a ,. Emmet Power. Greenfield, _In an effort to harvest 94 acms [of grain and to take advantage “of a fine ‘day called on the services of four combines to _do the job. Two were tractor- GRAIN HARV » hauled and the above two self- propelled. This is possibly the first time that four such machines have been in use on the same crop at the same ESTING IN KINGS CO. ~» s.»”"?. .. l time in the province and sug- gests that possibly more grain can be grown to an advantage than at the pnesent time In this province. .-.—r V..-‘....- yo ~.... g By NEIL A. MATIIESON Provincial and Farm Editor ' A continuation of the wet weather had Island tobacco -farmers looking gloomiiy at the ‘skies yesterday morning as they ’'wondered if they would get their crop harvested before the first frost. Several in the Ocean View ‘area are hopeful of completing the job in a week or so, bllt bthers figure it will take much llong-er. and some are not hope- !ul of finishing before mid-Oct- ober. Alyre M. Gallant. who has 20 acres at Rusticoville. said his crop is late and there is a great deal of maturing to he done be- fore it is ready for harvesting. Roy Gibson. who looks after the ‘crop on the provincial gov- ernment's farm at Greenfield, observed Wednesday that it is frustrating to sit wait for the stuff to mature. L.S. Vickcry, experimental tobacco farm director at Del- Ontario, said Wednesday at Roseneath thgt the ideal wea- ther condition would he ..to have no rain in the la st obacco Crop Needs Sunshinelo Mature» l ONTARIO CROP DOWN around and Q month, but the Island grow- ers have been getting persis- tcnt rainfall here_ An independent observer here said yesterday he thinks hhe .lsland crop willl be as g 0 od quantity-wise, as it was a year ago. though he fears the quality is bound to be affected adverse- ly by the weather. Some curing trouble is being experienced because the thin leaf curls up and burns on the tips. but steaming equipment is beinguloaned to the growers by the provincial department of agriculture and that is expected to help remedy the situation, by artificially supplying some of the needed moisture. Mr. Vickery said that the Ont- ario crop had been killed off by Estes’ Associates Get Prison Terms EL PASO. Tex. (AP)-—Three associates, of Texas promoter Billie Sol Estes were sentenced to from six to 35 years in pri- son Thursday on pleas of guilty to mail fraud and conspiracy. , Those sentenced were Harold E. Orr, 31. and Ruel W. Alex- ander, 36 of Amarillo and Cole- man Mcspadden, 45. of Lub- bock,~ all officials of the Su- erior Manufacturing Company of Amarillo. Mcspadden and Orr drew maximum sentences of 35 years. Alexander drew a sentence of not more than six years. Federal Judge R. E. Thom- ason, however. set the sen- currently, which means ‘ Mc- Spadden and Orr would serve a maximum time of 10 years and Alexander six years. No fines were assessed the officials but Superior Manufac- turing Company drew $1.000 fines on five counts for a total frost more than a week ago.. Production there was cut tlhls year by 25 to 30 million pounds, he said. by heavy hail storms which stripped the leaves in some places and tore‘holes in them in others, in addition to the frost damage. Kings Co. 4-H. Public Speaking Contest Winners Declared MONTAGUE — More than 60 persons were present for the Kings County 4-H club public ‘speaking contest held at New Rerth School on Wednesday ev- «eating. The winners of the com- petition will compcte at the Ru- ral Youth Fair to be held later this fall. Prizes were presented to the winners and all competitors re- EASlERN ?BR|lEFS _ AT CARDIGAN Mr. and Mrs. Lynwood Mac- Neill, Cardigan. have as thczr guests Mr. Miarion Norman, Wobttrn. tVlass., Mrs. Walter Hughes and Mrs. Frances Cun- ningham, Brookline. I\lass., and Chester Phinney, Norton, Mass. .« . T0 HALIFAX Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mac- Neill and young daughter. Susan returned to Halifax, N.S.. after spending their vacation in Montague. guests of Mr. Mac- .Neil~ls mother. Mrs. Arthur Macheill. . _ SPENT VACATION Miss Margot Hume returned to Halifax, N.S., at r spend- ing her vacation with her moth- nnrse at the Victoria. General ‘Ilos-pital in Halifax. VISITED FQIENDS . e or 32 year- Mro. Flora (MncLeodl Haynes. lceived a 4-H club crest. The ‘winners were presented with the P. E. I. Dairymen's Association ‘prizes by Douglas Mellish. i The winners were Irene Lar- gkin. Morell, in the intermediate at-lass: Eileen Martin. Green ‘Meadow. in the junior class, land Maureen Cronin, Summer- jvillc. in the senior.class. l During the intermission the {group .was entertained with music supplied by Rev. _John jCash. The meeting was chaired by Audrey Kennedy of New Perth. ‘ The judges were: Miss Teresa MacLeod, director of the W0- men's Institutes; John Chandler. of $5,000. The indictment, also. naming Estes, charged the four men in- uced farmers to sign mortr gages on fertilizer tanks which never existed and sold the mort- gages to various finance com- panies. Estes haspleaded not guilty. Lawyer, -Promoter Aire Found Guilty TORONTO (CP) Lawyer John J. Bussin, 49, and former mining stock promoter Albert Gould, 46, were found guilty h e r e conspiring fabricate evidencethat led to a $456.00’; fraud of Cabanga -De- velopments Limited in 1957. he Ontario Supreme Court jury deliberated six hours. Sentenct will be passed Sept. 24 Gould was convicted of fraud In December, 1959, d was sentenced to six year . ._ The trial involved a letter rom Havana, Cuba, in August. 1957. indicating sale of Middle East Israel Oil Corporation to Caba ces on five counts to run con- h Pork Extension Seen In Offing Offering for able of a large property at Brudenell is seen as the first step In general plan- ning to include the area .ad.iac- ent to Brudenell Park. The property was purchased some time ago by the provincial government through the Depart- ment of Industry and Natural Resources and proposals have been heard that a new golf course should be built there to give Eastern Kings County a 11 added tourist attraction. However nothing definite has been heard of this proposal. as department authorities have not yet reached final decisions on all planning for the area.’ Student Visits Mo-ntclgue Home MONTAGUE — Having had his thesis for a Master of Science Dogma in tstry accepted by Dalhousie Univer- ' William Maclntyre of Montague will begin a three- year course in October which will lead to his Doctor of Philo- sophy degree. ' An interesting feature of the course willl be a crui_se to Ber- muda collccting data on surface area. sediments and other items. His field of study is oceano- 2 ‘.3 graphy. Mr. Maclntyre is now spend- ing a two week holiday with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Maclntyre. Montague. CCC Oust: Move On Bilingualism VANCOUVER (CF)-—A mo tion onbillnguallsm, which had survived heated debate in pol- icy committee. was rejected Wednesday by the full member- ship of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce as it wound up its three-day. 33rd annual conven- ion. The. recommendation, voted down 83-44, had urged that: “A program be which would provide. over a stated period of time, that all deputy ministers be fluently lingual with full consideration given to efficiency." . . Fox of Wetaskiwin, Alta., said such a recommen- datlon—whlch, if passed would have gone to the federal cab- inet as chamber policy—would “discriminate against western Canada‘ where students received no French instruction prior to high school." 5'' —. .|SlAND NEW: PAGE -4 .'l'OBACCO GIIOWE-RS Four members of the com. mittee of tobacco growers charged with getting a Prince Edward Island Tobacco Grow- ers‘ Association underway. are shown here as they were caught chatting in the Kings- way Motel at Roseneath Wed- Montoque, Souris, Kings County. “You can't achieve unity by compulsion, as French-Canada should know," he said. lFreedomites ;Stay in Camp f PRINCETON. ac. tCPl— lBritish Columbia's Freedomlte Doukhobors disregarded the ad- [vice of their lawyer Thursday -and decided to stay encamped ere rather than continue a march to the we . "We are not going to march into police clubs." said Mrs. Fanny Storgoff. spokesman for gtlte 1,300 Freedomltes. “We ;will stay.” ‘ The Frecdomites were told iwedltgsday night by Vancouver lawyer George Herbrik that he felt they were within their rights to continue a trek from‘ the Kootenays to the west. The Sons plan to go to Agas- siz to camp near Mountain Prison where 63 of their broth- ers, and husbands are ‘jailed for terrorism. luc Salaries Increased LONDON. Ont. (CP\ — The United Church of Canada Thur- sday granted its ministers sal- ary increase of $150 a year for 1963 and another $150 a year for .1964. The increses will bring the minimum salary next year to $3.950 plus travel allowance and to $4,100 pills travel allowance the following year. Rev. W. ‘J. Baker of Grand Bank, Nfld.. told the 20th gen- eral council the increases would impose a hardship on churches in his part of the country. The average annual wage in congregations in his province is about $1,500. he said, compared agronomy fieldman; and David Ward. agricultural representa- tive. They were assisted by the Kings County agricultural re- presentative. David MacLean. Following the contest chocolate milk and doughnuts were supp- lied by the department of agri- culture. gliner Engineer jRetires After e40'Yeors At Sea MONTREAL (CP) ‘—- Donald 113. Hall, who first sailed the 1 high sea . c o a l - burning ;freighters, left Thursday on his ‘last voyage before retiring after a 40-year sailing career. Hall is chief engineer aboard ltho liner Empress of England. lwhich sailed for Liverpool car- rying him back to his hometown 0 stay. He first saw Montreal in 1921 as anénglneer aboard the Bal- our. a coal-burning freighter that took 34 days to make‘tht crossing from London. He survived an iceberg colli- sion in the Strait of Belle Isle -in 1936--the ship didn’t‘ sink- and kept sailing throughout the Second World War without get.- Al- ting a scratch. ‘to avoid trouble," he said. "I always seemed to be tranq- ferred to another ship in than V will visit with man... of her family and friends in Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton and New. York. ISLAND llfivruauu Ma ' position and onto MO'RA’.L ‘ (Continued from page 1) ing is ‘damaging to bodily health.”' Twelve principles drafted by the board of evangelism and so- cial service to guide church me bers in the observance of Sun ay were accepted by coun- cil with a recommentation that they be published in pamphlet rm. .Emphaslzlng the importance of. worship on,Sunday. the prin- ciples also stress the need for recreation and say physical and spiritual recreation are men- related. STRESS -TOGETHERNESS “We believe in the preserva- of a family where parents. and children are to gather as a family. Any com- mercial interest, any sport any amusement. w h I c h threatens to almost $4,500. including travel allowance, earned by some ministers. SUB. SHIP COLLIDE TOKYO lReuters)—A- Soviet ship rescued 16 Japanese fisher- men whose boat collided Thurs- day with a submarine believed to be Russian, off Etorufu 15- land near Hokkaido, Japan’: northernmost island. the Japa- nese safety board said. The fishermen were transferred to a Japanese patrol boat for re- turn home. ‘PLAN onus. ans:-umcn EDINBURGH (Reuters) The manufacturers of the thal- idomide drug Distaval. Distil- lers Company Limited, said Fri- day the ’company w s nd £750,000 ($750,000) for research into‘ the causes of congenital deformltiesflin human Inga. The drug is binned for causing deformed babies. . . CLAIM WIN SAIGON (AP) —— South Viet-' namese government t r o o p s claimed their first major ar- mored victory of the war Wed- nesday, reporting they trapped a veteran Communist rebel unit and killed 168 Viet Cong sol- diers in a battle 80 miles south of Saigon. this. or consistently deprives families of this, is evil in its nature." ‘ cofuncll, which Monday ‘passed eight of 10 main resolu- tiollr connected with a major church stntemént on marriage, agreed to the remaining state- ments Thur a . The report calls for a royal commission to consider npvfaion of divorce I w to Iclude desei-tion. crusty and naanlty ‘as grounds in ad- dition to mini . A resolution declaring that ‘ordination for women should be open only to unmarried women or widows "‘and therefore not under the call of wifehood or motherllood" ran Into heavy op- rrago of amendm . ntnnndnientvlllpenn wlaochndron have grownuptuhocornoordatned ulongubarputontedoea notlnterforo wtthlierwllely MOTOR REWINDING 8: REPMRS Storey Elflflllt l.lil ‘..‘.l1i-'m life. i’: lll"l‘ ‘ DIAL 4-6341 1.23:4-noun SIBVICI * DUVAR’S RADIO SERVICE, serving King’: County... lllghut oulnyrv Sorvleo BOA-Vicar nadhlfla 'l.‘V Ilaouvan - pllted -p!antoi‘fiI'Il.‘noflIa?.l'.I. du . The real that fornrover strenuous pro- tuts from a minority. \ "" Montisnc rm-'9 . | , I morning was back in custody by 2 p.m. when he was caught in the I from Georgetown. 4 ‘The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri. Sept. 21, 1362. Youth is Caught NAME COMMITTEE; I. nesday ening. Left to rfsfit are. Jo Power. Greenfield: Douglas Roloson. Ocean View who is committee‘ chairman: East Germans Ate Reported Non-Communists comma BROOK ‘(GP)- Mnj. - Gen. Sir Rohan Dela- combe, a former commander of the British military garrison in Berlin, says only five per cent of the East German population is Communist. » . Maj.-G . Delacombe. visit- centres on the first leg of a Marcel Mloyart. Upper Manta. ‘cue and Alyfl M. Gallant. Rustlcov-ille. in western Newfoundland centres on‘ the first leg of a Canadian speaking tour, said Wednesday 85 per cent of the people of East Germany are openly hostile to the Communist regime and the rest “simply go along." The retired general said Ber- lin is not a military problem, but a political and an economic ona.- The Russians do not want war‘ over Berlin but they will use bluff and every effort short of war. After Jail Escape GEORGETOWN — Joseph Steele made his escape o-ml Henry Daniel Phillip Steele, 16. the jail fence and his absence of Souris, who escaped from the was noted almost immediately Kings County jail at Georgetown by jailer, L.S. Batchilder who at about 11 o'clock yesterday reported it to the RCMP. Mem- bers of the Montague and Soutis detachments of the RCMP set up patrols on the main highuvay and also began organizing in woods approximately two miles \._I search party and. alerted the RCMP headquarters for the as- sistance of one of the dogs. However before this-. was necessary Steele was ca red about 200 yards from the main highway. He was found by Sgt. I-larry Burns at about 2 p.m. Steele was a prisoner in the jail on remand to Sept. 8 on I charge of breaking and enter- ing Percy's Grocery in Sourll and committing an indictable offence therein. so now Aupmuca VATICAN CITY (A1?)—Popg John will hold the flmgapal audience ever to take place in the famous Sistine Chapel on Oct. 12; the Vatican announced Thursday. The leader of the Re- man Catholic church will re- ceive members of foreign dip- lomatic missions sent to attend the Oct. 11 opening of the cou- menical council In St. Peter’; Basilia. ‘ I cons:-slut « t _ Newspaper Advertisingt‘; A "C Hits the ‘Mark with a Large ."';'.°W°I!.-*’ mt one--day or and Constant o .,_ . ' Thou’: nothing ltit-or-min about newspaper among’ .5 it’: I constant audience vnrlgg Inn-|g,vg|‘..-.¢"|._.,,g 3].. ’.'.,.p' »-til-v *'lm-lv- ‘ i I ‘vi K A ' . Will“ 5¢¢¢|_||0 circulation irnntdlns c_onctoot‘ii‘vlth ‘ . ‘WP Vflridfion 0 month to month. Tho,roio‘n6,utltninr dung. ' wlrouwltlnl-m-mg‘ ‘ ‘as: g .‘s V» ;_ ,_ .. 2