A FRONT view of the new Spr— tend to make the , rooms much. ~.—.-Mat...‘ awh cation of the great advances lTi.<.{‘fiPark School which will be of— brighter giving them a clean, airy made in the areas surrounding ficially opened at 7.30 this even- appearance. The architecture of Charlottetown for the improve- lng The wide expanse of windows the building gives a strong indi- SPACIOUS classrooms are pro— School. Behind the partition seen vlded in the new Spring Park at the back is located the cloak- CONGRATULATIONS ’ SPRING PARK SCHOOL _ _ IT wAs A PLEASURE FOR,M-E TO HAVE * PARTICIl?ATE'.D IN THE ARCHITECTURAL _ WORK OF THIS FINE SCHOOL. A KEITH PICKARD, B. Arch. H 100 FITZROY ST. DIAL 8618 ‘ V ment of educational facilities. ‘-room. A similar ‘arra ement has been provided in allrooms thr- oughout the building. The room above is presently occupied by grades 9 and 10. , I Stock Exchange Have» Less, Sales MONTREAL (CP)—-The Mont- real and Canadian Stock Ex- chahges in a year-end release re- port combined volume of 148,093,- 603 shares in 1957 compared to the all-time high of 274,976,228 in 1956. ' \ Industrial volume was 20,256,- 811 shares against 28,426,697; mines and oils was . against 251,549,§31. - 7 HARRIS TWEED COATS Reg. 52.50 Now only 39.95‘ 2 CLOUD NINE JACKETS Reg. 59.95 I Now only 45.00 25 DRESSES ‘ l-3. O‘-FF h 162 Great George St. CAR COATS “SKIRTS ' ’ (Except Plaids) I HousEcoATs .‘~ -1/3'OFF SUNTER'S LADIES‘ WEAR This evening the official cere- monies to mark the opening of the new Spring Park School will take place, commencing at 7.30 p. m. Principal speaker for the occasion will be Malcolm Mac- Kenzie, Director of Carriculum, of the Department of Education. Chairman forthe evening will be Ernest S. Matheson, chairman of the Board of Trustees. The pro- ceedings will open and close with a chorus presented‘ by students of the school. I In addition to the principal speaker, others on the platform will be: Premier A. W. Matheson; Wilson Ross, Supervisor of Schools; Keith Pickard, the archi- tect who designed the building; the principal, Claude W. Wood; and a representative of the M. F. Schurman Co., Ltd., the con- tractors. The building committee are: Gordon Rodd; Willard Burke; Elmer MacRae; O. K. Presby; S. H. Burhoe and Roy Smallman. In addition to the chairman the other member of the Board of Trustees are; George Cairns; Cletus Murphy; J. D. E. Stirling; and Francis Campbell. To these two groups, particularly the for- mer, a great deal of credit is due, for their foresight and drive, in providing the school children of the Spring Park district with this modern house of learning. MAIN FLOOR COMPLETE At the present only the main floor has been fully completed. Here are located eight large, airy classrooms, giving accomo- dation for approximately 250 ‘students. To the left of the main entrance is the office of the prin- cipal and the teachers, room. Ample space has also been pro- vided in this locality for the storage of instructional equip- ment. Each of the classrooms is equip- November For OTTAWA (CP) —- Federal gov- ernment revenues, slipping in No- vember for the second successive -month, left the treasury with a nom.in=al $1,900,000 budgetary sur- plus for the month. Finance Minister Donald Flem- ing, reporting that in his monthly treasury statement, showed a $259,100,000 budgetary surplus, however, on operations in the first eight months of the fiscal year to Nov. 30. . J The November surplus com- pared with a $46,500,000 surplus in November, ,1956. The ' eight- month total was down sharply from $387,600,000 accumulated in April-November a year ago. ‘ Mr. Fleming, In a Commons statement Dec. 6, forecast he will end the fiscal year next March 31 with an $80,000,000 surplus. This Monday,6.1958 Page 6 The Guardian Official Opening Tonight Of Spring Park School’ CLAUDE W. WOOD, principal of Spring Park School, who has held that position for the past eight years. ped with its individual cloak- room, and blackboards extend ‘for almost the full length of the front and a side wall. In the basement a large double classroom is being utilized as a music and projection room and also for physical. recreation. When the remainder of the base- ment is completed, in addition to an auditorium, rooms will be pro- vided for Home Economics and for regular studies. The principal this morning said the completed building will give the school sufficient room to ac- comodate well over three hundr- ed students. On the subject of manual training, he said that these facilities are not in the plans for present. Feldevral Revenues Slipped In Second Month is a revision from the forecast of a $152,000,000 surplus made last spring by the then Liberal’ finance minister, Walter Harris. It is customary for heavy gov- ernment outlays near the end of a fiscal year to whittle down sur- pluses piled up in earlier months. On top of that, new, tax cuts are expected to slice $26,000,000 from revenues in the last three months of this fiscal year. Revenues in November were $395,800,000, a drop of nearly $20,000,000 from $415,100,000 a year earlier. Expenditures rose more than $25,000,000 to a total of $393,900,000 from $358,600,000. ' REVENUES STAY UP For, the April-November period revenues still remained well above the level of a yearearlier, at $3,304,800,000 compared with AND BEST, WISHES TO :- T 147 Great Georgelst. SPRING PARK scHooL GRAND DPTNING We were happy to supply them with at new piano for this newmodern school I I MILLER BROS. LTD. CONGRATULATIONS - Dial 3535 ' Dial 6831 _In the Thursday. of them would be overweight, price change. , case of a storm on Tuesday. I IMPORTANT NoTIcT IIoG PRODUCERS- KENSINGTON AND SUMMERSIDE AREAS ~ For many years it‘ has been our custom to load your hogs on During the past few years, we have had many snow storms which have prevented us from collecting your hogs on Thursday. This resulted in holding your hogs until the next week, when some or possibly there would be an unfavourable To overcome this situation, effective immediately, we will be load- ing hogs in both Kensington and Summerside every TUESDAY. This will give us two extra days in which to collect your hogs in We wish to thank you for your patronage over the years and trust that we shall continue to be of service to you in the years ahead. ‘Remember our new doy:—- TUESDAY. JANUARY 7I'I|. and every Tuesday I-h.erecIfl'er. McIcEWEN & CASELEY Agents for:—Canada. Packers Ltd., Charlottetown YOUR ISLAND MARKET FOR ISLAND LIVESTOCK MAPLE AVE» CONGRATULATIONS I A.ND BEST WISHES TO “SPRING PARK SCHOOL ON THE GRAND DPTNING OF THEIR’ NEW MODERN UP-TO-DATE E SCHOOL PAINTING DONE BY LOUIS HOWATT JR. CENTRAL ROYALTY Would Have British, U. S. Diplomats Quit THORNLEY, England ‘APl_-- Emanuel Shinwell, defence m1n= ister in the post-war La-bor gov- ernment, said 'l‘-hrrsday night Britain and the United States should ask their chief diplomats to resign. He told a political meeting resignations of Britain's Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloy and State Secretary John Foster Dulles would help to make a fresh start in negotiations with the Russians. He said “neither Mr. Dulles nor Mr. Lloyd has managed to make much progress (in negotiations with the Russians), and while I believe that both of these gentle- men are honest in their desire for peace, they have-no notion of how to bring i-t about." First Transplant ‘Kidney Patient Becomes Father SHREWSBURY, Mass. (AP)- Richard Herrick, 26, who figured in the first successful kidney transplant in v o l v i n g identi- cal twins, becam; the father of an 8%-pound girl Sunday, it was disclosed Thursday night. The mother is the former Claire Bur-ta of Glace Bay. N.S:, a reg- istered nurse who attended Her- rick following his operation’ at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Dec. 23, 1954. The couple $3,224,900,000. Eight-month expen- ditures were up to $3,045,700,000 from $2,837,300,000. , The governments major rev- enue source, personal income tax, held up in November above the level a year earlier, at $120,900,- 000 compared with $112,500,000. Bu-t November returns in other major fields declined: corpora- tion income tax to $88,000,000 from $102,100,000, import tariffs to $42,100,000 from $50,400,000 and sales tax -to $6,300,000 from $62,- 800,000. Reductions in defence con- tinued to be outstripped by higher spending in other departments of government. - For the April-November period, total defence expenditures $1,086,100,000 a year earlier. But -this decline was causedvby a lag sxanmd o.LvN 0: pie Iemnur In and officials state that mutual aid transfers will step up later in the fiscal year. ESCRIPTION PR or ompt, Courteous Delivery CALL Sample‘: _ Pharmacy ‘DIAL 4171 dropped to $l,040,000,000 f.rom_ was married in .Janua1“.i"- 1955» ; Richard made a comP19l€_ ‘$55’ nvcry after receiving 3 k1‘I“€-" from brother Donald, in an 0139?" ation that proved transplallls be‘ tween identical twins were 905-! Oppose Bombing, To Kill Sharks DURDAN, South Africa (Reut- ers)--Fi:"' g experts Thursday; criticized government plans for IT 5 depth-bomb war on sharks terror- izing swimmers. As aminesweeper got ready to drop depth charges In a bid to ing spokesman Tommy Arter said the campaign was "the most stu- pid imaginable." The deptih bombings will kill hundreds of fish on which sharks feed and will attrack more sharks than ever to the coast of South Natal, Arter declared. ' Scores of sharks were spotted off the coast Thursday and Wed nesday. The beaches were de- serted. A 16-year-old girl was in knee- deep water at Margate when a shark attacked her three days ago. Two men went to her aid. fighting the shark with their bare hands. The girl was badly muti-I lated and lost her left arm. STAY OF EXECUTION HAMILTON (CP) —— A 10-day stay of execution has been granted in the case of Thomas Arthur LaPlante of Hamilton, ori- ginallyscheduled to hang Jan. 7 for the slaying last July of Edwin Jones a Jehovah’s Witness field worker whose body was found "on the outskirts of Welland, Ont. drive away the sharks. sport fish- , - Tm.-1. \l:1S also A St:‘l'luu3 TAi.r.NTEu btw-:‘-H - lFd T insiclerable fame = D umiel. the no ‘ Q (‘l . . Honole 8 ed m Frem-11 (-31-icalurisl W110 ‘II _,g_,,_,_,,,. __._ 9% W. CONGRATULATIONS - - BEST WISHES = -~ SPRING PARK scHooL .-I.‘ GRAND OPENING . IT WAS A PLEASURE TO PARTICIPATE = lN THE BUILDING OF THIS NEW SCHOOL. - YLUMBING and HEATING BY DOUGLASBROS. & JONES LTD.j 155 KENT ST. DIAL 65655 S J , , coNGRATuLATIoNs « ON THE COMP’LET|O'_N OF YOUR NEW scHooI A A FROM THOSE SUPPLYING (THE SEATS or LEARNING” /Ven-Rez Products Limited '”McInufcIc’rurers Of'.N[IouIcIed Furniture" o PRING PARK SHELBURNE, N. S. r TIIE KENSINGTON A SPRING PARK scIIooI ON THEIR WE ARE PROUD GENERAL CONTRACTORS ~ FOR THIS FINE NEW SCHOOL HOME OF 2 To HAVE BEEN [IIIIHMAII TTINEITSIDTI