V Mrs. Eleanor Hughes is shown here making up Mrs, Mae Amos at the dress re- hearsal for the play “0 Pro- mise Me." The play is a ammo READY FOR EASTER MONDAY PLAY three-act comedy written by Pete Williams and is to be performed tonight in the Birchwood High School audi- torium. The play is being in“... who"... . .r.i.':..r.t}x ,.~. 1.33. rsrANo urws PAGE Charlottetown and Queens County The Guardian, Charlottetown. Mon. April 15, 1963. 5 Collisions Numerous; No Injuries All sections of the province were slowly being dug out fol- lowing the severe storm which slammed into the area Good Friday, blocking all highways and bringing road and air transport to a standstill. By late yesterday all paved highways had been plowed out, although some sections were reported dangerous due to narrow cuttings. Work on wid- ening out is expected to get underway this morning. and work on secondary roads will be continued. he weatherman yesterday was offering very little relief from the foul weather that has prevailed since the main brunt of the storm passed early Sat- urday morning. The forecast for the Island is for continued heavy cloud and frequent snowflurries, with no rise in the temperature. The high for today is expected to be in the mid-30's. Reported Despite the condition of the highways. both the RCMP and, the city police reported high-t f ways and streets quiet, with very few accidents. The RCMP reported one col-' lision at Miliview. Friday eve- ning. and two mishaps at Tra- cadie and one at New Haven on Saturday. There were no acci- dents reported to the police yesterday. In all four c a s e 5, property damage was said to be extensive, but there were no injuries. \ In the city a two-car pileup occurred on Upper Queen Street, between Euston and Chestnut streets, Friday even- ing, while Saturday afternoon another occurred at the inter- section of Fitzroy and Pownal Second Firm Boosts Price BRITISH PACIFIS British anti H-bomb dem- onstrators parade past the royal family’s Windsor Cas- tle residence in Windsor. carrying banners demanding nuclear disarmament. parti- cipated in the mile-long pro- cessron. (AP Wirephoto streets. There were no injuries in either incident and damage in both cases was said to be light. ; Vatican Pa directed by Stirling lumen of Charlottetown. The sponsoring organization is the St. Charles Auxiliary of the Charlottetown Hospital. WORMS SCARC‘E, WEATHER COLD Trout Fishermen Happy As Season Opens Today The ponds are iceubound, the streams are clogged with ice cakes. and riled, the dirt roads are muddy if not covered with snow drifts and the tempera- ture is not expected to be much above the freezing point today. However. all that is merely in- cidental to the fact the trout fishing season opens today. Paved roads which are ad- jacent to well known fishin g spots are expected to be jam- m parked cars and d trucks and casting space is ex- pected to be at a minimum at such places as the North River and ernon River ca-useways. Anglens in all shapes and sizes, most of them wearing more clothing than they pro- bably have all winter, will be crowding the banks if the snow drifts don't interfere with the tootin - ‘- . Some will spend a few minutes — just long enough to wet their 1 m — while others will come prepared to spend most of the ay. If the fish are biting every- one will be happy no matter YMCA Circus Goes Tonight The Charlottetown YMCA will be staging a “circus” at the gym this evening at 7.30. The circus, involving a total of 18 acts, is being sponsored by the Omega Hi-Y Club and the Phalanx Young Men's Club and is made up entirer of lo- cal ‘Y' mem rs. Featured among the acts are Jack Turner and Judy Vessey with acrobatics, Roy Doiron. clowning on trampolene, and several other clown dance routines. p gram is under the chairmanship of Eldon Lara- bee with John Evans. David Mills, Winston Smith. Andrea Duvar. and Jack Turner as di- rectors. John lves will be the master of ceremonies. LOCAL BRIEFS whether he succeeds in landing aren't biting many and varied reasons will be advanced. such as “It’s too cold yet", and “You have to wait until the turn of the tide, because that’s when the big sea trout come in." Of course the biggest prob- lem — bigger even than the snow. ice. mud and cold wea- ther — is “Where do you get the worms? It looks like more and more fishermen are going to be seek- ing minnows such as capelin and gudgeons in the early sea- per Denies lapse Made In Prayer VATICAN CITY (AP)—O’Os-‘ servatore Romano. denies that Pope John made a prelate re. start a Good Friday prayer to omit a reference to “perfidious” Jews. Italian and foreign cor- respondents at the service re- ported he did. In a brief statement in Satur- day’s edition, the Vatican news- paper says Fernando Cardinal Cento read the prayer without hesitation and without the use of the word "perfidious." Pope John had ordered the adjective stricken from the prayer in 19 59. Reporters following the service said the Pope caught the inad- vertent lapse and that the car- dinal started again. Most of It- ditional phrase “for the perfidi- ous Jews.’ “A surprised Pope, a frown on his forehead, looked at Msgr. Enrico Dante (chief of cere- monial). The canon (Cardinal Cento). after a moment of un- certainty. realized his mistake and repeated the prayer in the corrected form." In its statement on the inci- dent L'Osservatore R o m a n o ys: ‘A number of newspapers. in reporting the liturgical service I‘ll A) Of U.S. Steel NEW YORK (APl—Luken's Steel Company, the third larg- est producer of plate steel in the U.S.. announced price increases of $5 to $7 a ton on some items Sunday. Wheeling Steel Corpo- ration has been standing alone with a $6 average price in- crease since last Tuesday. i was no immediate in-I dication whether any other companies would follow suit. 1 After Wheeling’s announce-i ment President Kennedy had said that selective price in- creases would not be objection- able but that across-the-board increases would not be viewed favorably. Lukens said the price in- creases—$5 a ton on carbon steel and $7 a ton on alloy steel plates—would apply to less than half of the company’s sales. Wheeling's increases, ranging from $4.50 to $10 a ton, were on products that accounted for nearly half its 1962 shipments. Lukens. with headquarters at in St. Peter's on Good Friday, have said that the Holy Father had the prayer for the Jews re- peated, because the celebrant in the course of it made a lapse. aly’s papers reported it. One Rome newspaper carried a front page photo of the Pope at the service with the headline: “He had the prayer repeated." V a t i c a n correspondents of some of Italy‘s major newspa- pers agreed on the incident. Tu- rin's La Stamps said: “. . . ecause of an error of memory the canon officiating at the service pronounced the tra- c ange The information is not true. Car- dinal Cento showed no hesita- tion and correctly gave the prayer as prescribed in the new Coatesville, Pa.. is 20th in the industry in ingot production. It said the three-per—cent increase for the two products is effective on shipments made on or after April 15. ’ W. E. Mullestien, vice-presi- dent and general manager, said Lukens has not raised its prices since 1958. Redistribution Promise-s To Become Ottawa Issue By JAMES NELSON son anyway, with spinners and flies reserved for later in the one or his "flout." But if they season after it warms up. Two Drivers Are Remanded On Drunken Driving Charges W. David Loggie, Summerside. charged with drunken driving, was remanded to April 16 with ball set at $130 by Bert Camp- bell. clerk of the court, acting in the absence of Magistrate A. J. city police court Saturday. Curtis Strickland, charged with operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, was also remanded to April 16 with ball set at $130. Barry J. Gass. Charlottetown. charged with assault causing bo- . hatched Sunday at the T0 HALIFAX Mrs. Ain. Glllls was a plane passenger to Halifax Sunday afternoon. having been called there due to the death of her hrother-ln-Iaw. George T. Med- forth. BIS BANQUET POSTPONED The annual banquet. schedul- ed by the Benevolent Irish So- ciety for Wednesday night, has been po ned, officials said last night. It was to have been held at the Clover Club. Offic- ials said a new date we announced later. MOTOR OVERHEATS City firefighters were called out shortly before 6 pm. Satur- day. when an electrical motor became overheated and caught fire at the Guardian- Patriot building. Damage was confined to the motor located In the boil- 0r room. HEIFEB PLACES HIGH A ihrcc-ycar-old heifer own- °fl b." liarold Palmer and Sons. hcnsington. placed high in her class rec ,- of “5‘5 rePorted in the current Issue of the Canadian Guernsey Journal. Boaverwood F. Kester produced 9,241 pounds milk. 527 fat with breed 5 overs!” 0f 128 and 146 for an overall! tear of 5.70 butterfat. production . Three- Legged Gosling Hatched A three-legged gosling was farm of Irving Boswell, Marshfleld. The bird appeared lively but died later in the day. Of a Em- den-Toulouse cross, the gosling had the regulation legs, and a third somewhat shorter. farther from the head. Former Resident Dies In New York Mrs. Keith BosWell, Victoria. has recently returned from New York where she flew to attend the funeral of her sis- ter, Mrs. Bryce Rea. Douglas- ton. Long Island. Mrs. Reawas the former Jane MacGregor daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. David Lawson MacGrsgor of New London, P.E.I. Previous to her marriage and in her early life Mrs. Rea wrote magazine articles and was associated wl F.C. Lane. editor of Child's Magasine. She directed amateur plays an d ew York Carnegie, author of the book “How to Win Friends and In- fluence People." ' The funeral was held at the Gleason Funeral Home in Flu- shing, Long Island and then to the Congregational Church. She is survived by her hu s- band. William Bryc Res; sons Bryce. Jr.. and David at home In Douglss- . tes- Kelth Boswell. Victoria: Mrs. 'Lemoel Orr, New London and Mrs. Howard Cram. New York. dily harm, was remanded to Ap- ril 20 with no bail. David J. MacDonald, Charlot- tetown, charged with uttering a forged document was further re- manded from April 6 to the 18th. On a charge of speeding, Don- Curfew Cla mped In Kenya Town NAIROBI. Kenya (Reuters)— Dusk-to-dawn curfew has been clamped down on Isiolo, capital of K nya’s northern frontier district. following a riot Satur- day in which a youth was killed and 15 persons injured. The youth, a support of the Keyna African National Union, was killed during a fight be- and tween Somali supporters of sec- cession for the Northern Fron- tier District and Mom and aid E. MacPherson, Charlotte- town. had his caSe adjourned to April 17. Charged with the illegal pos- session of liquor in a place other than their residences. two men were remanded to the 17th, and. another was fined $20 and costs or 30 days. me on a charge of illegally having with bail in hrs possessron, liquor, not be- I ing the holder of a permit, a Rev. Earl stolungs, pastor of First Baptist in. Mes bands with a Negro woman on the church steps in Ala.. yesterday. Birmingham. NEGROS ADMITI'ED ' Kikuyu tribesmen. Some 280.000 Somalis live in Kenya's northem frontier dis- trict and it is for them that the Somali republic seeks the right to secede .Iz-e'fore Kenya attains self-government. n was remanded to the 16th set at . Three drunk and incapables completed the docket. OTTAWA (CP) —- A problem rarely mentioned in the recent election campaign promises to raise the hackles of politicians both in an out of Parliament soon after the new House ommons meets. That is redistribution, the re- drawing of federal constituency boundaries in line with shifts in population recorded in the 1961 census. Redistribution Is undertaken after every decennial census. while opposition par- ties pressed the Diefenbaker government to proceed when the 1961 figures were compiled, they were barely ready before the 1962 campaign got under way and the question seemed to be sidelined in the tangled political times leading to this year's elec- n. No sitting MP. nor a politi- cian on the outside trying to get in, likes to have the boundaries of his constituency changed drastically at any time, certainly not on the eve of an election. PM HAD EXPERIENCE Mr. Diefenbaker had a bitter experience with redistribution in his former Saskatchewan rid- ing of Lake Centre. After the 1951 census, 8 par- liamentary committee on which the then governing Liberals had a majority amalgamated Lake Centre with the constituency of Moose Jaw, then held by Ross Thatcher, whose barbs stung the former govern- ment. Later he quit the COP, joined the Liberals, and now is Saskatchewan Liberal opposi- tion leader. Mr, Diefenbaker described that redistribution, which n .— O Q a. Mr. That er's chances getting back into Parliament. A second Negro woman stands by after the Easter morning w servl part of a cup of five Negro worship- gs who attended the church. Guernsey President Tops Judging J. Eric Hurry, West Royalty, who is president of the Canad- Ian Guernsey Breeders Assoc- iation, was the top Prince Ed- ward Islander in the Guernsey All- Canadian pictorial judging competition this year, accord- ing to the latest issue of the Guernsey Journal. He scored 389 out of a possible 410 points. Allison a -r r. Harrington. was second for this province with 386 points. A 4-H Club member from Truro, RRi, Nova Scotia topped Canada with 399 points. Other Islanders who placed Included Allison Bryenton, Brackley with 382 points; and rs. Roy Younker. "I'll’l'lln as "a process of surgery with- out the benefit of anesthetics"! When he became national Con-l servatlve leader in 1956 andl prime minister in 1957. Mr.l Diefen-baker promised that the} next redistribution would bel based on recommendations of an! England yesterday on their via radio from London) U urlt on the site of the voca- tional institute. Ratepayers of districts contained in the Char- lottetown Rural area are ex- pected to meet this week, pro- bably at Prince of Wales, to take a vote on whether or not they favor construction of the regional high school. 2' biggest problem and I think the board will begin its own study in he city as to what we are going to do." The school board member I pointed out that the new Vo- was found by two Trois-Rivi- ercs, Que. residents in a thickly wooded area at the eastern tip of Montreal island. With it was a pistol. A spokesman said a ballistics test was being made. Georges Marcotte has been sentenced to be hanged May 31 for the shooting of the consta-l bles. Claude M a r l n e a u and‘ Denis Brabant. ‘ 50-mile Eastertime trek to London from Aldermaston, site of the country's atomic weapons arsenal. An estim- ated 7,000 marchers, many I I “Another problem as far as the ‘ city is concerned," the school S n S a board member said. “is the cost of transportation for city stud- ents to the vocational institute. , At present, the government does 1 not supply transmrtation for city em, students." r. Dewar said that if the bill ‘ g were passed. it will be a “ rad- By DON. MacLEOD I scational Institute, now under“ ual process" in raising theg stu- Gflalrgggrlrélt’igtlnigtpiaffj tWrite: lycoflStrUCfion may drain off a dies at Prince of Wales to a . se 0 ma ’e four - year course. Makin the Prince of wales College a degree- 1g; “gtpe’feé‘tafe ff 6mg? n and university degree-granting vTould granting university. the Immedi- Cl y 5 u s and t 15 would mean expanded teaching staff ate problem for the Charlotte- “lease addltioflal SHOE" and the expansion of college fac- town School Board is what pro- It was also pointed out that a ilities. IiIISISSdVliglifiignasdceh fol" Grades regional high school for the rur- Several WCEkS ago in the Le- Dr Gear 8 Dig“, r00 S; . t 31 area of Charlottetown is under gislature. Dr. Dewar announced ' . g .a “mm? or? consideration and would likely that a ‘ibeneficent gentleman" education, has given notice in made a $60000 endowment to the 'Leg1slature that an Act will prince of Wales cone e R be introduced at the present ses- cently Premier Walter R .Shaevv gagging; till]; a de- confirmed that the endowment A member of the schobol board was made by RObert L. comm. . t Charlottetown, who has given 131%“ guvt, Isatgrflay g‘att about $250 000 in money and pro- ce 0 acs a'es aou ‘- - three quarters of the Grade perty for various purposes in the 11 and 12 students from Char-, pmvmce' Iottetown and the surrounding‘. . areas. "The large high schoolsl of Birchwood and Queen Char- lotte." he said, "are overcrowd- Y M C A ed now and they take up to I I I I Grade 10, only." “Additional space will be th e CHARLOTTETOWN Y.M.C.A. MONDAY AND TUESDAY APRIL I5TH. AND I6TH. AT 7.00 RM. 0 0 Children 5°C 0 Adults 75c commission. independent of the, partisan considerations in a‘ Commons committee. The Liberals promised they i also would turn the job over to an independent commission and mentioned that a similar course; was taken by a former Liberal‘ government in Manitoba. . PROCEED AT ONCE A liberal source now says that a Liberal government would proceed immediately in! the next Parliament to havel new electoral maps drawn up.i The smaller groups in the Com- mons have supported the inde- pendent commission plan. But all parties have their own‘ ideas about how such a com- mission should work and. more particularly, who should be ap- pointed. It seems that a man who is regarded by one party as a paragon of judicial inde- pendence and political non-par- tisanship may be regardedby the other party as “a hide- bound old Tory." or “the worst Grit in tamation." ' i Whatever r e c ommendations 5 are produced by whatever com- . mission is formed. will have to‘ be embodied in legislation tot he passed by the House of Com- ; mons and Senate. . ; Rifle Found In Slaying MONTREAL (CP) —— Police said Sunday night they believe they have recovered the Bel- gian-made semi-automatic rifle used in the slaying of two constables Dec. 14 in the Santa Claus bank holdup. A spokesman said the weapon NEWSON ELECTRIC c WIRING o FIXTURES o APPLIANCES o REPAIRS Free Estimates Dial 4-8325 Electrical Contractors 161 Queen Kingston with m norm ouch l—and Laughs—Laughs—Laughs. Coming Thursday-Friday - Saturday *********¥¥ NOW PLAYING Now is the Time for Fun—Romance—Sonq 44444 \f \l ‘l (/l/ as NG / goes back to college and has himselF the hi h time 0F 3 ii etime! air a a. zoooooiflooo- n so ooaoooouao..cont-Cooootooooo-ao GIIOSBWHIBIAN .0... noop'oc 'V$.< SHOW TIMES 1—3—7—9 SPECIAL MATINEES Tuesday and Wednesday at 2:30 ‘ EASTMAN COLOR lunar m .nr: 1M were in some: .TONTO ooons OPEN _ AT 2 O’CLOCK s snow AT 2:30 IIIIIIIIG s'l'ar' GIN-MASCODE cow's n07. Lure ‘ "GET More Outofllfe- - - Go Out To A Movie". i**x****4444444444, ‘ t l