IRISH Members of Souris Dramatic Society rehearse a scene from the society’s annual St. Pat- i PLAY FROM SOU rick's play at Souris: This year's play is “Irish Cinder- ella.” From left are Mrs. Isaac Islanders Hold Top Spots , Winston Keough RIS Arsenault, Lloyd Mallard and Two Injured _With Canada’s Tax Division In Car Crash J. R. Arbing, formerly of | Howlan, P.E.1. has been pro- moted to chief assessor in the | Saint John office of the tax- ation division, department of national revenue He is said to be one of the youngest em- | ployees in the division ever to! be promoted to this position After graduating from Prince of Wales College, Mr. Arbing obtained his Bachelor of Com- merce degree at Dathousie Uni- versity, Entering the Halifax taxation office he qualified for | his GGA (certified general ac- | countant) and the RIA (regis- tered industrial accountant). de- | grees and was subsequently | transferred to the Toronto dis- trict office. Other former Prince of Wales College students who are fiow holding the position of chief assessor in the 30 offices of the taxation division across Can- ada, including the data centre, Ottawa are Ralph C. Smith, CGA in the date centre, Ottawa, | who is formely from Charlotte- | town; P. Edward Blanchard, | CGA, formerly of North Rustico, at Sherbrooke, Quebec, Harold | A Forsythe, CA, formerly of | Charlottetown. who is in King- ston. Ont., and J. R. Leard, CA, formerly of Souris, who is in the Charlottetown office Senior administrative pos itions in this department of the | federal government are also held by J. Wellington Dixon, CA, formerly of Charlottetown, who is director at Saint John, N.B.; H. R. Hennessey, CA, di- | rector at Charlottetown and J. Alban MacDonald, BA BCom., formerly of North Bedeque who | is chief valuator, estate tion, Ottawa PRESIDENT (Continued from page one) tration requirements —The naming of federal reg- istrars by the bipartisan civil service commission were lo cal registrars fait to register eligible voters. —Use of federal registrars in Mrs Orrin Bell of Murray Harbor is reported in Satisfac- tory condition in Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital where she is recovering from injuries re- ceived when she and her daugh- ter Ellen, also from Murray Harbor but now living in Tor- | onto. were involWed in a caf accident half a mile east Hazelbrook church about o'clock, Saturday Ellen, who was on her way back to Toronto after attending her father’s funeral last week, 7 of | rolled on it’s Tight side. Fllen ISLAND NEWS PAGE. Eastern And Central Districts |The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Mar. 15. 1965. 5 Five Accidents. Near Montague Five accidents itt, the truck and over the weekend at or near slid onto its wheels. throwing Montague caused considerable Mr. Graham onto the highway damage to motor vehicles and | and injuring his chest rolled over MONTAGUE resulted in one man being sent} A_ similar accident occurred |te the Kings County Hospital| about 4:45 p.m. Saturday when ifor treatment. Two of the at-|a 1957 foreign car driven by cidents were the result of snow Merrill Boyd Herring of Mur- drifts, vtich threw motor veh- ray River went out of control icles out of control on the turn at Commercial On Saturday evening at 9.40 Cross narrowly missing the /p.m. John Wandelt MacDon- RCMP panel “truck which was ‘ald of Sherwood was sideswip- returning to Montague —= This ‘ed while crossing the Montague | accident was also caused by a | bridge causing approximately | snow drift ; |$150 damage. This accident is Donald Crawford of Wood being investigated by. Cst. Ed, Islands and Ferdinand Joe Pet- Downe of the Montague police. ers of Souris met in a cutting Ralph Graham, Lower Mon- "ear Primrose on the — Seven fi * about 11 am. Sat- tague, was taken to the Kings Mile Road a County Hospital when the half. urday and were unable to avoid ton truck in which he was a @ collision. Damage to one passenger and which was driv- vehicle was opprosimately $50 i c and to the other $200 en by Eric A. Ellsworth pulled A minor accident on Thurs from a narrow cutting onto a ‘ . . snow drift to avoid hitting a@ day occurred when a backing vehicle / | school bus driven by Rolan ehicle driven by Horace Hew. Penny of Murray Harbor col- lided with a compact car driven urday morning suffering only by Thomas Sanderson of Mon- head» lacerations to her fore- tague Approximately $125 t ad us Bell received a frae-| gamage resulted The Mont- Ghe . — minor cuts. ague detachment RCMP and " to be resting | town police are investigating comfortably. Her condition is all accidents hot reported serious. ee A member of the ROMP sald) oy Density for shooting snd anon went nen their birds other than game in On. tario is a $1,000 fine The ex- eee ae ine ceptions are crows, cowbirds | . blackbirds, starlings, and spar- | Bell was reported driving at "WS: the time CASTLES IN SPAIN Dr. H.P. Stewart was the at- Only 2,000 of Spain's 10,000 old | tending physician. for- both wo-..casties. still stand. The missing. | men. They were taken to hos- ones were torn down mostly for tax S@C- | was released from hospital Sat-! pital by Chtcliffe's Ambulance. building materials. It Canada By KEN SMITH Smarten Up, Management Told Federal Gov't Ponders Automation Problem ai hoods “need more. than just OTTAWA (CP) Transport sympathy .. . we are looking Minister Pickersgill said | for action.” the government is trying to| He noted that the Commons decide who should carry the railway committee 15 months financial load of easing the job- ago approved a private bill that jarring effects of autemiation— would have protected the rights the companies involved or the | of railway workers facing te~h- public treasury. nological changes. It was ex- He told a delegation from ‘the ‘emely disappointing the zov- railway brotherhoods there are |¢rmment had not considered this strong arguments on both sides Tecommendation when it wrote of the question and that govern- he new railway bill. ment is taking a serious look Mr. Pickersgill said there at them seemed to be a misunderstand. | The delegation, representing 'g about a section of the bill nine unions and 100,000 operat- dealing with branch line aban- ing railway employees. . asked |40nments. The idea was to take in its brief that job protgetion ito account that social and eco- and compensation for job dis-|80mic considerations in an area | location be written into the rail-|before allowing abandonment, way legislation now before par-|S0mething not possible under liament. , the present law. The brief ‘said many railway aoe Minister MacEachen workers will losé their jobs: and |! ated he plans to amend la- many more will be forced to bor legislation later this year to move their homes when the ™#ke automation issues open to railways are allowed to aban- | 0¢8%tlation during the life of a don money - losing lines and Comtract. This is not provided services. Some railway com- i" the present Industrial Rela- munities would be faced with ‘one and Disputes Investigation economic ruin." . Mr. Pickersgill said he sym- He corre op cotin of pathises with the union's argu-{ mas ments and stresed that ‘‘the has started to deal with government has not closed its power problems in geseral mind on this matter.” So poust on compensation | Arriving Daily But there was some doubt whether the necessary compen-| Lovely new Spring sation involved should be aj creations - - + charge on the railways — and ultimately ~the shippers—or be @ Skirts 4 borne by the general economy. @ Blouses a said the railway situation @ Dresses 8 just one part of the much Sports larger subject of automation e wees and its effects. He indicated the ° government is thinking of a island furriers general policy to apply in all suen gone not just sl Huneault, chairman of the delegation, said the brother. @ Graftes S#. ltd. | Vietna mese Hit Island DA NANG, South ; x F GLORIOUS TECHMICOLOR and § | CINEMASCOPE BOX OFFICE NOW OPEN, 1f:00 P.M. — 5:00 PM, —-. ‘Nekets $1 Telephone 892-2464 A WEEKLY CALENDAR OF EVENTS SPORTS CA eee To Achieve Goals develop management in both in- young pedple will prove more any state or election district Canadian Press Business Editer dustry and government with the ready to move to economically where 50 per cent of eligible! voters were not registered or | red business and industrial lead- ability and the sensitivity SO per cent did not vote in. a ers were told Tuesday manage- change, both genera) election —Impounding of all ballots in any election where people | were prevented from voting. | Around the clock, pickets lukewarm highly critical of Wallace con- ference, sponsored by the Cana- economic challenges. tinued to march outside the TORONTO (CP)—Seven -busé- ment will have to smarten up if Canada is. to achieve the goals set out for it in the re- cent report of the Economic Council of Canada. to Johnson and Delegates to a one-day con- man resources to meet future program growth from the funds avalil- 4 dian Chamber of Commerce knowledge, the conceptual advancing areas rather than re- to maining in unproductive areas social and tech- where their skills cannot be nological, that the latter part of used or developed. he ‘60s will require.” Robert Winters, chairman of Karl E. Scott, president of, Rio Algom Mines Lid. said Ford of Canada Ltd., said Can-| business will have to re - ex- ia needs to regroup its hu- amine its present investment to ensure maximum for a dimension able This “calls [ 0) ( A [ White’ House. Sunday afternoon, and the Toronto Board of Trade,,of managerial .understafding He noted the council forédast just across the street from the on the report heard several and diligence which, in my | $17,000,000,000 in capital will be White House and its pickets, speakers emphasize it fs up to view, we have not heretofore needed in 1970 to meet the ‘re | several thousand people of both senior management to make the demonstrated,” he said. commended annual growth rate B R | f fF S jeeeee gathered at Lafayette decisions that will allow Canada “The amassing and organiz- of 5% per cent, compated with LEAVES HOSPITAL Park to hear calls for more ac- to increase its rate of economic ing tion fast to curb state repres- sions ef voting rights. Freedom songs with rythmic Imperiol Oil Ltd., told the de- we can do this as capably as clapping could be heard clearly legates there are many implica-| any foreign competitor. in the White House. growth. W. ©. Twaits, president of tions in the council's report for Mrs. Carlyle Cahill has rej Chief criticism of the presi-iboth business and turned to her home in Soutb-| port after being a patient in the | Charlottetown Hospital for <he.: past 10 days. | REPRESENT SDU Mary MacCardle and Kathleen MacDonald represented St. Dun- stan’s University at a Maritime | Intercollegiate Debating League Motor | dent has been: —That he. should have inter. vened with federal troops after the assault on demon- strators by state and loca ment at both the industrial and longer to find out.” police a week ago; he should have moved much more promptly | to speak out against the situa- tion in Selma and to get the face all of us to an increasing |if industry is to provide jobs for The government should voting legislation before Com- degree every day, but it is not |the more than 1,000,000 HEROIC DOOM Roald Amundsen of Norway, . . first man to reach the South Pole and the first to clear the! ‘These policies.are. going to tions college graduates Northwest Passage, vanished in | eepeenseece & ; from behind the ie ee eH 2 exhaust curtain... by Von Zipper but there was one striking con- clusion: “Our biggest problem is to improve the calibre of manage- governmental level. “The problems of increasing skilis. of automation and ‘ of technology, are those which in this are that the ———~ policies can be developed to cast, will be produce the results envisaged . in this report. CHALLENGE SEEN have to be produced by intel- ithe Arctic in 1928,.0n an air mis-|ligent management Gnd 1 be-|a job is whether they sion to rescve an Italian ex-|lieve the real challenge posed |to move to another in these recommendations is to ee eee a / eh 8 THE PARTY PICTURE THAT TAKES OFF WHERE THE OTHERS POOPED OUT! of physical resources, of | $9,300,000,000 in 1963. course, will continue to be a demanding task. But we know INCOME NEEDED “This requires an average an- nual rate of increase of £9 per “What we do not know to cows, Cue om — if na whether we can rally our peo- “ona! savings wi able to ple to the point where our hi- "keep pace: Tf not. the result will man dynamics will match those be a widening gap between, cap- of any people on earth. ital requirements and domestic- “I think we cannot wait any lly generaged savings.” John Deutsch, chairman of CHANGE WORKED In a question period, however, success of the program depends Mr. Scott suggested some la- on long-term planning by both bor habits will have to change | government and business. for- who, the council's report entering the market in Canada between and 1970. { He said one of the | asked to answer on applying are city. He added he hopes at ty tk the council, said much of the | seen LARTER’S Drug Sundries (Hal Larter, Prop.) LADIES KEEP FORUM—S. D. U. High School Afternoon & Evenings CASUAL BOWLING | Basilica Recreation Centre . Richmond St. Charlottetown CONNIE ‘Building MONDAY _ Drag Sundries TUESDAY Sand cateat Betis ; Bar maven —Pasemn PeREy 2 Phone 892-2532 BOWLING — Casual Bowling Basilica Recreation = FREE DELIVERY BOWLING — Casual Bowling Rollaway 2-5 46 ELM AVE. YMC. Men 8:00 ~ 11:08 FIT SWIM—Y.M.C.A. om. 8 om. vs. Regers “Rangers” REC. CENTRE—17:00-9:20—Working Men's Basketball ot i., Sat., March 19, 20 - 8.00 P, Now—All Seats ‘ 30) . L wy aes | About A Cruise ?« Le of Wik fe ¥ ; i i ‘ ote af ~~ * oe afi —_ Re er Re Nn ee