Rane ia BIS MARKS ST. PATRICK'S DAY members of the Bene- volent Irish Society, John Coady, left, and Pius Smith, right, prepare to place a wreath at the cenotaph on Queen Square as part of the St. Patrick’s Day «lc: Saturday. Following the mony at the monument, the members paraded via Grafton Queen, Richa d and Great High Mass Following the cere- members paraded through _ Water Pressure Lack Said Report Feature BY RALPH CAMERON Guardian-Patriot Staff Writer It is an old saw that you have to fight fire with fire, but most members of the city fire department would prefer to have an adequate supply of water for the job. Only recently local firemen | had pointed comments to make on the water situation in Charlottetown, particularly in the east end where they claim both water and hy- drants are inadequate for pro- tection. But the east end of the city | fs only one of the many sec- | ens, particularly in the older Charlottetown, where there ‘is insufficient welee supply — or pressure — provide needed fire protection. NO GUIDE AVAILABLE The need has been known, but nothing was done about {t for the simple reason that city authorities had nothing to guide them in providing a remedy. However, last year the Commissioners of Sewers and Water Supply, hired a firm of experts to examine the situa- tion and report on the needs That their report contains arresting, and possibly even frightening information is sur- mised even Known as the Pitometer Re- | Port, the findings of the New ‘ork water supply experts will be discussed by the commis- sioners with the City Couneil at an early joint meetin COUNCIL PROVIDES FUNDS One of the peculiarities of the local arrangements is that though the Commi leaers. | have absolute author thelr own field, it is the Clty” Couneil which has to provide the funds with which the wa- LOCAL BRIEFS Dr. W.R. — by plane from Halifax here he had a check-up in ictoria General Hospital. HOME . Carson arrived Sat- ROGERSON FUNERAL — The funeral for James D. Rogerson | could jointly supply ter department expands. ight be of interest to cae to know something of where their city water comes from and how it gets to them. The present system was in- augurated back in 1888 with the city water supply coming from the pumping station on the Malpeque Road. Old tim- ers will remember when a favorite Sunday —_ afternoon drive with the horse and bug- gy was out to the pumping station. It was one of the local wonders 1 the time, as prior to that the people got their water trem local wells | oF bought it by the pail from vendors who obtained a large cask of it out at Spring Park. Now the supply comes te | the city through a big 12-inch | main along the Malpeque Road as far as Gerald street. But from that point on con- ditions are not as they might be so far as hav- ing sufficient pressure for fire fighting is concerned. From Gerald street the sys- tem branches out using eight- inch mains to carry the supply further into the cit is an oddity of mathema- ties that two eight-inch mains cannot the pressure provided by one a inch m: PRESSURE REDUCED The reason is that the pres- sure is based on the square of the diameter of the main. In | other words a 12inch main can give 12 times 12, or 144, pounds while an eight inch main can give only 64, Thus two pipes of the latter type only 128 pounds of pressure. When those main are redue- ed in size — as they are in older areas of the city near the waterfront the pressure obviously is reduced. ‘That it is reduced to alarm- ing proportions is known to members of the fire depart- ment who have to depend on an adequate pressure through their hoses to control danger- | ous fires in residential areas. SOURCES ADDED There are sections of the city where the water pressure is only one-third that requir- ed while in many more it is only one-half. At one important point where the aes comes is 2,500 inch, thet” aval vallable, ts ealy at pounds, Another sear the heart of the merena- tile area requires 3,300 pounds pressure but has only 1,030. Since the early days two ad- ditional sources of supply have been made available as the city expanded and its water is grew. The original Malpeque sta- tion has two wells used in normal operation and an auxiliary for an - Brackley station from 18 wells while th the "Un. ation gets its water from lis. The big problem faced to- day is not an adequate sour ce of supply — the city now has that—but adequate means of getting that supply to every section of, Charlottetqwn sctticlent force to meet emergenci Otficials believe that at tae resent time Shout @ per cost of needed for fire fighting wall able Decease antiquat in use. In other the supply is cutting down the amount which could be had unable to bring sufficient pres- sure to bear on the flames. That this situation could eas fly cost Sone lives of many. citi rens is obvious. It is hoped by officials that when the entire Pitometer Re the business district and back to the club rooms on Gréfton | Street, Firemen Busy An Weekend Four fire alarms, three them yesterday, kept city ‘ce men hopping over the weekend Shortly after noon on Saturday firemen were santa $0 See by a oe 8 malfun wr pprinkder ee called ee to and MacLeod Ltd. shortly after ‘one o'clock Sunday morning and lan overheated oil stove at 195 ‘Cumberland Street cailed fire men out about 11 o'clock Sun- day mornin ‘The third Sunday alarm came |. A malfunctioring sprinkler system also was the | cause of the alarm. ee damnege was reported from of the alarms. Near Montague MONTAGUE — The Montague | fire department was called late yesterday to extinguish a fire |in the home of Mr. and Mrs. ee McCarron, Commercial Starting from the oil stove, the fire had gained considerable | headway and caused extensive | damage to the interior of the | home before it was Peete ate erase, ere EASTERN BRIEFS. SPENT WEEKEND Donald MacLaren, Moncton, N.B., spent the weekend at his home in Montague. ENTERS HOSP! Elmer Millar, Stree arbor North has entered ings County Memorial ‘Hospital for observation and treatment, SUNDAY GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. Penna Moore, pomam e were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs, J. J. Stewart, Montague. jUESTS Mr, and Mrs. Leslie Campbell | has as their weekend guest thelr |daughter Miss Doria Cami | and her friend Miss Anne Mac- Ewen of Charlottetown, AT NEW PERTH Miss Bessie Stewart of the | staff of the Provinclal Sanator- |ium spent the weekend — with her oarents, Mr. snd Mra. Tra Stewart, New Perth, Kinos County Memorial Hospital. aque. TO TIGNISH Mr. and Mrs. John Miller, Cardigan, are in Tignish due to the illness of Mrs. Miller’s moth jer, Mrs. John R. Gavin, a ‘4 patient in the Western Hos- pital. Dunlap and Mrs, Nora All its top leaders in Algeria | absence by Lea of Halifax are in Charlotte- are fugitives from justice and | bunal last July for their parts in Most of them town this week to be with their a Damaged | CEASE-FIRE (Continued from page 1) which included the cease - fire agreement and ot ont e in | tentions of both les. Belkacem Krim, vice-premier | of the Algerian provisional gov- ernment, signed for the insur- | gents and Joxe, Transport Min- | ister Robert Buron and Jean de | Broglie, secretary of ere for | i ried for Fran Tunis; Tunisia the seat of fe rerarisiaee femeecae ee |radio played an insurgent |marching song and then the cease-fire was announced. An insurgent leader in Tunis | said: “We must build a ae | perous Algeria and work for new epoch of co-operation with | France.” | In Evian, Krim smiled for the first time since the negotiations | began an reporters as he stepped | into the helicopter taking the in- surgent a back to its | base in Switzerland. Joxe said the text of the agreement bites be published in a few days time. He did not reveal the details | of the agreement but ce that |in all negotiations “‘the organ- tration of self - determination as the point of departure Dee iwortiaeater nei ein e | ing point. We also studied the guarantees for self-determina- | tion. | PREPARE FOR FUTURE Joxe said the negotiators | made preparations for the fu- ture and in particular for the independence of Algeria and co- operation with France. ‘The agreement included plans for economic, cultural and tech- = operation in Alge ndiiin/anaretwtacel orice has “essential interests,” Joxe said. Military questions were | also’ decided. im Paris, a government| man announced that the | Direuch[eatisee oil test today and an extraordinary session of the National Assembly—called |toceter by telegrams — wil vie. ponte will hear a special message from de Gaulle followed by a y by Pre- mier Michel Debre, ‘explaining the cease-fire and the political agreements reached. PIRATE (Continued from page 1) The underground government. will be called the “National Council of Resistance to Dicti torship,” Jouhaud said, but the | names of its members would | not be disclosed at present. The success or failure of the provisional administration set up under the cease-fire agree- ment to govern Algeria until a - determination referendum will depend on its efforts to foil the secret army. INCLUDE BEST MEN | The chiefs of the terrorist group include generals and colo- | nels once considered among the best technicians and strategists in the French military. It has spread with the com- plicity—willing or forced—of a large section of the European Population in Algeria, including members of the government, | army and police. The secret army murders op- ponents and then announces the “executions” in leaflets, usually describing the victims as “trait- ors” who were “ barassing."” It spreads its view in these leaflets and by radio and television broadcasts that into the regular service. are under the sen- tence of death, passed in their | A 6 m.p.h. police chase over more than a mile and a half of Streets in the north “ad of the city at about 11 p.m. Friday, re- sulted in Sterling Pursey, 8 Gay Avenue, Charlottetown, appear- ing in ‘city police court before Magistrate A. J. Haslam Satur. day, charged with driving with out due care and attention. The testimony of Cnst. Doug- las Taylor of the city police force revealed that the chase started at the intersection of Euston Street and Elm Avenue; | and ended when the accu: drove his car into a driveway ‘ot a residence on DesBrisay cent CHASE ROUTE Between those two points, the | accused, £ followed by the police | patrol, sped east ‘Tuston, north on Walthen Drive, west on |Allen Street and Kirkwood | Drive, south on North River Road, and east on McGill Ave- nue and DesBrisay Crescent. At most intersections, | cused made no attempt to slack- en his speed. water turning into the drive- | way, Cnst. Taylor stated that | ISLAND NEWS PAGE Charlottetown and Queens County The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. March 19, 1962. 5| Police Chase Results In Arrest, Conviction from a resident-on Green Street resulted in the accused being | arrested in a barn on a Green | Street property. Following conviction, | the magistrate imposed a fine of $40 and costs or 20 days in jail, and ordered that the opera- tor’s licence of the accused be | suspended for three months. THEFT CHARGE Appearing for sentence on a charge of theft, John Lawless, | Charlottetown, was sentenced 60 days in Queens County jail. At his arraignment Friday, the accused had pleaded: guilty mel to the theft of one tri seams iron, and ove clock-radio e property of Marjorie White, Ghantctawn, and valued un- ‘Attempting to take beer into the Rollaway dance hall Friday | night, an accused was arrested and charged with having intoxi- cating liquor in his possession in a place other than mnie _ dence. The accused p gully and wan fined sso 85d costs or 30 Failure to a for “stop” “A Lump on a Log”, (above) was a prize winner in a black and white photo competition on “table tops” judged at a “LUMP ON A LOG’ recent meeting of the Char- lottetown Camera Club. Held at the YMCA the competition was won by Gordon White Dropouts Reported Heavier In Second Survival Course OTTAWA (CP) — The army achieved 78 per cent of its man- power objective in the first two Pursey jumped out of his car signs resulted in two other per- militia courses to train men be- and made off over a number of | fences and through the back| yards of a number of hom ‘The pursuing officer sent in a| being drunk and incapable, two 50,000 men. | call for assistance to the police station, and was joined by two other officers. The three con- eater a search overa wide of the district. Li sons each being foe $3 | costs or two days in f four persons charged with were each fined $20 and costs or 10 days, another $10 and costs or five days, and the fourth was committed to Riverside Hospi- all | tal, Dollar Speculation, Report Feature Economic Discussion “ By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor The annual report of the Bank of Canada and speculation about | | the future of the Canadian dol- Comparing the 1961 recovery with that of 1958 it said increase in consumer expenditures on |durable goods, especially auto- mobiles, is more pronounced tween the ages of 18 and 50 in national survival techniques. The objective was to train A total of mare finished the two six - courses, an army peageaee said Thursday. More than 7,300 men dropped out before they finished the courses ares, ions the first se for 20,523 origi- | nally carolled, eal 4,436 from the | second course for which 25,878 rolled. ‘ai reason for the drop-ou ai pokesman alain i take civillan employm uae than 1,000 left the rst course to take jobs during the pre-Christmas shopping rush. jut apparently-even more jobs were available after Christmas |Iar featured the week's eco-|the current expansion. Business | hecayse 1,511 departed the sec- ae discussions. bank's report 16h "put it pointed up late-year trends that indicate a substan- | tial base for continued recovery. | Trade Fair « Plan Praised Commenting on the proposed | Island trade fai held in |late September, Premier Wal- |ter R. Shaw called it “an am- | bitious program” and said his government “will give it every possible assistance through our resources department.” costs. The fair, designed to bring to- | LoT’ gether all products offered by the province's manufacturers, pro- ducers and packagers. will be sponsored by the Charlottetown Kinsmen Club. Buyers from all provinces of | Canada, as well as from other | countries, are expected to be at- | tracted. St. Theresa H & S [Hears Debate ST. THERESA — The month- ly bpd of _ ‘St. Teresa's Home Association was held rina t the ap sence of the secretary, the min- utes were read by treasurer, Sextus Curran. Various rs. bal- ance on ae of $24.75 ‘consisting joney Po piss Program convenor Sister Mary Gregory had pupils of grades some membership | seven to 10, present a program consisting a short commentary provincial “government te ved that a and s all students should receive high school education”. Eliza- beth Lawlor and Denny Car- michael ee oe ottirmetive and Rita C Bradley the sneenie. Both ae Sore pean nd debate proved nthe date for the ne as set a8 Apa 3 inch was served afer the meeting ad- journed. a Paris military tri- jae abortive Algiers putseh of April, spending on plant sole, ment also has picked up soot for | his time and there is less. de- pendence on — and inven- | tory investm Current automobile figures back up the bank's comment, with production this year to ve totalling 105,463 vehicles, jp 18,103 units from the corre- sponding Period last year, de- spite a strike at Chrysler of | Canada that has lowered that | samen’ production by about | 3,500 units. The bank had little to say about the lower foreign ex- change value of the Canadian dollar, beyond urging that it be used to increase production and not frittered on higher "S OF SPECULATION In other circles, however, there was a lot of speculation about which way the dollar is | going, It is noted that Canada’s foreign exchange reserves dropped by $308,000,000 in the first two months of the year, Presumably as a result of sup- |port given the Canadian cur- rency to keep it from falling |too sharply — a support that could not be continued indefin- itely However, psychological fac- tors are assumed to be respon- sible for some of the dollar's 1% weakness, just as they were for some of its strength in the past. It is probably being tested by international speculators, but if the economy continues strong and attracts investment, the period of testing could end quickly. In the meantime there is spec- ulation that monetary authori- ties may encourage Canadian borrowing in other countries, rather than frowning on it as they have been doing. The ef- fect of such borreving ist crate demand for Canadia Fency and to raise its quoted REPEATS DISAGREEMENT D lerson, Ontario _gen- eral manager of the Royal Bank of Canada, in an address to the Prospectors and Developers As- sociation in Toronto, repeated his bank's disagreement with any deliberate manipulation of the anes value. many claim the lower value is a boost to exports, Mr. said there is little | | change in uae of either ex- imports that is not ond course to take civilian em- ployment. MANY GO AWL Other reasons for drop-outs from the second course were: absence without leave, 1,056 men; disciplinary action, 616; medical reasons, 370, miscel- laneous, 883. The third of the four courses, designed to train another 25,000 men, began Feb. 26 in armories across Canad: 5,380 special situations, such as wheat sales to China. He also describes the effects as unpre- dictable, perhaps self-defeating and dangerous, and as contribut- ing to the current “extreme nervousness of the foreign in- vestor.”” The Prospectors convention noted that Canada’s mining pro- duction last year for the first time passed $2,500,000,000, de- spite a drop in uranium produc- |— ton—dae mainly to increases in crude oil, natural gas and ict The week's business an nouncements included: Federal Railways ordered 56 diesel electric loco- motives, valued at $5,600,000, from General Motors Ltd., London, Ont., and New Zealand ordered 10 locomotives ued at $1,700,000 from th same company. Northern Electric Id build a $5,500, Brampton, Ont. to eendtacenre electronic telephone equipment. The plant is expected to employ | from 2,500 to 3,000 persons. nil ‘he Canadian Pacific and Ca- nadian National Railways will build a 3,000-mile microwave link between Montreal and Van- voucer at a cost of 000, and RCA Victor Co. nounces a $12,000,000 contract in connection with the project. TOT @ Wiring @ Fixtures @ Appliance Sales and Service @ Call today for Free Estimate Newson Electric Dial 894-8325 161 Queen St.—Ch’town of Brazil | : MIX began the course but the num- ber of drop-outs won't be known until it is completed next month, when the fourth and final course will begi Maxpowes target for the third course was Defence Minister Harkness re- 25,740, eek | ported to the Commons earlier this month that of the 20,523 men who signed up for the first course 14,571 were unemployed at the time. A total of 17,700 who enrolled in the second course were jobless, | PUBLIC FORUM (Continued from page 4) that the members of Council are not worth the amount of money | which they now receive, or even the amount which will be dis- cussed or considered as suit- able remuneration for them. I do, however, suggest that there are other matters, and have enumerated some of them, which sould be considered be- cause these can definitely affect the overall well-being of our City’s administration. Sincerely yours, FRANK J. STOREY. aun ALLOWANCES Since when has the Fam Allowance been stopped when children are unable to at- tend school on account of sick- ness? One of my children has been sick, and missed over the period which is provided for them to miss. Can you invent some sickness that would not keep them home from school over a day or two? It would save doctor's bills if so, m, Sir, etc., MRS. SYLVIA LAMONT, Churchill, P.E.1. *¥*¥ *¥ ¥ ¥ FUN! FUN! FUN! LOVE! LO liberally and STARTS TODAY - Its the BLUSHINGEST INVASION OF PRIVACY , SINCE THE Imagine having your hideaway villa Sccounted for by trends exist- ing before tion or from tuned into @ haven for teenage toursts..“while your Girlof-the-Month turns into the Deep Freeze of the Year? WARSI Need TaN Ye of the year with the cast of the year! Adult Entertainment with Roland Taylor capturing both second and third piac- ings. Mr. White showed the club members a selection of color slides taken under dif- ferent light conditions, Rus- sell Nettleton showed slides and provided a running com- mentary on Denmark and Scandinavia. Nee Ss Gov't. Inspected Branded Beet Money Back Guarantee WEATHERBY’S CLOVER FARM 79 Up. Queen St. Dial 4-3644 Prince of Wales College Chorus Presents HMS Pinafore Gilbert & Sullivan College Auditorium March 20, 21, 22 at 8:30 Tickets at Miller Bros. and Toombs Music Store Adults—$1.00 Students—50c | ae a VE! LOVE! you've got the movie SHOW! 3:30 -7- TEMA SN AE ALSO — . AbDisney Color Cartoon zkeewew FeEKKKS