fo r woe a 14 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., April 11, 1966. 2 @ Canada sNuclear Industry U.S. Automobile Industry Receives Shot In The Arm 'Collides With Government units. But -it isn’t used. Despite \eonclusive tests of its worth. Similarly, a ‘‘dead man's.’ \throttle’’ or driver's alert was nea’ the mass-production stage. | At..an installed cost of $125, it could guard against the tratfic \hezard caused when a truck Gryver Wascimpaired” by alcohol, WASHINGTON (CP) The co - U.S. automobile industry has oe. macs tiets ne tt seen of Sears pees Sp BtyROm, MeCRRNTIE tunien ot taer nce ae "but a oe im ceidual Can- oe with the justice jization-of auto emission devices “ aN = Eeraaas sth — a year, bu! artment over a uest | — I hopes for Canada's nuclear in-|this figure is unlikely to’ be| Heavy water for the. Pine ai immunity from antitrust pede reais Gor a ard equipment in the union's dustry got a shot in the arm reached as the terms call for Point plant will be borrowed. prosecution, in swapping safety a grant of anti - trust’ immu- next .round of bargaining, he when. Atomic,. Energy. of |stretching 10 years’ maximum ‘from’the U.S. but this will"have ideas among manufacturers. nity.” en said. : Canada Lid. announced it has [production over a 12%- “year pe- to be returned as soon as Cana- In a letter to the Senate com- PLACED ON RECORD +] J accepted a proposal by. Cana- (riod. dian production. begins merce committee, the assistant! Chairman. Warren Magnuson 7 ty $ et } dian Genera] Electric Ltd. to| Canada’s first large - ph nu- Acceptance of the CGE propo attorney - general Donald Tur- (Dem... Wash.) placed Turner's build a heavy water plant cap- clear power plaut at Pine Point sal climaxes a controversy that ner, ‘said the industry’s argu- letter in the committee's -hear- able of producing 500 tons a on Lake Huron being .built by began last year when Western ments that it needs such immu- jing reeord. ee yg SHEET META year. : AECL -for Ontario Hydro, will Deuterium of Canada Ltd. nity for co - operative efforts in| Two Canadians, Heward Grat- The plant will not go into pro-.require an initial supply of 220 abandoned plans to build a plant designing safer cars ‘‘do not ap- /ftey, Conservative MP for. the | @ duction until the middle of 1969, tons of ‘heavy water when it at Estevan, Sask., that would | pear sound.’ . ~~ sQuebee riding of Brome-Missis- | but it would reach production joes into production later this produce 300 tons a year. The- Turner referred fo testimony quoi, and Fred Young, NDP “3 4 just the time an expected | in- crease in nuclear power plants lim some types of nuclear reae- tors. it ‘is vital to Canadian models both to control the reac- ‘cost natural uranium, It also “tprovides~built-in—safety.There lis little danger of contamination Hfroni natural uranium—fuel. jtion and ‘allow the use of low-! year. It will provide 250;000 kil- company said it was unable to owatts for Ontario Hydro. ; Meet the November, 967, pro- before it starts full operation in the contract was approached but 1971. also refused the contract. When | The proposed 250,000 - kilowatt the other two original bidders station expected te be ready |* also failed to reach an agree- ment with the Crown corpora- about 1972 in Quebec will need tion, AECL started negotiations only 120 tons because ofa modi. with CGE. ified, experimental design, but in-| CGE has given no indication by industry spokesman John S. Bugas, who cited a pending jus- would provide a big demand for But the 1,000,000 - kilowatt ‘duction deadline. tice.~ department’ ipvestigation ‘su ),000 Support of .a safety - car heavy water. station being built at Pickering, | Dynamic -Power Corp. of Cal- into whether the autg’ makers |type in New York state pai While heavy water is not used Ont.; will need’ about 920-tong'gary, second lowest bidder for | have illegally restrained-trade in| Spokesmen for. the American the handling of air-pollution con- trol devices on automobile ex- hausts. The government official said this investigation __was begun '“only within the past 15 months Tand—could-not-have—been-the-ba-. sis of previous industry inactiv- member of the Ontario legisla: | jture for Yorkview, testified in| Your ‘Automobile Association, claim- ing 10,000,000 members, ‘and la- | bor leader James Hoffa also | spoke in favor of safety stand- ards. Hoffa, controversial . chieftain ,of the Teamsters Union, was ik gag ea ‘explicit on two examples. The plant will -more than creased power demands by that as to where it intends to build ; triple Canada’s... production of |period are expected to produce the plant. It has until the mid- 4 heavy water by 1970. Canada’s demand for several similar dle of June to announce a site: wait povieonone't Minerals Industry _In-Canada. Is Continuing Rapid Growth ity.”’ He said a 12-pound device ex- | Furthermore, Turner said, ists at an installed cost of $100 “the charges being investigated which can prevent deadly ‘‘jack- by the anti - trust division are of \knifing’’ by “heavy truck-trailer | year when it starts production) this summer. The AECL announcement said | jGlaee- Bay production could be+ increased to the same figure as | lthe CGE plant. provided Deuter- | OTTAWA (CP) Canada’s hyssteria’ over possible water | lium of Canada: can provide as- minerals ‘industry is continuing diversion and export. isurance of adequate financing |’ so thaajg cB che but there still| Mr. Pepin said he had ‘ap: | ifor the expansion. serious problems to ‘be | proved of earlier government But expansion of the Glace | Hnolsad in the gold, coal and statements that there was noth- | : si ~ “ & oe : EES iBay plant probably would) in- uranium .fields, Mines Minister ing wrong with possible water oe : |volve renegotiation @f the” con- Pepin said. exports provided Canada’s | MODEL BITTEN BY LION - Meaet prices, © OR salinities: “sasps iw tte core tea ome tate was F I N-S:,-wilt--provide—200_tons__ al | awake at night,’’ he told the ,a compensating reverse flow of Deuterium of Canada has a |Commons energy committee economic benefits crossing the , a, oa petting the animal’ when %& bald was taken to a hospital, foams to supply 2,000 tons of | considering his-department's es tborder—from--the.U.S. Model a. and was reported in satisfact- the next 10 | timates. | _ Bavarian clutches clawed her and clamped jaws heavy water over “But I'm going to stop saying bleeding left leg , as she re- around-her leg. Miss—Theo. ory condition. (AP Wirephote) years. at. $20.50 a pound. The |- The government was awaiting this: . ives help after being utes | ‘CGE. contract calls. for 5,000 |@ special report and would. an-; ‘The statement has been get- | by a lion in New York. ~was posing with the tame fio for pictures as part of press eview of the New York Auto | Show at the Colimem. She was | jee over 12% years at an "av- |nounce a new policy shortly. ting far more attention than it. Ultr a-Modern Timber Plant pais gee oe: dick sion. shyla ay Oe as ta the U.S. had asked | ls Being Carved Out In B.C. The price would start : $20.50 but drop to $16 by the end | Everybody would like every-| for Canada’s water and no de- | PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) ‘from the B.C, government to | A computerized sawmill and an cut 60,000,000 cubie feet — of | of the contract. |thing tomorrow, and this -may | cision could, be made until the | Expansion of the Deuterium not be possible.” jeompletion of studies to deter- | icontract to the same terms as | Problems--of gold mines1n} mine whether Canada had a wa- ‘the CGE agreement would mean |Ontario, Quebee and Manitoba | ter, surplus. \“instant town” are just two of' timber a year starting in me |the ingredients planned for an for pulp mill purposes. jultra - modern timber industry! Alexandra development man- | | being carved out of rugged wild- ager, W. J. Connery, -enthust- | |were..well known, he added, and | =o jthe uranium question boiled eRe KHRUSHCHEV r erness near here. : ‘astically predicts . the 30-dwell- | IS DEMOTED Hot Water Alexandra Forest Industries Ling <pucleusof the town—to be But the rest of the industry | River dam reservoir. class to attract people to work | ordinary member of the. Crude oil and natural gas re- | down to whether to sell to any- Ltd., an affiliate of B.C.-F sst known as MacKenzie will Moscow (AP)—Nikita 8. Sone s |was.-booming.. Production-—had: Hot water at the turn of @ The —sawmill,_—-scheduiled__for |for _us,’"' said Mr. Connery. Communist party. serves were being developed ‘Lands at a aais School District. ‘NOTICE oF SALE OF LANDS | BY SHERIFF UNDER EXECUTION PURSUANT to and by virtue of Writs of Execution to me directed and issued out of the County Court of Queens County at the First: Circuit of the “said Court on the 24th day of March A.D. 1966: in applic- ations wherein The Trustees of School District No. 68 in- of selling only with strong safe- | guards on the use of the. tion of a $6,000,000 sawmill and ban area by 1970. man in the Soviet Commu- ‘related facilities 120 miles north MUST BE TOPS “| nist party and the govern- ‘pared to a base of 100 in 1949 | im just 15 minutes. |while Canadian industry on the | ia. ; body now or stick to principles | uranium. Products, has started construc- mushroom into ultra-modern ur- | Khrushchev, once the No. 1 ‘\reached an index of 346 com- || tap—300 gallons of hot water of Prince George on the Peace, ‘‘We have to make it first | - ment, now is just. an whole had riseéh only to 249: limited production in July, is |‘“That’s why such a good job is| The party central “com: . ly marked to levy as follows:— Thus thé former party first {from the northern. affairs de- WATER HEATER -Queens County applied for | surrounded by 30 new homes being done on the townsite.” mitteeWhich was an- judgment against the lands pyjjt by the company. Three| He predicted MacKenzie —will | nounced here at the end Enlly ade te | herein described and which «memory banks’ of computers | have a population of 5,000 by | of the 23rd party congresS |” water resources, . which ral Power said executions were several- \will sort lumber for finishing the end of the decade and’ will | did -not include his name. leently had been transferred First for $24.90; Second for | $52.27 and Third for . $23.92 being the amounts of school taxes and. costs which remain unpaid together with the costs “et execution and~of—tevy—and- sale. _ | HEREBY GIVE PUBLIC NOTICE that on Thursday the 12th day—of_May- A. D__ 1966 at the hour of eleven o’clock in the forenoon in front of the Law Courts Building in -Char- lottetown in Queens County in Prince Edward Island I WILL SET UP. AND SELL to the highest bidder the fcliowing Adescribed lands and premises situate lying and being on Lot No. 49 in Queens County in said Istand—described—as—fol-——yysrex ro~ lows: FIRST: BOUNDED on the east side by the Gaul’s Road; on the south by land owned by the Estate of John Currie; on the west by land owned by Brendan Curran and on the north by land owned ‘by Bren- dan Curran and containing about 25 acres of land a little | more or less and being the land assessed in the name- of ‘the estate of MIGHAEL CUR- *RAN. e SECOND: ~ BOUNDED © on the east by Gaul’s Road; on ‘the south-by John Lynn; on the. west by Frank Curran and on the north by lands of Frank O'Donnell and the Estate of Edmond O'Donnell and. containing 42 acres of Jand and being the lands as- sessed in the name of JAMES ¥F. GARLAND « THIRD: COMMENCING at a Stake fixed on “the division line ‘between and Cunard lands 50 links “south fromthe southert boun- dary of land ~ Bernard Hughes. and ‘running thence southwardly along said ——flivision line 9 chains: east to the outlet of Keefe’s “Lake; thence along the~ said ‘Dutlet fortherly to a reserved “Road atong the-margin -of- the “Lake: thence along said re- Ferved Road along the margin of the Lake and on Bernard lughes (south boundary :iae ‘BO links wide to the place of commencement and containing 55 acres of land a little more or less and being the lands “assessed in the names of the Estate| of MICHAEL F KOUGHAN and WINNIE KOUGHAN. Dated March 24, 1966. KEITH D. MY E RS- Sheriff of Queens ‘County NOTICES ATSA HOw}... the Haythorne ‘hence | ‘and directing it through the ultimately have 10,000 inhabit. | plant. Work on a pulp mill less than a mile from the sawmill will start after provision has been made for power and rail serv- ~“jees. Alexandra has “won rights- +such-as~ -Prince—George— aE The 250,000 board feet a day | “Announcements | CITY AND QUEENS DR. L.I. DUFFY will be absent from his office until April 19. : DR. €. A. COADY will be. absent from his office from April Lith to 15th both dates inclusive. DANCING VERNON River Hall Tues- day, April 12th 9.9 te 12.30 Musie by ‘The Islanders.” Conference on Aging, over CFCY TV, | 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 12th. DANCE AT THE Recreation Centre, New Glasgow tonight Easter Monday. Dancing from 9 to 12. Music by Ed Matthews. DANCE EASTER Monday. night, New Haven Legion. No bingo this week, fol- lowing week. Jackpot $40.00.) CARD PARTY in North Wiltshire Hall on Monday night~at- 6:30-p.m.—In aid of the hall. EASTER MONDAY night dance Cor- ran Ban Hall, 9:30 to 12:30. Music by The Group (formerly the Thunder- bolts). ’ DR. JOSEPH MacMILLAN , will be absent from,the Charlottetown Clinic until April 14th. ANNUAL EASTER. Monday dance in the Clover Club. Dancing 9-12:30, fea- turing Charlie Maunroe’s orchestra. Novelty dances, door prize. $2.00 per couple. Sponsored by the “Ladies Aux iliary. EASTER MONDAY & p.m. there wil be an Easter program of singing and meditation in the Christian Retorm | Church ~ Sherwood. A warm welcome ‘to all. | KINGS COUNTY conveyed to | | MONTAGUE LEGION Home _ mixed | cribbage, every Tuesday. Please note changé™in date. EASTER MONDAY night dance Car- digan Legion Hall. Dancing 9:30 to ' 12:30. Canteen service. GUITARS.— AMPLIFIERS — Capos pickups — strings — picks — neckcords ——straps———violin—strings——- —rosin_— bow hair — microphones — Hohner harmonicas melodicas — recorders ~+_tape splicers -- recording tape — all in stock -— tague. PRINCE COUNTY | ANGLICAN CHURCH Guild, Kensing. ton—wilt hold their andual Easter Pepler’ s ee Mon- Chicken Salad «Tea, -Bazaar and Pan. , | ey sale, also high -school | students modelling their spring fashions in Church Hall Wednesday, April 13th. Serving from 3:30 until 6 Tickets( $1.00 NOTICES _ YOU MUST-SEE IT IT’S YOUR LAST CHANCE for the ‘Aunt Abby A Ha Souris kK ST. MARY'S PARI ~~Crtein—time8.30 ! ee APR return of nswers An Ad’ of ¢ : : i SH HALL; SOURIS. Players Specialties sanadial__—oyrriciats-of-most-of_these-c panies say there is competition ants.- The townsite is located as faf | south-on.the Peace reservoir as | possible, ~for purposes of com- | munication with other esieihand a sawmill will start July produc. | “tion with—one- shift, expanding to two in September. The build- | ing almost entirely @ncloses all phases of the timber operation | due to weather conditions. The Alexandra efforts simi erations ince Is “COMPETITION for skilled workers, with re- cruitment .taking place. as far east as Quebec. One example-is Gold River, being. built by the Tahsis Co., on the east coast of Vancouver Island. In an effort to attract employees to an- isolated area away from the big city the com- pany has built a complete town out of the forests. It has, arranged taxation base for the community by including the- mill within its borders. Rents and mortgages are made as reasonable as pos- sible. At -Prince- Rupert Columbia Cellulose is “building a sub- division as part of its multi- million dollar pulp and paper’ yroject now under construction. Cranes Take Off | For Northland WASHINGTON (AP) — The whooping. cranes have started their northward flight to nest- ing grounds near Canada’s | Wood Buffalo National Park, the U.S. interior department, has announced. The Arapsas__National uge in Texas April 6. This in- cluded one group -of -20 the largest—single—mass exodus _ 6f whoopers ever recorded. This also was one of the few times that a departure” has been observed, the service said. Ref- uge employees who saw the birds leave said they circled to gain altitude and then took a northward course. i _sfRepartures usually are dis-, covered only by the periodic counts of the rare birds during the winter-and early spring— and thig system indicated four had“teft i, April 6. Fifteen still _ Aransas. winteetd flock of 44 was larvest since record-keeping beuaR in 1938. Eight pf the birds were irlings. The urged mig are The the that . persons along -the route not harm any which by whooper. migration Okla ration bird he a ae vhite chance might The wile flock on norms assas Texas,? Sas, Nehraska, the 4d into’ Canada. The: Roer valley in central Watka.<p.emis tobe A fe" stupover for the birds are | ilar to those of several other - pulp and paper companies how | building. multi-million dollar op- | throughout “the prov- | for a good | fish and wildlife service said..25..of the birds left the Wildlife ref- iterior department | secretary and premier has | nothing left in the party but | his membership. He lost the other jobs in an upheaval within the old central _com- 1964. __mittee in October, _ partment jurisdiction, provided | another problem—mainly one of | co-ordinating the- 10 government | departments and nine federal | Palmer Electric Ltd. Choose from the latest selection of antique satins, sailcloth, decorator damasks, Arnels, Terylenes and-practical desirable Fibreglas. : IF-YOU HAVE of our service. you FREE OF CHARGE, ° “@ Minimum letigths of drapes for free making: 63" “@ A small additional charge wi be made. for / shorter lengths. ot. Custom - Made ‘Ends April 16 - - - HURRY !. 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