: ) { Dartmouth Job Tops Contracts contract for dredging * the har- bor of Dartmo @ $2,857,985 list of c sued in March by the federal tence if he ch if he chooses, works department. in its unanimous dec After the verdict a gale in crowded rtroom there were cries of “Algerie Fran- | caise” (Algeria is French) f:om | OTTAWA (CP) — A $588,940 | critics of the judgment. There is no appeal from the | verdict. However, President de | ulle can commute the sen- uth, tapped js ae i contract was awarded to P. Porter Company Lim- ited “, Montreal. Construction contracts in Que- bec: British —. Metabetchouan — Post office, Real Nault, Jonquiere, $29,012. | Seven Islands — Addition Indian residential school, F. Vig- | neron Construction Generale LONDON (Reuters) perial general staff, MOTHER AND TRIPLETS DOING WELL Mrs. bag Bujold of Fort Frances, Ont., holds her triplet - bables—one born April 1 and the others April 13. The boy | on the left arrived first. weigh- ing four pounds, 14 ounces. The girl in the centre weighed six pounds and the other boy five pounds, 10 ounces. The babies have not been named yet. Doe- tors report the triplets are thriving. (CP Photo) Easter Week Services Planned By City Churches With the Easter season near at hand, churches throughout Charlottetown will mark the end of Lent and the day of the resur- rection with special services and music appropriate to the season. Trinity Church will hold a ae a service at 11 a.m. Tiday, featuring se- latene from the cantata ‘Oliv- et To Calvary’. An interdenom- inational service of meditation will be held from three to four o'clock in the afternoon with music by Trinity Church choir and worship conducted by the ministers of the Charlottetown churches. Handel's Alleluia Chorus by the senior girls choir will be featured at the morning service on Easter Sunday, with the sermon by Rev. John Ball en- titled ‘“‘A Walk in the Garden.” Rev. R.S. Latimer will preach at the Sih te i te and music will the senior choir and ihe § hanes girls choir. MIDNIGHT M St. Dunstan's Basilica will have the Solemn Mass of the Resurrection at- midnight Satur- day, preceded by the Saturday an re Masses on Sunday 1 be as usual, ‘erg - rere Pontifical unos atl On Holy Thursday thane will be a Pontificial Low Mass at 8 a.m, with the blessing of the oils. There will be masses at four and five in the evening, | with a Solemn Mass at 7.30 p.m The main Good Friday service will take place at three p.m. with the stations of the cross and sermon at 7.30. The First Baptist Church will have the first observation of Easter Sunday with a sunrise service at 7.30 with Mrs. Mitton as speaker and Eileen MacDon- orning service. entitled “‘Conquerer of Sin and Death”, will begin at 11 a.m. Special music will include Divine Redeemer” by Gunod “The Holy City” by Adams sung by . Douglas McKinney, and a solo by Sterling Inman, ‘‘When Rn Easter Sunday Morning” by CAROL SERVICE e Easter carol service will be held at 7 p.m. with selections by the church choir, intermed- jate girls choir and senior, a meditation on ‘Our Everlasting Home’. On Good Friday evening @ service of meditation and music will include an organ re- cital by Rev, T. Elgar E a of Wales The Church of 1 The Most Holy Redeemer will have Saturday} # vigil services at 11.30 p.m. fol- lowed by Solemn High Mass at midnight. Masses are at the us- ual times on Sunday. Good Fri- day service will be at three in the afternoon, and masses on Holy Thursday will be at 4 p.m. and 5.45 p.m. +e a Solemn High Mass at 9 p St. Peter's Cathedral will hold the celebration of the Holy Eu- christ at 7 and : a Easter , with Matins at 9 a.m. A Procession and choral euchrist iE will be held at 11 a.m., with the| sid musical setting by Charles ’| emphasis on berts, | ZION PRESBYTERIA? Evenson 3s... process- Deum by Lit-| the day's ser- p.m. The Magnificat | Dimmitis will be by VICES 8 Services will include communion at 11 a.m. on East- er Sunday. Musie will include the choral introit ‘Begin My Soul Some Heavenly Theme”, by the junior choir. ‘‘The Festi- val Anthem" and “Blessed Be The Lord And Father Of Our Lord Jesus Christ’? with solos and 7 p.m. on Sunday, with spe- cial Easter music. Music by the senior, intermediate and junior choirs will be featured at the evening service. A communion service and confirmation of new members will be held on Good Friday morning. by Barbara Rogers and R. M Reymond. The Vesper Order of the Sev- en Easter Lessons will be held at 7 p.m., with passages being read by the laymen from the gospels, epistles and Apocalyp- se. Music will include the anth- em “The Strife Is O’er’’, a solo, “TI Know My Remeemer Liveth” and the Alleluia Chorus from Handel's Messiah. SPECIAL CANTATA A special Easter Cantata will compose the evening service at Central Christian Church, En- titled “The Road. to Victory” the cantata proceeds from the triumphal entry through the pas- sion to the resurrection, with scripture narration and music by the choir. The morning ser- vice will feature a special mes- face. St. Paul's Anglican Church will hold communion services at 8 and 11 a.m. on Sunday, with Handel's Alleluia chorus at the later service. The service of evening prayer at 7 P. m. will include the anthem ‘‘The Strife Is O’er’’. Services on Good a day are at 10 a.m. and 8 p Services at Calvary enti on Sunday will place special the resurrection. Main selections by the choir will include ‘Christ Arose’ and “Death Has No» Tares’. The Journalistic Awards Made NEW YORK (AP) — The Overseas Press Club of Amer- ica has presented journalism awards to 16 individuals and citations to 13 others. Inc., Seven Islands, $304.79 |\be able to use more training | [ 4 areas in Commonwealth coum. | be tries. Re Receives Hull told members of Royal Commonwealth oe Death Sentence the question of training areas is not peculiar to Britain. The PARIS (AP)—A special high | West aittars coutt genianced ts ‘alning areas of West Germany ere tending to become sm 60-per-cent interest }ceeds of asbestos production of | Lake Asbestos of Quebec Lim-| ‘ited, a subsidiary of American The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed. April 18, 1962. 21 SMALL BOY FITS lse"Stowreent intone Spelt PIPE TOO WELL RACINE, Wis. ‘AP )— |Smelting and Refining Co., ap- There was nothing wrong plied the net income to its own with Steve Frederick- | deficit. Deficit at Dec. 31 stood son, but he got himself into a chest-to-toe cast anyway. he three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred fred- erickson found a length of concrete sewer pipe near a construction site and tried to find out whether he'd fit 179 a year earlier. President A. B. Davidson said/ in the annual report earnings from 1962 operations should; show “‘still further improvement | at $6,093,905,down from $6,348,-, a Rosas wife, Melen, | and technical Aug. 2 Heodall was Walkerton, Ont., The Crown had established he killed his wife with a butcher knife in a lonely Bruce Penin- sula cabin in 1952 and disposed of her body. The body was never found His three children, Ann, Marg- aret and James, who were 4, 11 and 12 respectively, at the time of the incident, testified saw him kill their mother | Kendall appealed the capital convicted at they surveys, tes been named chairman of the #& nation intergevernmental ographie CoE it was an- nounced her The Oa came from the Paris headquarters of the United Nations Educational, Sei- entific and Cultural Organiza- tion Dr. Cameron, 47, < Cone, succeeds the late Brumn, leading Denn a biologist, who died last Decem- ber two months after his elee Training Areas to | sir Richard Hull, chief of = im said | |he hopes the British army will | Asbestos Corp. Reports Profit Asbestos aller reported net income in 1961 was tion as the commission's first provided the tempo of industrial | chairman, production is maintained.” Death Sentence Changed To Life | OTTAWA (CP) — The cabinet | has commuted to life prisonment the death cee for murder which had been im- posed on 52-year-old Arthur (CP) — United James Kendall of Johnson's Limited has | Harbor, Ont. Kendall was inside. The answer was just barely, or not quite, depend- ig on your point of view, After 35 minutes, two po- licemen with a hammer and chisel returned Steve to cir- culation. murder conviction to the On- tario Court of Appeal and the | Supreme Court of Canada but the pire ga was upheld by mm ¢ VANIERS VISIT MUSEUM MONTREAL (CP) — Mme, Georges Vanier, wife of the Gov- ernor-General, received a spe cial surprise Thursday when she and her husband visited Mont- real's Chateau de Ramezay Mu- seum. The chateau has in its picture gallery a pertrait of Mme. Vanier’s grest - grana- - Dr. Wil- father, Charles Michel de Sala- director of yy distinguished soldier and hero of the 1818 Battle of Cha- ao as his trial had rec- eacmaeate mercy. im. Canadian Gets Appointment PARIS (Reuters) iam M. Cameron, been oceanographic research for the MONTREAL Corp. to have Gen, Edmond Jouhaud to death | ang there i. certainly more $194,626, up from $77,434 in 1960.' hanged April 17 for the abled Canadian department of mines teauguay here, users of those areas. Jouhaud, 57-year-old former a But with our strategic lift of chief of staff of the French air | me Royal Air _— transport force, had been charged with | e mmand, I wi see armed revolt against France | a the not too "Setaet future a and with inciting Algerian Eu- | greater use made of some of ropeans to terrorism as a lcader the Commonwealth countries, of the Secret Army Organiza- | who still have fairly large areas tion. The nine - ated 2% hours before bringing ' of damage,” he s: to SOosTOn P Stay at Boston's finest — @ Near neon, Shopping, Entertainment and Educational nters e urious Radio, TV Available @ Riviera Dining Room — Coffee Shop @ Can Can Cacktail Lounge — Unique Sherry Lounge «+ Entertainment Nighty @ Ample Parking Facilities COCRCO SERED BREE RAE EEHOOEEOESEOO® trom oe Complete Banquet, Meeting, Convention Facifities eins i COpley 7-7700 Massachusetts Ave. ot Boylston in which military training can man court deliber- | | take place en . on deal Winner of the club’s annual George Polk Memorial Award medium, requiring ‘exceptional courage and enterprise abroad” was Dickey oo a New York free-la A ume os nd were given for her coverage ot the fighting in South Viet Nam, where she made several para- chute jumps into enemy terri- tory. She described her report- ing experiences in the book What's a Woman Doing Here? A citation went to Sydney Gruson of New York Times for his reporting on the Berlin sit- uation. Gruson, 45, began his news- nat career with The Canadian Press. He worked with CP in Toronto, Montreal, New York and London and left to join the New York Times in London in 1943. He now is stationed in Bonn. His brother, Wilf, is with The Canadian Press in Toronto. for the best reporting in any | Employment Opportunities LEGAL OFFICER, experienced lawyer with knowledge of federal slatues and regulations, to > eave on enomane of legislation, regulations and legal documents of the Treasury, Finance, Ottawa. $8760-$10,300. tion 62-7: ASSISTANT REGIONAL OFFICER, with responsible adminis- trative experience, to assist ‘in developing national . ency supply plans, Defence Production, Halifax, N. 7920-$9300, Competition 62-757. SUPERVISOR, BUILDING CLEANING, with broad ee ce all phases of modern building cl operations, Civil Aviation Branch, Transport, Ottawa. $7500-$8700, Competi- tion 62-235. CHIEF OF OPERATIONS AND TRAVEL INFORMATION, experienced administrator, to be for activities as trav . edmntnistretion and in the Canadian bmi Bureau, Northern Affairs and National Resources, Otta $7260-$8340. Competition OPERATIONS OFFICER — DATA PROCESSING SERVICE, to proide technical direction to clerical and machine staff involved in process ative, regulatory Nese four resurrections is to be the theme for the sermon. VIGIL SERVICES St. Pius X Church in Parkdale will have the Easter vigil ser- vices at 10.45 on Saturday night, followed by midnight mass. Sun- day Masses will be held at the regular time. The liturgical ser- vice for Good Friday be held at 3p.m. On Holy Thurs- Ont. Relaxes Drinking Laws TORONTO (CP) — Premier Robarts has relaxed Ontario's drinking laws. The premier announced: 1. Hotels will be permitted to serve liquor in rooms. day there will be an evening Mass for the children, and a om Mass with procession at 8 "bs pring Park United Church will, hold < Lg at 11 a.m. on Sunday, with Rev. Clayton Le- wis Sania on the theme “He Risen Indeed’, “This be goo Panersde” will be rendered by the junior choir and “He Arose” by the senior choir. Worship services on Seite at oo ee aa Church at 11 . and 7 p.m. will emphasize the ‘Easter theme throw pecial music by the. choir un- der the direction of Miss Mad- elyn Wadden, organist, will in- clude S morning eae ‘This Joyful Eastertide”’, a tradition- al each eadiedy, oad aboys trio composed of Allan Stewart, Allan Balderston, and Kenneth Murphy singing ‘ a of Jerasulem” by H In the evening, ine Phillips n will be heard in the spiritual | present When They evening. | MORNING MESSAGE Charlottetown Bible Cha’ be “The Power of His Resurrec- | to | oon The conclusion of a three | | waaeraese, The crossi | Jordan, will compose the even-| ing service. Salvation Army services on Sunday will include a special | even-| sunrise service and Easter bre: United Chere 2. Cocktail bars will be per- mitted to ane open = hour longer—to 1 a.m.—on weekdays he bring chan: in line with h dining ounges. 3. prieale clubs In dry areas may be licensed. 4. Tourist establishments fn unorganized areas, motels and summer resorts will be eligible for licensing and arrangements will be made for the package sale of alcoholic eet are in summer resort @ 5. Public Sounes "ond taverns will be able to ask the liquor licence board for different open- ing hours, providing they are not open more than 12 consecu- tive hours. At present they open at noon. CNR Pensions To Be Boosted OTTAWA (CP) — siderable he | cause the new tates ‘only to and not to employees. The main | for the pension review had come from the railway Lionel Chevrier (L—Montreal rates Laurier) said the id have been much earlier and it was anfor- | tunate oe the had not ‘o the assistance of workers “out research, end Seer ae data, Agriculture, Ottawa. jon 62- Competi! FOREIGN LANGUAGE INSTRUCTORS, to prepare and con- duct lectures in Russian and either Italian or Arabic, Joint os ia ae School, National Defence, Air; Ottawa. $6420-$7140. Competition 62-763 ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER, experienced in municipal a fairs, such as municipal’ organization, procedures finance. local | penteamannt and aa taxation, zoning, etc,, tere thern Affairs and National Resources, Ottawa. $6420- $7140. Competition 62-308. ELECTRONICS Sea experienced electronic tube apec- to represent Armed Forces on committees of inveuti- oo nbn to ean a tests, Na- Defence, ING, Pharnacy, Bacteriology Directorate, National 1 Health and Welfare, Ottawa. $5460- $6180. Competition 62-481, STANDARDS 1 eathies or Sera hae tee university Chemistry with graduate in a eee or years’ labora- tory physical mea coum ¢ or high school graduate with five years’ gas experience, Trade $5100-$5640. Competition 62-566. ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN, for complex technical shop and . construc- tion, modification and testing of equipment used for food processing , Agriculture, $4620-95160. Competition $4800 REFRIGERATION TECHNICIAN, for development and struction of specialized refrigeration equipment and catenet and plent environment chambers, Agriculture, Ottawa. $4280-84800, Competition 62-373. eo mo TECHNICIAN, at least four years’ exper- fence, to develop roll film and ome laminated identifica- tion cards with phot: Canadian Armed Forces Iden- tification Bureau. National “Defence, Ottawa. Competition 62-756. FORMS DESIGN TECHNICIAN, several years’ related exper- ansport, Ottawa. $3750-$4200. nea a $2004. MUSICAL INSTRUMENT INSPECTOR, to in Details and application forms at major National Employment Service Offices or nearest Civil indicated as a.m. | the oresent sovernmant.” the 25, ot work theouh the. policies of rs cin, perfect plan for fashion flattery il Wardrobe planning for Easter made easy; Bach of these lovely Spring ensembles is designed to make you look your very loveliest! Fresh, exciting selections > « » see them today. The ‘Lassie Suit new short-jacket middy suit; slim skirt; double breasted Jacket with white buttons and red satin lining. In lovely grey, navy and red for the Junior Miss, size 7 to 13, 29.99 all- weather laminated coats light as a feather; lined with a wafer thin layer of tiny cells; foamed back on jersey wool; pure silk and worsted coats shower and wrinkle proof; mar . . . “the” fabric for Spring! Widely darin collar, %4_ sleeve; black, accentuated “A” line: cleverly designed % navy, red, beige; size 10 to 16. with front yoke and sleeve line cut in one piece. Uncrushable Grey only, in sizes 10 to 16; styled by “Montroy”’ 69.95 Easter bonnets "Julius Resnick" Handbags and Capri and sleeve: multi shades on a white ; plastic marshmallow, j oe ne hie’ softly pouched hand. ‘ * en bags, smart vet roomy; ; white in the pop- bete Wines , - es ular cloche style; ee a per orewe os small brim, pleated "> ane tee q nylon ribbon and ; large bow at side. . 4 Styled by “Fashion Pyjamas sees : “eee eee 2.98 ed Hats” gay harlequin pyjamas; Baby Dob ? leg; frilled round neck 6.98 background; small, medium, large. CH'TOWN STORF: S'SIDE STORE Open Mon. throngh Thurs. 8:30 a.m, to 3:30 Soe ee eee ame 0 nes RE p.m. Closed Good Friday, April 20th. Open Good Friday, April 20th. Open Sater Saturday, April Zist 8:30 a.m. te 9:30 p.m. @ay April 21st 8:30 a.m. te 12 noon, ; )