S$'SIDE GUIDES RECEIVE GOLD CORDS dred Clark, Sheila Praught. Summerside Guides urday afternoon at the annual grids tea held in the auditor- ium of the Legion Home with a large attendance. The pig A provincial i rs, Gordon Avard, Char- felbstonn (centre). The reci- pients were left to night, Pauline Muttart and Janet MacFarlane. Patricia Rogers was unable to be present to receive her gold cord due to illness. Kensington CGIT Makes City Tour The Girls in Training toured places | of educational interest in Char- | lottetown Saturday. Some of | these were The Guardian-Patriot office. OFCY-TV station and Montgomery Hall. The girls were joined by the intermediate CGIT, Tuxis and rn groups when they visit- ed St. Dunstan’s Basilica, Trinity United Church, First Baptist Church and Park Royal United Church. This ee re churches was in conn their mission study for new times’. At each church the sroup was addressed on various _Phases of he ministry. Rev. Edmund Roche conduct- ed them on the tour of | the Basilica; Rev. John Ball showed them about Trinity; at the Bap- tist Church, Ross Downe officiat- ed and at Park Royal, Rev. and Mrs. J.H. Tye were their hosts. Mrs. R.R. Hurst conducted the tour of Montgomery Hall and Miss Eileen MacDonald explain- ed the operation of the iderlaine station. Accompanying the group were i Caseley, Nelson Caseley and Mr. and: Mrs. Donald Glover. CARDROSS SCHOOL Following is the report for March. Grade VIII: 1. Marie Shep- ard, 2. Erma MacEachern Grade VII: 1. Gavin Quinn Grade VI: 1. Jean Dockerty. }. Malcolm Dockerty, 3. Carol oe and John Quinn (equ- al) Grade V: 1. Errol Flynn, Myles Flynn, 3. Eileen Dockerty Grade IV-Sr.: 1. Margaret Campbell, 2. David Quinn Grade IV-Jr: 1. James She- pard Grade IlI-Sr: 1. Leah Flynn, 8. Robert Quinn, 3. George She- Bers Til-Jr.: 1. Donna Mac- ac’ ao Hi-Sr.: 1. Stella Shep- yo HM —Jr. 1. Marjorie Do- ekerty Helen Cobb, Teacher. itadeteidiaaeaiaiaaeiat iatieaaaeateaemeateamenenantieaianel LATE NOTICES (Alse see announcements in columns adjoining Classified Ad- rertising section.) ‘uae ae” Ont. Friday, MICHAEL — Suddenly at Char- lottetown, April 7, 1962, George Michael, 44 Longworth Avenue, in his 56th year. Rest- = at the Cutcliffe Funeral Home until 10 a.m. Tuesday. Funeral from St. Peter's Ca- = service commencing @t 10.30 a.m. Interment in St. Peter’s Church cemetery. — At Charlottetown, April 8, 1962) Michael \ of Pat- Tick J. Ready, 88 McGill Ave- nue, ys his 55th year. — at Home, where the ly will | held morning, lea- Many | the funeral home at 8.45 or Requiem Hi Church of the Most Holy Re deemer at 9 o'clock. Inter-| ment will be in the Roman Ca- | tholie cemetery. READY ed si ¥ < efryi : i: fil i / de * ? senior group of Kensing- | ton United Church Canadian | churches was Architecture of new and old discussed and studies were made of ‘he neces- | Sity of the church expanding into new suburbs and problems that such ventures might entail. As part of this study the senior CGIT group met last week at the Protestant Chapel, RCAF Station Summerside where Fit. Lt. R.M. Bartlett outlined the differences in ministry of mili- tary padres and established churches. | h | } “cnurehes 4 Frenchmen In Spy Case Are Released By GEORGE MCARTHUR CAIRO (AP) — Four French- men being tried for spying were unexpectedly released Pe and a high Egyptian goyern- ment source said the action was in appreciation of the French cease - fire with Algerian na- tionalists. The announcement came as a surprise in the court where four members of a special French diplomatic mission have been on trial for nearly three months. All four had denied spying on the United Arab Republic. At official word that the trial was being halted and that the four would be ‘permitted to leave for France on the first plane, the entire courtroom—de- fendants, their lawyers, prosecu- sion of the Suez Canal zone in 1956 after President Nasser had seized control of the interna- tional waterway. Cairo broke re- lations with Paris at the time of the attack and seized French property PART OF MISSION The four are Andrei Mattei, mission president, Jean - Pa Bellivier, Henri Mouton and An- dre Miquel. They were members of a diplomatic mission allowed to go to Cairo to try to settle claims of French property own- ers. They were arrested in Cairo last Nov. 26, and indicted on charges of espionage and plot- ting to assassinate Nasser. The latter charge never was pressed. A fifth mission member, Chris- tian d’Aumale, had returned to pa and was tried in absen- a. A government source said that in Geuiaing the case, U.A.R. authorities were showing appreciation of the spirit in *| which President de Gaulle of France is carrying out the cease-fire accord with the Alger- ian nationalists. e U.A.R. strongly supported the cethandliits, provided a base of operations here for many of their leaders and praised France when the cease-fire was reac last month. Slemon Park Elects Slate SLEMON PARK—The ne 2 ee Park is Fit. nL. = . Headley and the eee yor is Sqdn. smith The ress of te election announced ai as ball held in the RCAF’ Ste Sta- tion recreation hall Friday ; Other successful candidates Tignish Man Said Victim Of Assault ee _ of Tiga was =~ taken to Bad ome early Saturday mo: ter he was ares fe to @ have be bee assaulted on Street dt ue The incident was ios to have taken place shortly after midnight and was investigated by town police. DesRoches is suffering sever- al fractured ribs and lecera- tions to the face. Those involv- ed in the assault were reported to be from the Borden area. were: eet t LAC G. W. Sane Sgt, N. MacNevin; Ward 2. Fit. Sgt. en C. aoe Cpl J.A- Gauthier; Ward 3, Smith; Ward 4, or A a B. Gabriel, Bit. Lt. C. ms Bellcham- ber; -Ward 8, Mrs. S. G. Hend- ren. The newly-elected mayor installed in, ve y his ne decessor, Fit, Lt. C. E. Ross. U.S. Decorates Japanese Officer TOKYO (AP) — The United | States has awarded the highest military decoration it gives a foreigner to a * obaeed head of Japan’s air sn Gen. Lemnitzer, chairman of the U. s. joint chiefs of staff, presented the legion of erit, ree of commander, riday to Gen. Minoru Genda. Genda, 57, has retired to run for the upper house of the Diet (Parliament). He has headed e air force since 1959. Lemnitzer, on a tour of U.S. ar Eastern bases, praised | Genda for his leadership of the | post-war air force and his co- operation with U.S. forces in| apan. Genda helped draw up the Pearl Harbor a’ lan as an ce ttack p ae spectators—burst into air fleet staff es Last Sep- The trial was a ‘.gacy of the : eee et 8. | checttived British-French ‘ava attack: ‘‘We should not have at- tacked just once. We should | have attacked again and again.” He added that he was speaking solely as a professional soldier. Boom In Steel Believed Ended Ottawa Couple On European Trip BEDEQUE — Dr. Ernest P. Weeks and Mrs. Weeks, Ottawa, left by Canadian Pavifie Airlines, for Lisbon last week. From there they plan to go to Seville, Gib- raltar. Barcelona, in Spain and then to Paris, and to Italy. In Switzerland they expect to visit Zurich, In England they will spend some time at Oxford, where Mr. Weeks attended as Rhodes Scholar for New Bruns- wick in 1933, and from Oxford University he received his PhD. | They expect to be absent for six weeks. Fire Losses Mount In N.S. HALIFAX ( CP) — Property losses as a result of fires in Nova Scotia during 1961 totalled | $3,094,000, an increase of about | $575,000. There were 34 deaths a decrease of two. The porvincial fire marshal’s report tabled in the legislature also said there were 2,553 re- portable fires of which 965 were caused by smoking, including a fire in Halifax a year ago which took the lives of five children. The second-greatest cause of fires was stoves and furnaces, | 270, followed by overheated and defective chimneys and flues, 175, and electrical causes, 174. The cause of a fire which claimed the lives of two adults and three children in Sydney Mines was not determined. CLEVELAND (AP) Re- moval of any strike threat by a | labor contract settlement pews take ‘‘the boom out of the ond quarter and the bust ot a the third” for the steel industry, Steel magazine said Sunday. “There will be no frantic rush to build inventories, no need for steel-makers to operate ineffi- cient mae and no reason for hedg foreign steel,” the cootel- paride weekly said. “The resulting stability will — lower eosts for every- The magazine said a panel of | 58 top rank economists predicts | 962 will be the 1 best in U.S. his- | jy Bs a the good times will last | at least through t the first quar- | of 1963. a a national product will a respectable $560,000,000,000, | they think, and much of the | onomy’s stren n be cred- | ited to the vitality of the meial- | working industry,”’ it a Production vikeiatien isn’t | N.S. Owner Has ‘Double Winners HALIFAX (CP) — Horses owned by Allison Nicholson of nearby Bedford were double winners in Saturday’s Harness racing on the Halifax Commons. Magic Rapid swept both ends of the feature race while Dawn Shadows took both races of his class. Palley Abb, owned and driven | by Dave Pinkney of Truro, was another double winner as was Pepper Shaker, owned by Doug Walsh of Lower Sackville, N.S. Single wins went to Gibson | Were, owned by H. MacBurney of Shediac, N.B., and Time’s Boy, owned by Leigh McHugh of Lower Sackville. Best time for the three fu r- longs was Magic Rapid’s 47 2-5 seconds in the opening race. easy for steelmakers at present | because users are cancelling | more tonnage than the mills are Diilas Returned High Mass at the | | conditions, To Prison Cell | BELGRADE (AP) — Milovan Dijilas, formerly one .of Presi- dent Tito’s closest collaborators | and friends, was taken to prison | again Saturday, apparently be- cause a new book he has written. Djilas once was vice-president | and one of the four most power- ful men in Communist Yugo- slavia, but won his greatest | UP | fame in "o Ra ans world be- cause of book The New | Class, in er which bitterly charged that communism breeds its own privileged cliques. For that he was imprisoned. He was on parole at the time of his arrest, and « sechateatly imprisoned about 1961, were to refrain from poll- tics and writing. Government spokesmen gave no reasons for his latest arrest. ation the new book by re with Stalin. The book was ed come out this) booking, but despite cancella- this are three-fi ks are limited largely to flat rolled cts. le and appliance manufacturers are enjoying good sales and will use large quantities of steel even thou | they’re trimming thelr fi inventor- a lor construction steel ond ta tin oo Hag is starting to pick up seasonally, ES Aid Planned > Pope To Send Famous Statue To World Fair VATICAN CITY (AP) —Pope John has eonsented toa request by Francis Cardinal Spellman to send Michelangelo's famed sculpture of the Pieta to the New York World's Fair in 1964. The Pontiff’s consent to allow the famous statue of the Ma- donna and the Dead Christ to leave St. Peter’s Basilica was obtained during an audience with New York’s Roman Catho- lie are Th life size marble statue, which is located above an altar For Family NORTH BAY, Ont. gather supplies for the) Mercier family in a it was | Mrs. Mercier gave | wae Wedentiny 46 twin daugh- ters, her fourth set of twins. | jae eye cunarte end thetr| en ee The fi ‘tamily lives in @ remote | wat Sousa Gas Ce and néwspaper stories originat-| ing in Hafleybury indicated the \ tamily needs hetw | the -Churea in the Basilica, has never before | been out of Italy. It was sculptured by the ren- | aissance master when he was | @ young man and is considered one of his greatest works. Mil- Sens of oeme from al parts of the world have seen Tt will be displayed in a Vath = pavilion at the world’s fair. high Vatican official also an that a statue of the Good dating from the fourth century will also be sent to the fair. The statue is kept in the Lateran Museum next to of &t. John Lateran Summerside and Prince County ISLAND NEWS PAGE The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Apr. 9, 1962. 3 Home Destroyed, Woman Injured SUMMERSIDE — Fire at | Everything in the home was Springhill, P.E.I. Saturday even- | lost to the fire which caused the ing hospitalized Mrs. Ralph Es- | complete destruction of the re- | sery, caused minor burns to | sidence, together with clothing | her husband and destroyed their | by ay og Staats, ie frame dwelling. Their seven- | ricgkphinarunie returned to | | the province only six weeks ago Peres son Bruce escaped un- \o ofter residing in Ontario for the ast 13 years. Mrs. Essery is Mrs. Essery is suffering | | the former Edna Boulter of severe burns to the hands and | Charlottetown. face. Following the fee Seturday Reportedly caused by a flare- | night, Mr. Essery and son we up of oil when Mrs. Essery me . given shelter at the pole of his lighting the kitchen stove Mr. and Mrs. A!fred prepare supper, the fire pale Essery ’ Mount Pleasant. The burns which resulted ‘n her be- | house destroyed by fire was ing taken to the Stewart Mem- | located beside the main ae | orial Hospital in Tyne Valley. | not far from Sprin, : Answers To Questions Given By Government In House MARKETING DIRECTOR George J. Ferguson asked the minister of agriculture: (1) What are the _duties of the; marketing director (2) List new he obtain- ° FINANCIAL STATEMENT | A. W. Matheson asked the eee of fisheries to table a the under-listed | oe in the financial statement | of the report of the department | ed? (3) What has been the benefit | (A) Administration: (1) tra- velling expenses, $1,074.47; (2) | tries? government owned cars, 1,-| (4) What salary is he paid? 592.10 ANSWERS (C) Fishermen's Lobe Board:| (1) To promote the sale of Is- (1) board member’s f and land products in all areas expenses, 1,329.20; (2) avetiea | where these products are now expenses, 1,220.26; (3) govern-| sold as well as_ investigating ment owned car expenses. 789.01. | new markets and supplying con- R | tacts for local dealers. 2. Contacts have been made | AN: No report of the department of with northern markets which fisheries tabled re an year ended merce 31st, | from this province. FICE FURNITURE | 3, More farm produce to nor- | . P. Smith asked the minis-| thern markets and many con-| ter ‘of industry, natural resour- | tacts made. ces and fisheries ,200. (1) What aitice, furniture has PREMIER’S TOURS been purchased by your epart- | A.W. Matheson asked the pro- ment in the fiscal year ended| vincial treasurer to tablea March 31, 1962? | breakdown of the following (2) What office carpets and | items shown in the Public Ac- rugs were purchased by your| counts for the year ended department for the same period? |‘March 31, 1961, Appendix 1 (3) What adding machines, | Item “y' — General Govern- calculators and typewriters were | ment, Miscellaneous General: purchased by your department He (a) Hon. W.R. Shaw—Pre- for the same period? r’s tour $45, (b) Hillside Inn (4) From what. firm or firms | | and Ano. — premier’s tour he these articles of furniture, | 62.10, (c) MCA and TCA — tic- carpets, rugs, adding machines, | kets 2,075.15, (d) Clifton Hotel — calculators and typewriters pur-| Meals 47.33 (e) Highway Offic- chased? ial’s Association entertainment | (5) What was the cost of the| 198. (f) Summerlea Restaurant | furniture, carpets, rugs, adding| $48. machines, calculators and type- writers, and how much money| item Hillside Inn and Ano? was paid to each supplier for | ANSWERS each article? (1) (a) ati eed Captain for Har- ANSWERS | bour Tour $5. W.R. Shaw expen- (1). one desk; one desk chair; | 8eS—not broken down $40 three regular chairs; one filing | aay 16 Dinners — Hillside Inn | G. R. | cabinet; one storage cabinet; Nine meals— one book case; one pepe Prowse 15.50 — $62.10. an; one humidifier. ) L.F. Rossiter — Seven Is- (2) Nil ‘oh 88.55 R.R. Bell — Ottawa (3) Nil 9. W.R. Shaw—Ottawa $79 M. (4) H. M. Simpson Ltd., Sto.| J- “McQuaid — Ottawa $79 J. D. te ae Ltd. | Stewart — Ottawa 71.50 H.B. . M. Simpson Ltd., $506..| MacNeill — Halifax $9 W.R. m8 “storey Electric Ltd., $77.69, | Shaw — Ottawa 83.05 M.J. Me- | Matheson asked provincia treasurer: Quaid — Ottawa 87.05 (1) How many ministers of the | | Wedge—Ottaws 90.90. MJ. government have group insur-| Quaid — Quebee 70.55 L. Rossi- | H.W. Me- | ance under the policies appli- | ter — St. Johns 115.60 A.B Mac- | cable to public servants? | Rae — St. Johns 116.55 H. W. (2) Who are the ministers and | | Wedge — Ottawa 90.90 J.D Ste- how much premium was paid | wart—Victoria 141. L. F. Rossi- | by the government for each! tet — Moncton 24.20 J.D. Ste-| minister? | wart — Montreal $65 J.P. Mathe- (3) ¥or how much is each of | 802 — Montreal 65.55 W.R. Shaw the said ministers insured? | — Ottawa $90 M.J. McQauid — (4) Is this group insurance! Ottawa 106. H.B. MacNeill—Ot- available to members to the le- | tawa $76. L.F, Rossiter—Haiifax gislature? 45.20 L.F. Rossiter — Ottawa (5) Were any changes made | 105.55 L.F. Rossiter — Montreal in rules and regulations cover-| $86 A.B. MacRae — Montreal ing group insurance since April $66. H.B. MacNeill — Moncton 1, 1961? | $10. H.W. Wedge — Ottawa $51, (6) If the answer to question| (4) 22 dinners — $47.33 (5) is “yes,” what were all| ‘¢) Not broken down — the said changes? (f) Meals — Premier’s Prince ANSWE co te ea $48. (1) Five (2) G.R. Prowse GOVERNMENT BOARD M.L. Bonnell asked the leader of the government: (1) During the year 1961 fer each and every government board and commission: (a) How many persons were employed (2) J. D. Stewart, L. F. Ross- iter, J. P. Matheson, H. B. Mac- Neill, A. B. MacRae, $8.16 per| thousand annually 3) $9,000. (4) No. (5) No. |te farmers and primary indus- | © the} | Quaid — Ottawa $83 M.J, Me-| 15 } Lewis A, Trecarten, Mete- orological officer at RCAF Station, Summerside, recently received an award for a sug- | gestion he made concerning the installation of clock-con- | trolled equipment on the wea- therfax "akan at radar sites. The suggestion has re- Dysentery Epidemic Flares In E. | By CARL HARTMAN BERLIN (AP)—East German | authorities Saturday announced |an epidemic of dysentery, more | than 28,000 cases—three of them \fatal—in the East Berlin area, foes _ virtually banned travel by | | | full time? (b) How many per- sons were employed part time? (c) What were the total salaries of all full time and part time employees? ANSWERS Liquor Commission, | Compensation (1) (a) oe Workmen's oard, © Publie Utilities Com. | ae (b) oa 5; Fishermens n Board, 4; Workmens Com- ac et Board, 6; Public Util- ities Commission, (ec) Liquor Commission, $105,- | 494.88; Fishermens Loan Board, 966.06; Workmens Compensation Board, 20,021.32; Public Utilities | Commission 17,669.99. FURNITURE PURCHASES H.P. Smith asked provincial treasurer and attorney general: (1) What office furniture has, been purchased by your depart- | ment in the fiscal year ended March 31, 1962: (2) What office carpets rugs were purchased by your) department for the same period? | What adding machines, | culators and typewriters wer e| for the same period? (4) From what firm or firms were these articles of furniture, | carpets, rugs, adding machines, | calculators and typewriters pur- chase (5) What was the cost of the furniture, carpets, rugs, adding machines, calculators and type- writers, and how much money money was paid to each sup- | plier for each article? ATTORNE YGENERAL (1) 1 bookcase, 75.00; 1 table, 08; 1 desk, 238.16. (2) Carpet, Court House (3) Nil (4) Desk and table, pson, 253.24; book case, B. Van Iderstine, 75.00; sae Crockett and Storey Ltd, 732.86. (5) See (1) (4) H.M. a VENDING SALES During 1960 Canadians bought $38,000,000 of merchandise | through automatic vending ma- chines. THE SUMMERSIDE HIGH SCHOOL THEATRE GUILD —Presents— “OKLAHOMA!” Tuesday and Wednesday, April 10th & TIth 8:30 P.M. SUMMERSIDE See your vel ag sient 3 an CIVIC AUDITORIUM Admission: $1.00 and | cal- | | TCA AIR TRAVEL BARGAINS! EXCURSION FARES TO MAY Sist, 1962 = ( biggest and best travel ! On some routes tra aa REKDAY EXCURSIONS — good for sa travel Saturday or Sunday on WEEKEND Berlin their craneeh They blamed # on bad but | The — began in East |Berlin at the end of last week. |Early this week it spread to | the surrounding areas. In other | Places isolated cases have been authorities said ae were due to visits to or from Berlin. | They banned sports events | and other assemblances and de- jereed that East Germans tra- |velling abroad must have a medical certificate to prove |they are not infec i newly formed “central com- ssion to combat dysentery” | issued a statement saying “by }united efforts, the disease will |be successfully overcome.’’ It said the epidemic was caused | by “a small quantity of infected | butter, which was immediately | withdrawn from the market.” Western officials express be- | lief the outbreak has com- | eeicatog by food ceartaaes | and |that East German authorities | have hidden its 7a oe They discounted, how a report in one West ete pi paper that there have been 34 deaths. So far the epidemic has not | spread to West Berlin, although | the city is surrounded by East | German territory. In a city of 3,300,000 only a few thousand (2) Who is the “Ano” in the| Purchased by your department) people pass Sa the Com | munist wall in a day. Food and | sanitary miami a much better in West Ber date. Robert Cousin’s Mill, feeds and concentrates. > | SUGGESTION WINS AWARD sulted im considerable finan cial savings to the govern- ment. He is shown above, right, receiving a certificate and cheque from Group A. G. Dagg, CD, comma: -_ officer the RCAF Sta- , Summerside. Darnley, and mixing as usual with complete line of Co-op J. &. T. Morris Ltd. At Your Home “Pop Bottle” Pickup in Charlottetown we'll pay you: Two Cents Cash for smal] bottles and Five Cents Cash for larger bottles of @ Coca-Cola @ Peerless beverages @ Morris beverages Dial 4-3745 or 4-4233 when you have your bottles ready and our driver will pick them up immediately and pay you cash money. J. & T. MORRIS LIMITED Ch’town, P.E.L ATTENTION KENSINGTON AND VICINITY Kensington Co-op will be closed for grinding and mixing the week of April 16th, due to necessary overhaul of diesel engine. Farmers are urged te have their mixing requirements done before that will be grinding -scene. Tra Canada on TCA ECONOMY ROUND Rie EXCURSION DAY $ SPECIALS — both weekday and weekend. It’s one ins ever — with BIG envi ail the si aoe or . saa on YEXCURSIONS — ened FOR EXAMPLE: OIY 44 MONCTON MONTREAL SEE MORTON DEW, 181 QUEEN ST., OR CALL 4-8541 “Travel must be completed by May Sist. TRANS-CANADA AIR LINES (&) AIR CANADA, e