - centage ts Schoo ectically all of. its | It could continue to have a reside in Belgrade, Temes a, he a hydr stabilizing influence on energy Where he was appoi Cana- 8.30 P.M. - apebe vero. sources. leosts up to 1985, he added da’s ambassador last year. He Mg week oniens ae By 1985 Canada would be con. wil malke regular visite to Al- Montreal branch of the Cana suming 65,000,000 tons of coal a seria dian Institute of Mini ona ee” and 40,000,000 tons of this Metallurgy ae for Snore power Only 20 per ; }cen anada’s coal consump- Saal taarenc oes Aco ition now was used in power fuels or puclear’ power, emcept |@°2¢ration. in Manitoba where hydro power |, Although the low cost of coal would be the~most important. in Western Canada will assure Ontario could meet its needs|{t 2" important part in meeting through the use of malar future energy needs, it will fossil fuels while Quebec would |™ ¢¢t increasing competition depend on hydro generation, |with oil and patural gas, it was Mr. Fournier believed thermal |2&Teed. BASEBALL TEAMS ARE HONORED jor thermal generation would | AF. Sullivan, Montague, is won the Island crown and al- Sullivan received congratula- take a larger share in Quebec | SELF - SERVICE For The Finest In pictured with the captains of most won the Maritime champ- tions from many sources dur- ftom 1980 onwards. Reading the juvenile and bantam base jonship. On the right ie Billy ing the paniquet for his out- ae eee ee Et Laundry & Drycleaning H] 1... sneth Langlord $12.98 ee Te in ” ny ' Conohon of the Juvenile team standing ‘job of organizing-and | production. 1 @ Economical “Victoria R. 1.” lezion Home. On the left is winners of the Istand and promoting baseball in the Mon- |\GREAT POTENTIAL ‘ | Bw Easy and speedy “The Making of a President” Joe Cain of the Bantams who Maritime championship. Mr. tague area. “The potential production of Aa - Theodore H. White $8.50 @ Visit our Car Wash als penltntcaneees , aS — - = “Is Paris Burning” $7.75 e jhave been making recently |&t ion kilowatts, approxt- | M : | about sible ex; of Cana- mately equivalent. to the needs | S & See: ea Many Questions Face Gov't dian wae — jof the country for the next 10} Eden St Ch'town Par ey ~~. J w PICKERSGILL , Mullafly - e “I was talking about the fu- |years. + +e ‘ i ° ° e : bode Prior To Exporting Of Water tz. wien water may'be avery “Until the present time, aur ; important export,” the prime |Veys have Minister of Transport M.P. for Kings minister said 4s not economically feasible. Fu- OTTAWA (CP)—Many° diffi- degrees of purity will these de- : ture technological developments MISS cult. and important questions velopments require? What water Mr. Pearson added that Mr. as well as the exhaustion of fos- DON'T FIND OUT HOW TO have to be answered before Can- supplies do we have in reserve {Laing was talking about the in-- si) or nuclear fuels would im- e d Da > eda ‘can consider.gny possible (to serve future growth of our | mediate future, while he was [prove the competiveness of this Big Masquera e nce “ ’ a irreversible scheme to export country?" talking about long range poss' Project.” : MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT FOR MORE’ our water: Resources Minister | Prime Minister Pearson said | pitities. The experts agreed atomic ’ ; Laing said here. in a television broadcast Oct. 15 yy) ister has Power may soon be practical in Saturda ’ October 30 os Mr. Laing, speaking to 500 /his government is planning talks | resources mini @S highly industrialized ; ‘ @ ' members of the Canadian Insti- with the United States on the indicated im recent speeches |p F. Fortune, manager, project | At Rollaway Club tute on Pollution So said. | Possibility of exporting or e ‘that he is critical of an Ameri- product planning atomic power cia e I ra Ov. “Water is critically important |verting' Canadian water south can proposal, the North Ameri- department of the Canadian “ ‘ i ‘ to all industrial, agricultural, |the border. lean Water and Power Aifiance General Electric Co. Lid.. said, Dancing from 9:00 til 12:00 , developments may we expect in| But Mr. Pearson later said | which would provide the western can be competitive in areas Musie by the Hy Notes 3 : Canada and where will these there: was no difference betwe-n | United States with Canadian such as Toronth and Montreal, Prizes for best costumes Admission 91.00 J come” How much water of what lstabements he and Mr. Laing | water- | “The alternatives in these L and urban development: What pet SIMILAR \500 - megawatt power stations Inserted by Kings County Liberal Asan. cj << Cp ; bs ba g tA There’s one here for you at Savings you won't want to miss. All demonstrators carry our General Motors Warranty so BUY NOW 3 Late Model Specials 1963 CHEVROLET Standard 6 cylinder, 4 door sedan, radio. : Radio. as . motor. Tu-tone 1965 PARISIENNE ‘ Strato-Chief ae Was $2150 Now ~ Wes $1900 Now CONVERTIBLE 4 Door Seda f Red, white top, black interior. Automatic. re j $ $ 1964 PONTIAC Big V-8 motor, power steering, power | Tu-ton, automatic 6 eylinder, tinted wind- . brakes, radio. Reverberating speaker. | shield. 2 speed electric windshield wash- : : uae Standard 6 cylinder, 4 door DEMONSTRATORS “ER «1963 Ford Galaxie “[ 1962 Ford Galaxie $7 895 7 mi 4 Door Sedan. V-8 engine. dé Geek. eee a 1 tinted windshield, 2 speed electric wind- shield washers. Bucket seats. 825. white | ¢T. wheeel discs, radio, back up lights, wall tires. Discs, Back-up lights. Floor | white. wall tires. Heavy duty suspension. mats. Chrome door trim. f = td : ay 1961 Chev. 1960 Pontiac =a $ zn Was $ ; deat 52950 1 , 4 Door Sedan. 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Floor mats. mats, seat covers. “=” $3650 eee A Preston Wood, George Carragher, Alden Rodd, Gerry Corragher, Leigh ‘Crabbe, Rolie Johnston NOW ; ‘ ) TUT ee a —— Terms ‘AT LOWER PRICES bie ee HILLSIDE MOTORS LTD. | On The Spot Financing Laurentian, 4 door sedan, standard : ne 2 sons Se = dS * cy’ r, %, hacen Mag Dan Grecaae wane $ , wipeer, vied! date, Guia Wah, $ "Where Customer Service and Satisfaction Come First" 9 wall tires. radio, rear seat speaker, floor mats t : | “ mirror, heavy duty suspension, : Was $3590 — NOW Was $3650 — NOW 7 ST. PETER’S ROAD : PARKDALE , : a = Sa