he ae has bought the Southport fish hatchery from the federal gov- | ernment and. according to. ‘*Premier Walter R. Shaw con- Morell Plans Sportsmen's - POSSIBLE TOURIST ATTRACTION | sideration ts being given te developing. the site into a tourist attraction. The form- er_ hatchery received a brief inspection from the premier INSPECTED | Wendall MacKay, pre- executive. assistant; Premier Shaw, and. Hon. | | Philip Matheson, minister of { highways and public works. | | Dinner To Boost Rink Fund : <i Se : ‘ ¥ i older residents of the village. On opening night a special train arrived from Charlottetown with PSSERREC ect iit reel = sfFth dinner is being : 8 3 will measure 75 by 180) The building will — have | a central heating unit, spacious | dressing rooms and a canteen, Ap eight-foot promenade around the ice surface provides enough for three rows of seats may be added jater, if works program. Williams Murphy is the contractor for LORNE VALLEY Mr.. end Mrs. James Mac- were recent visitors to Fanningbrook, where they were of Mr, and Mrs. Wen- dell Jay. | Mr. and Mrs. Bennett Crane visitors te Charlottetown y. . Margaret Mooreside and son, left recently for their in Melrose, Saskatchewan, visiting relatives and in this vicinity, . Peter MacLeod was a visitor to Charlottetown. of Lorne Valley Institute met at. the i fet, [ He I ff the business period a time was spent while a lonch was enjoyed. H i president of Trump Lid., Mrs. Peter: MacLeod | ; January meeting. Fol- Hatton was the | sonintaw = and | Kf i REZE It was a big night for Morell, | teams had to travel at least 2 ‘was something of |.miles to get one for a game or ause 1 | . Morell has always heen a | center of hockey enthusiasm, | even during the years when the village was without a rink and workout. ; With a new rink in the com- munity, it is expected § that | Morell will develop some top- | notch teams, and perhaps the rivalry “that exists between Morell and places like Peake's, Mt. Stewart, St. Peter’s, and | Georgetown in the Kings Coun- | ty Baseball League will be, carried to the icelanes. But, right now the village is looking for some $6,000 ‘to fin- ish their new rink, and they | | hope to pick up a share of that | inext Tuesday evening. The | Sportsmen's Dinner, by the way, | may become an annual event in | the community, depending on e success of this year's effort. | — Small-Town Businessman OLIVER, B.C. (CP)—W. E. can compete in big-time bus- iness. ‘ The 43-year-old inventor is of Oliver, a community of 1,750 at the southern end of the Okana- gan Valley. An army convinced him he should try life in Oliver so he came here from Vancou- ver at the end of the Second World War and set up a one- man machinery repair shop. Today Ted Trump. heads an organization that employs 100 persons, “including army buddy Colin McDongld, sales -man- ager | Annual sales total more than $1,000,000, and_ machine mp's invention is being man- the federal-provincial | ufactured under licence in the United States, Britain, France, | | Argentina and Australia and is | i being sold in 43 countries. BUILD NEAR TORONTO His own plant here has just completed a, new addition and a branch plant is going up on a Trump Ltd., has gained a world-wide reputation as an au- thority on hydraulic aeria! plat- forms, a rapidly growing field comprising various mechanical means of raising a man to any ‘given height for safe and easy | access to such tasks as clean- sng “Sag rees, pa ings maintaining them, de-icing air- craft and fighting fires One of Mr .Trump's devices, which he calls. a Snorkel, is widely sold to ‘municipal fire departments. A fireman stand- jimg safely inside a basket-like jaerial platform can be raised |as high as an eight-storey build- | ing to rescue trapped persons or direct a stream of more tian | 1,000 gallons a minute of water into the heart of a fire. INVENTED FRUIT PICKER Trump says the fact started business in Oliver, » fast ways to gain access, to fryit on trees—something better than a N51 he build. Giraffe, A man f a s as giz zt 8 e dl Rae i a if i i 2 ¢ i rs i > : rk : z fF z Z P i f f 2382 is 3 ii | : a & & | *» provincial basis, should also two - acre site near Toronto.__*°¥ an aerial plat- Works Out Success Story jto study industrial needs and Thornton - Trump offers proof |demonstraté uses of his ma- | $2,000,000 toward a new search that a small-town businessman -chinery, has orders for equip- | for peace. jment that he hasn’t yet de- | | signed. More Councils On Productivity ‘Are Suggested | TORONTO. (CP) — Productiv- ity councils, already forming on i|be set - up at local levels, H. George De Young, chairman of | the National Productivity Coun- cil, said here in an. address to the Toronfo Rotary Club. The national council, he nars on the subject, one in |March and one later. “If we can make them sue- | ceed more -will follow. We are |inviting heads of companies and representatives of labor to sit down together and look at the problem of how we should work together fo make Canada | Mr. De Young, president of Atlas Steels Ltd., said Canada |must prepare for 1970 competi- tion and he outlined what other countries are doing toward the ‘The prime minister had prom- | “*hasd’t taken all the disabilities ‘Being Sought JISLAND NEWS PAGE léw Products, New Displays Mark Competitive Business - | uri i Co : Canodida Prose’ Bédeces EAter| dia la we ean 2 Montague, Souris, Kings unty New products. new forms for | today's hotly competitive bus |4 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., _ 1962. , eee : Se NoComment mete eae sag ru ck a 0 ; can On Proposal your tare boss: ' ‘ In any event, your taste and ° ‘ conyenience are being consid- ras) A truckmen’s association ered as ition’ ial ah s. spokesman declined. to com never ment on a new “road. | Cofrect analysis and quick ac- OSS ; re 0 eS Conaadion National patie - - ire ae oe way, : ' : |S Sealeil bode dee Pent timid seme ee ‘The province’s hospitals* are, hospttal care now. They are not | # lal body, the Public Utill- nificant repercussions more operating at a financial loss, ac-| interested in supporting drives Yes Commission of this PrOVIP-) Kasic' forms of the meee cording - of the| for funds—it's hopeless now.” | **- such . Other complaints believed to| A decision on the prdposal| Sik” We aériculture, and on em be in the brief are: hospital ad-| Will probably not be reached ministration is bogged down oy | @ month, at the earliest, PROCESS sPUDS d red tape and restrictive rulings; |i was, learned 7 ¢s 0 Fdey| Salada Foods Lid, for vin it is difficult to hire competent | si +The ’ "| stance, announces that it will help as budgets do not provide | yi geen Cornwall, vice-| PrOces# more than » 50,000,000 large enough salaries for per venient of ha wall, pounds, or 833,000 bushels, of po- sons who have qualifications re- | ? Maritime Mot-| tatees during the current sea- quired by the commission; and nsport Association, said i that reeord keeping practices of yosteutay ‘at gop eret ‘con . the commission in regard to) 11 legal = = Mathe- Pulp Boat = ital insurance premiums are) 44, OC ‘the truckmen’s ‘ -| inadequate. has’ decided to” withhold “coer Mak Pp : ° ment until a decision is em es ort STRONGER BID? ’ “It -has_ been intimated that — @: Ciineaia le dt eas . , the association is prepared to) . general; SOURIS — Resotute pokesman said the sunmit 9 stronger brief if gov- | Superintendent of highway set-| arrived in Gourig last even- commission “has cut our bud-| ornment action is not taken on| Vices, CNR Atlantic Region,| ing considerably iced up after gets wherever it could, and the)),<+ week's brief. | suggested last night a new Ducking storms off the New- Citi hi point has been reached where|< Hon Hubert McNeill, MD,|‘tamsportation service would foundiand coast. The vessel | izens ip aa have no —_ of get- minister of health, said ‘yester- speed deliveries. - ae a was ig by. They're all im the red.| day that the cabinet discussed | , Ste Planned Whether or not it's the com-| the brief, but ofere ane cam | tail was making a “complete a a ER AS p missions’ fault, we are not! ment is made om it “it will have | study” of the operations of the Eastern Pro | sony oe ducts Lid., with ‘loading opera- ; sure, but it is to some extent. | to be investigated further."” He | commission “in an endeavour to! -tiong scheduled. te cust’ thio OTTAWA (CP)-—_A step to| The commission doesn’t seem.to|-said it was-‘‘too early” to spec- | iron-out-any problenis that may mtning ‘ put naturalized Canadians and | have fands available to make) ulate on whether or not any | exist in.adminiatration.” The vessel encountered ne native - born Canadians on the/ normal payments to hospitals, | changes would be made in ad-| Members of the commission | difficulty from ice in the har. same footing with to “Something has to be done.| ministration of the Hospital | met _at the. commission office | bor which cracked earlier is loss of citizenship will come| we can’t ask the public for | Services Commission |. yesterday but Dr. L.E. Prowse, | the day and most of the ice hemes the Commons this ses- —" as the public feels that; Premier Walter R. Shaw said | chairman, declined to comment | was moved out by the ship's *- w. Pickerigill be é — is- paying for wae time ago that his govern-' on the. brief of the association. ‘ entrance imto port. vista-Twillingate) gave notice | ad ; that he plans to reintro- Murray River Phone 70 Montague | - Phone 220 Funeral Director Service with Dignity and Honour. Also 24 Hour_Ambulance duce legislation to amend the Bill of Rights adopted in 1960. The former citizenship minis- ter said the object is to prevent loss of citizenship by natura- lized Canadians who live abroad for more than 10 years without returning to Canada. The only way a native-born Canadian now can lose his citizenship is to be- come a citizen of another. coun- try. . “This is just my way of get- ting Mr. Diefenbaker to live up to his\eampaign\promises,’’ Mr. | Pickersgill said in an interview. |. ised during. the 1957 -election campaign to provide complete equality between naturalized and. native-born Canadians but away” since then. $2 Million For Peace Plan OTTAWA (GP)—Dr. Norman | z. Alcock, founder of the Cana- dian Peace Research Institute, announced here that his or- | ganization will -ask Canadians later this month to contribute Leen He also told a press confer- ence that if the institute is sue- cessful in its. appeal to the pub- lic it wffl ask the federal gov- | ernment for another $2,000,000 ito help finance a crash pro gram to find a formula for, peace through science and rea son. Dr. Alcock said he is con- vinced that Canadians are inter- ested. in the institute’s new ap- proach to peace and will re spond to the public appeal for funds. He said federal govern- ment officials had expressed “sympathetic inttrest’’ in the work of the institute and would welcome information from an ° ng body on methods to prevent war. The institute’s objective is, to study in the cold light of sci- ence the conditions that lead to war. It would issue public re portg_analyzing particular prob- lems that could lead to conflict in the hope that they could be solved by reason. , Dr. Alcock said committees now have been established in 10 we. cities to conduct the public ap- s peal for funds, Both the general public and Canadian industry would be asked to contribute. Mr. De Young's were contained in a text made available to the press in ad- vance of delivery. - | same end, ‘ comments Company Officers Are Blamed For Million In Debts NEW YORK (AP)—St. Regis Paper Company said here it had discovered debts af ap- proximately $1,000,000 that were | created by credit operations of | itwo senior officers of z> Z a Hs the sub- sidiary, Bates Do Brasil, S.A., jplaced in preventative -ership. St. Regia also has: asked a police investigation by Brazilian authorities and planned legal ings im federal rt’ in New ‘York i 75,5 iy gf G | i Ht i isk i Hi i , Ft j F ; 5 ¥ 1 ! i q 7 Trujillo's | Daughters Seek Fortune’. MONTREAL (CP)'— Two if deposited $114,917 and $99,- in. two separate ‘joint ac- counts last November at a Mont- real branch of the Bank of Nova Scotia é li Ee zi ~——Chartottetewn. — : Pee Canadian’ National Is setting the pace in the Atlantic Provinces ... to give better, faster service to both shippers and consignees. We have added trucks to rail to provide a much improved shipping service. - Pe tae : Now many “Classes of ‘shipments — including LCL — are handled to many points with the speed of Express...thanks to a developing system of rail-heads and satellite rail-heads which links the roads to rails Where most needed. CN's Rail and Road Service will keep more and more shipments in our care all the way...and-progressively _ dispense with commodity restrictions. ia” To find out all about this new, complete CN Rail and Road Speed Service, phone, write or call: : 7 * S..W. Le . - . or your local CN agent. ee *