. LA Tl Work is progressing on the I addition to the Tigrus-h Region- tl High School. The new $90,000 Iddition will include six clam- rooms. a teachers’ room. jani- Contract is For New Convent Bldg. J. G. FitzPatrick. Montreal,’ has been awarded the contract‘ for construction of the new mo- therhouse for the Sisters of St. Martha to be built at Mount St. Mary's on Mt. Edward Road. it was learned Saturday. Work is expected to begin im- mediately for the new structure. The amount of the contract was not released. was reported earlier the buildiniz was to cost‘ approximately $l.250.000. Architect for the project is Joseph Dunne. Montreal. work-" g in association with Charlot- tetown archjtect Peter A. Mc- Nell. It is expected that two years will be required to complete the E-shaped building. ' measures 281 feet in length. is :3‘ .- (3 :3‘ Two Homes Destroyed At Montague MONTAGUE One home was completely destroyed and mother gutted in two separate, res ir. Montague early Sunday . L ’ morning. The first fire which broke out s«ho~:ly after midnight guticd the residence of Mrs. Minnie‘ McGuigan and her three daugh-~ v iers. No one was at home when the flames were first noticed. i The second fire which wasi first noticed about 4 a.m. de-1 ntroycd the vacant house which 3 nad been owned by the late: Cecil Drake. he cause of the fires has not been determined in either case. Montague firemen fought both outbreaks but the flames had attained considerable head- way before the alarms were dven GNEISH HS ADDS LSSROOMS ‘ addition is ncv:cs.sai'y tc mcet -the overflow of high school tax... s~..':-'1'!‘-11>!-1'-‘<.\')..9*!v.\'a\a-‘hr’ ‘luv-.-v .: -r ,L_.s ac... . DLAND NEWS PAGE Mon toque, Souris, Kings County 4 The Guardian. Charlottetown. Mon. Aug. 13. 1962. Beach Point Girl Object Of Search MONTAGUE —- A 19-year-old 1 ed the roadside and wooded Beach Point girl, Eileen Faye y-areas along the highway between Williams. is the object of an in- Montague and her home but tensive search in the southern with no trace of the missing girl Kings Conuty area. The girl who being found. ishome on holidays from Ontario The last time she was re» wss last seen last Monday night - ported to have been seen was at the top of the Wood islands; about 7 o'clock last Monday eve- hiil in Montague. i ning. At that time she was re- She had visited friends in Mon- ported to have been wearing I ‘vague on Monday and it is be- green sweater and black slacks lleved she left Montague to with B white stripe. The is five hitchhike to her parents‘ home I feet, four inches tall and weighs in Beach Point. She is s d-augh- about 100 pounds. V sék‘ .. lProducers lMeet Names Committees l Three sub-committees were- formed Friday afternoon atl 8 meeting of a committee re-l ‘’ presenting ‘ students in the urea. Hubert Gaudet. MLA. who was fore- man for the construction of the original school, is also fore- man for the new construction. Truck, Car Collide SOURIS A half-ton 1955 lFord truck was in collision with a 1954 Ford on the New Zealaml Road, approximately t:or‘s room and two lavatories. completed in 1960 but the new Awarded the beef industryl which was held in the offices ofl :the Federation of Agricultural | One committee will deal with! two miles from the main road. 3 the constitution. by-laws a ndl 113 feet deep, and “.111 rise 1 ghfilla Flt" 12-49 _5“"d33’- iplannlng of a provincial beef three storeys. ?m:e lr;:lE£S;::agrivelnnJ:;y‘Ed_ producers association. A public Steel and concrete will b cl ward M31131-d_ 398,- River w.hi1e relations committee was formed "tied fill‘ the °°"5“‘“"ll°“- whe" the car was driven by Kenneth l to meet with the minister of Conlpleledv the 9W m0lh9T' Mat-Cormack. New Zealand. lagriculture in respect to the: house Will D|‘0Vld9 living 30' Mir Mallard's vehicle stayed appointment of a beef fieldmanf Commndallon 501' 8DPF0Xlm3l9' on the road but the impact for the province. This commit-. 1)’ 150 P0FS0llS- . the car into the ditch. fee will also meet with repre- It will be located near the Both vehicles suffered extensive - tativcs of packing companies to; present motherhniise of the or- damtige. lsee if more information can be: The Sourls detachment of the 5 made available on cattle RCMP investigated the ncci- ‘ dcs. l The third committee will dis- giscleswriitt-ihidpfiiclliillfdultlltfrslormula l %N.Y. Stocks flnch Lower ‘During Week it was decided that the office‘ of the Federation of Agriculture‘ be used. for it time, as a clear- ing house for taking in and‘ . giving in and giving out lnfor-1 ‘ of feeder cattle. Barring a sharp break in thel. NEW YORK tAP)——The stock For the first 2'5 days of the economy. finishcd stc ship-2 market inched lower last week.t week prices declined slowly but ments will be at least 16,000,000 l stricken by what many calledt surely. Part of this was blamedf tons in the third quarter and a spell of summer sickness. ‘on the failure of General Mot- der at Mount St. Mary's. U.S. Steel Seen Edging Higher Cl.EVFLA_\.'D IAP) —— United States steelmakers think Sep- tember shipments probably will surpass Au;zust' by about 10 to 15 per cent, the magazine Steel ys. gra-i lmation to buyers and sellers. l 18.000000 tons in the fourth,-' Trading activity tumbled to‘ ors to raise its dividend. a step the weekly journal of metal-ithe second lowest of the year‘ some brokers had anticipated‘ W0l‘kl|lil said. r a non-lioliday week. Many in iew of record company sales and profits. L Wednesday came the. only active period of the week‘; with prices recovering rapidlyl in the final iiour. The day endedl with 'the list higher but byl. Thursday's opening the surge‘ had worn off. The Thursday, market was ii standoff as was‘ Fridays‘ session. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks was off 1.9 at 217.9; while the Dow Jones industrial average fell 4.06 to 592.32. Drug issues gave ground un- til the final session ns the gov- ernment moved to impose stric- “Total shipments for the. year i Street “reizulars" were on va- will be about 741100.000 tons,"Qcahon. Investor interest laiziied said Stccl. “'l‘lia:'s less than~lll l-’(‘l10ral. most forecasters expected, hut_ The popular market averages it's a substantial iniprovemcntishowed relatively small losses. over last year‘s figure (66,100, lE.'icli day it was the same 000 tons» and it's the highest: story: A great majority of Sgllpnlellls have been since 1 stocks moved by fractions of a l 7.‘ ' ' The niagaline looks for pro-l Business news. good and bad. duction to advance for the sixth had little impact on prices in straight week as stcelmakers most cases. The over-all loss ecp pace with continued ini- ran from 1-3 to 2-3 of the gains provemcnt in bookings. 0utput[accumulated in the previous this week willobe higher than ; two weeks, "19 1-590900 "?g°l ‘°“5 Sledl The market appeared to feel ewmaled the md“-"‘”y P°“““l‘ there would be no U.S. tax cut last week. Output then was 4.6‘. - y ; his year. Late in the week fer controls over the testing of; 9°’ Fem 3b°"° the Pl"9Vl°“5 some of the July economic in- new drugs. Silver shares were Week - dicators such as retail and de- among the week's better er- Steel price composes No. 1 partment store sales and per- formers. They responded to heavy melting grade held at l sonal income pointed upward. four straight boosts in the price. $28 a gross ton for the second ' week. ‘reinforcing the likelihood of not of silver. totalling 2 cents an: lfax cut until next year. lounce. I ter of Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Wil- Anyone knowing of her where- liams. abouts or who.may have seen Estimates of the numbers l anyone answering her descrip- taking part in the RCMP - led l tlon since last Monday night is search yesterday range from 60; to nearly 200. The party search- i RCMP detachment. Unique U.S. Tannery Uses Workers 45 Years Or Older HARTFORD. Ill. (AP) .— The younger men who had depnrtedl luckless job seeker walked out 1 and decided personnel bossesl of the tannery office sadly sliak- ' don't know what they're talk- ing his head. Within the space ing about. of an hour he had been rcjcgted "This idea that a man has by ii nearby refinery as too old -‘ passed his peak in productive b YOUTH LEA Standard equipment for the Y o ut h Leadership Training Camp is the T-shirt being view- ed by director of physical edu- oation. David Boswell ice-ii David Rogers. camp counsel- lor (left). and David Weale. Davey Moore Defends Title At Helsinki and the tannery as too. capacity after he reaches the; young. |age of 45 is so much talk." He was in his early 403. ‘Richards said. Jny THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The International Slice Com- "It has been our experience pany Tannery, reversing gcner-i that men in this (older) age‘ ally accepted personnel prac-lbracket are reliable. do their tlces. hires only workers who work well. are easier to work are 45 or older. I with and. above all. have more the idea of R. H. Rlch- mature judgment than many, ards, 61. International Shoe. younger men ' vice-president in charge of sub-f Plant manager Rudolph: sldiary operations. He belicvesl Green agrees generally. al-' Davey Moore will defend his world featherweight boxing title Friday at Helsinki against Fin- lands Olli Macki. in the first world championship match ever held in Scandinavia. Emile Griffith. the world wel- terweight klng. also will make DERSHIP CAMP IS PLANNED ; camp counsellor (right). The } comp officers are: director. , camp runs from Aug. 0 to ;.Mr. Boswell: assistants-Jolvii ' A . 25 and the final day for t E. Ready. Ed Hilton. John . l-I8 ‘ registration is Aug. 14. Those _l wishing to attend should con- « tact program director. Charles l Ballem. Summerside. er ; Evans. Alf‘ Groom, Bob Sim- : mans. Jock Proud-e. The camp l capacity is 50 and the site Is Hollimd Cove. an appearance this week in experienced foe in Maeki. who Tacome, Wash. Saturday night 3," had 0.1),. 10 pm fights and f be :tu;lke.hl: ilirsoivtillrolllill :i:lch with 1‘ “°‘ ‘”“'°"’ '"‘°"’“ °“‘5‘d° ““ home country. It will be the Denny Moyer of Portland. Ore. D n- Thcir nationally televised bout "ml defense 101‘ the 29-year-old champ from Columbus. Ohio. who has a 55-8-1 record with 27 knockouts for 62 pro starts. Maekl's record is 8-1-1 with no knockouts. (ABCl will be the athletic high- ‘ light of the National Boxing As- ’ sociation’s convention at Ta- ‘coma. Aug. 18-24. Moore will be meeting an in- l l THEATRE MONTAGIIE industry s t it it to benefit l though there are times when . "when the old bugahoo of not l he feels he could use a few’ hiring men over 45 years of age youngr workers for the more 3 article 70 of the constitution guaranteeing freedom of wor- goes down the drain where it‘ physically demanding jobs. lship. belongs." "Our workers settle down, ‘‘In the first postwar years The tannery has held to the quickly. train quickly. and——one the authorities had many orph- no ans on their hands and no place strange hiring policy for five‘ important thng ~ there's ‘ to house them and to care for years now. ‘L horseplay," Green said_ Much of the leather for Sec-. The tannery's workers range them." he said. "The nuns ond World War military men in age up to 76. Only two are N helped with all their power. To- undcr 45 and they were em- day, these same sisters are left i ployecs before the 45-or-older ; without any means to live." .hlring policy went into effecl.l was processed there and em- ployment at the tannery. one of three operated by the firm. reached a peak of 1.200. After’ The majority are 51 to 58. the war employment dropped tol Employees may retire at 65‘ its present 300 production work- under the standard company ers. By laying off workers with. pension program but they don't the least seniority, the tannery. ve to found itself with a dispropor-l 5' B International has had workers tionate number of older em-; as old as 85. including one octo- ployccs. ggcnarlan who asked his fore- Richards and other exccu-gman if he couldn't switch to fives took a hard look at pro-‘K another job in the plant “with duction and cost figures of the more of a future." ' h A ' h d Polis Persecution C arge B Roman Catholic Primate WARSAW i.-\P>—-Stefan Car-land cared for orphans since? dlnal Wyszynski. Roman (lath-‘ 1917." : olic primate of Poland. pub- CHURCH TRIED TO HELP licly accused state fllilllorilies‘ The cardinal said the church Sunday of closing three con- ‘ tried in vain to intervene with vents and nurseries in violation ‘ the proper authorities. He also of Poland's constitution. aid it was deplorable that the A protest letter signed by the i 9"l°“°"s were amen ded by cardinal was read from Cath-l “the so-called patriotic priests." olic pulpits throughout the War- i 1! small sect of the Catholic. saw diocese. it was the first-cicrizymcn openly backing the such public ac cu sation in communist regime. months and followed a relative Cardlllfll WYSZYHSH Saltl the lull in church-state rclations. evictions violated the law and FOR... The letter said local militia-' ALL YOUR CAR H I men in the last few days illeg-l_ ally entered church premises- and evicted nuns and children- from nurseries iii Olwock and Wawer. towns near Warsaw. . In addition. the csrdinal= NEEDS! dugemnt’ and an in added, “sisters of The Holy} m E , Sacrament were thrown out oft 3::',|,..,,,:_' nes‘¢'".¢Ae::?m.:.-'3', ‘"91 °°3t5 drop 3nd Y eir own house“ in downtown‘ pump.’ ge.¢,_ (;,..,,h_ Wm" Warsaw. where they had “lived us. A complete line of loan Board Seizes Boat SOIJRIS -- The fishing drag- E “MV Lrene R", owned by Griffin. Souris. was seized by the P.E.I. I-‘ishermen's Loan Board officials and members of the RCMP Saturday. Mr. Griffin landed a small. had of fish Saturday morning Gd shortly after John White, , Montague. investigator for the board. and two members d the RCMP seized the vessel. EASIERN PHBRIEFS V “have? FUNERAL — The ' ’ for Thomas Frederick was held Saturday. Aug. MID-SUMMER MIRAGE? lion. Campbell 1.. ltscrheh tlii-es-quarters of which lurks son. on s scheduled visit to star to menace ship- Exceptloiisliy b s d ice con- ditions the Halifax- elcort Sioux Lab dor settlements ‘oftb , stand guns from taking the LlcittcI'|Ii|t- Pl'0:l‘Ilc¢ recsntty. The proof: :Ih‘tl‘InoO tong. hue: “ls: Governor of ,» Newfoundland. shown an leelssrg. of font tbs soi-than tip of Newfound- aocessorles for '62 mod I. Stewart Motors III 6!. George II. 4-S57! YOU cm’? 51’ O P CARBON MONOXIDE nus WAY"! RDLACI TODAY wnu A PIEAIIM MUNLER F0 51' 3.‘ YOUR Mr. Loo losslts Monday . Tuesday Aug. l3 - 14-9 P.lVl. Matineee Tuesday 2 P.M. YEO TEENAGE MILLIONAIRE Jimmie Clanton, Jackie Wilson, Chubby Checker. Rocky Graziano. Laugh filled tune tilled frolic. 20 song hits. See the twist, can you do it? For a real show see this one. NOW...SH1lT all/-HE-6'0... llTTHEFLIPOFil. MULTPPOWER! Now. from the world's largest tractor maker. comes the world's simplest, most practical shift on-tho-go . . . Multi-Power trons- misoioni Lets you gear down or speed up——1-ight on-the-go—a.s easy j as you switch on a light. And does it: smoothly. effortlessly, without my clashing jolt. With 12 forward to choose from—all direct gear drivo—.ovory task becomes easier. on feel more refreshed at the and of the day! Come in and see Multi-Power demonstrated. See for yourself the outstanding advantages it gives you on the MF 35 gas. the MF 50-< diesel and gas--and the MF 65 diesel and gas models. s. D. his I Produce Ltd. H°"*“~ Kins! County -1 Prince st. oimiotsaoown REL nnm ism} 0-5» Reid I: Moolhmio Wuk; 3. sq‘ (amt you (H 8% P E Monhsnc Imam-ioeon‘— imam rum oooomv.49.s9 mo ° ° L P- E , Dolnziosy Foods service Motion ‘ K In Alba mi pfposhv 00min I I. I. am gton I no land. The Sioux. with vics- ‘ Y '‘ M v regal party embarked. is m g“ ‘f; g w’ M ¢79‘Tm!I TIM harbour. ', I L r ‘ '. (Notional Dsfssos Photo) ° 3 "V .3‘ l