a + ee § “UNITED FUND BRIEFING HELD» chairman, public relations was the person at the meeting chairman and directors. Mr. who had travelled the further- MacDonald is the chairman 6: to attend. The United Fund.” of the region that was first to : go over its objective during Campaign for 1965 starts on Monday, Sept. 20. the 1964 campaign. Mrs. Green Dan MacDonatd of Souris, leit, Mrs. A. C. Green off Al- berton, and John Ellis of Sum- tmerside were among those who .attended a United Fund briefing session for regional Maritime Electric Co. To Install New 20,000 Kilowatt Generator A new 20,000 kilowatt turbo- —generator_unit will be - installed xy Maritime Electric Company m its Charlottetown plant it has xeen Jearned from Hon. Lloyd VacPhail, minister of industry and_natural_resources. The generator was deemed secessary by Maritime Electric secause of increased dmand for slectric power and consumer us- age. | date in 1968. Island. However, the recent an- During the past few years stu- dies have been carried out on the feasibility of installing-a sub- nouncement of the construction of the causeway in the next five years has led to the decision not marine cable between New |to ‘proceed “with the installation , lof a submarine cable. It is now | probable that a suitable cable 'will be installed on the cause- WEATHER : way and this will provide a link TORONTO (CP) — Tempera- j with the mainland utilities. te obert Smith, company man.|tures: . | ,The cable on the causeway ts areal the unit woue usadie Low Overnight High Friday | considered to be @ more reliable Prince Edward Island's require-|Dawson .......---- 38 56 |means of bringing power to the ments until 1972 or 1973 when |Vancouver ...;---- 45 61 | Island than the submarine cable t is expected the causeway will |Victoria .......--- 47 60° | which would be subject to —pos- provide an avenue for additional |winnipeg .......-- 45 50 a ice damage as well as da- power. ; Toronto .....ccee 55 64 |mage during construction of the The new installation here will |Ottawa ....-..+++- 39 65 |causeway. In addition, a sub- bring the total capacity-to 70,000 |xgontreal .......-+ 43 66 | stantial saving in costs should be kilowatts. Previous additions to |Queher .........-- 35 64 |made over the installation of a the plant resulted” in imcreases |Fredericton ...--- oe 66} submarine Cable. of 10,000 kw. in 1959 and 20,000 in |caint John ....---- 43 63 Officials of the local utility es 1963 at a total cost of about $4.- \yfoncton ......--++ 38 67 |timate that the new installation 900,000. iialifast 5.5 siesee 45 65 |will provide adequate firm pow- TARGET 1968 .. {Charlottetown .... 4 62 jer until 1972 or 1973, depending Mr. Smith stated. Montre al l Sydney Peep gig 49 61 -|on~the load growth during the fngineering is the consult ant lYarniouth=—-s1005 44 60 next few years. This should al- firm_on the new project and work |c+ John’s......-++- 46 54 |low ample time for the comple | ‘s expected to start next ‘sum |p \cton . 62 | tion of-the causeway With a pow- ‘ccoiseeeieesistnatasimatesneasiasi ana aaa. “72 "Ter cable attached. ~~~ ELE AB LALLA AALS ~g4- tek coe oa MaePhait : suid thatthe? a7 oe enlarge the yenerat- | Tuucson ~“89°--}ing facilities “locally was made* lLos Angeles ....--- 60 76 after receiving advice from J. HALIFAX (CP) —: The wea- | Kays of Engineering Service ther office says an area of high Company, Halifax, who , centred south of Yar- had been engaged to study the mouth, was moving away to the | situation following a-. meeting southeast Friday night. A weak |held in Charlottetown last June weather system over the Great| with representatives of the Lakes was approaching the Mari-| mainland utilities. Mr. Kaye has times and should maintain | advised that the local generating cloudy weather in all three pro- | capacity should be enlarged and vinces today. No major change |the link withthe mainland de- in daytime temperatures is €X- /ferred until a more reliable and ‘LOCAL BRIEFS IN CITY HOSPITAL Sandra MacKinnon, Morell, is : t pected, with afternoon |More economical connection. can E er = = enor mostly in the low 60s. ibe made on the causeway. ospital. The outlook for Sunday is for a | Is PATIENT continuation of the generally John R. MacLean, Cornwall | cloudy conditions, with tempera-| WE SPECIALIZE IN ls a patient in the Prince Ed-| tures in rg? viewing eae = ward Island Hospital where he| Regiona forec: : 7a" underwent surgery Friday. Nova Scota, Prince Edward i Island, New Brunswick: Cloudy. SANG DUET Temperatures much the same ‘i WT era At._the ‘Montague __ United |_as on Friday. Winds light. Low- ; Church amniversary — service| high at Halifax 48-62, Yarmouth | Sept. 12, a duet was ee oe 45-42, Kentville and New Glas- | Mrs. Silas MacKay a . 48-62, Goshen 48-60, Sydney K E PAT kK Ss Louis Herring, and not Mrs. Lou| 4340, Charkottetown 45-60, Monc- Harris as was reported. ton and Fredericton 48-65; Saint UNCLE DIES. | OR 00, sad Word has been ‘received by Mrs. Garfield Jay of East Roy- alty-of_the death-on-Sept.12—of $ JEGELLERS LTD 1; sonable temperatures. High tide foday at Charlotte" mer with: a completion target |Brunswick and Prince Edward | Not Offering Says Morris HALIFAX (CP) — Edmund Morris, Conservative member of Parliament for Halifax from 1957 to 1963, announced Friday he will not seek election in the Nov. 8 federal election, but in- dicated he might re-enter poli- tics in the future. Mr. Morris, 42, was reported under heavy pressure Thursday to seek Conservative _nomina- tion in the two-member Halifax riding. Both seats are now held by Liberals. ‘Mr, Morris, 42, was reported under heavy pressur eThursday to seek nomination, ‘‘but I have other commitments to keep." A parliamentary secretary in the - Diefenbaker administration prior to 1962, he did not. support the Conservative leader in -the 1963 confidence vote in the Com- mons that defeated the govern- ment. The Halifax PC-organiza- tion denied him the nomination in the 1963 election and he de- clined to run as an independent. Mr. Morris said Friday his de- cision not to support the - gov- ernment in 1963 ‘‘was for me the right and only stand.” He said present commitments to St. Mary’s University here, a Halifax newspaper and his radio program prevented from seeking election Nov. 8 “but at some future date, if I thought I could be of service and if my other obligations would then allow, I might try to re-enter competitive politics.” ~ FORM -LABOR-GROUP-..——. lumbia are being organized inte a seligione-qoenied labor asso- ciation, the International Wood- workers uf America convention has been told. J. Clayton Walls, said here Wednesday the IWA— an affiliate of the Canadian La- bor Congress—has sent Jim, Rouw of Hanover, Ont., a Dutch speaking union organizer, into the area in an attempt to com- bat the movement. \ him) _VANCOUVER. (CP) — Dutch | workers.in—northerp British, Co- | 46 Bayfield Street died late yes terday afternoon. Mr. DeCoste was born in Char- lottetown in 1899 and was a well known and well-thought-of em- Office until his retirement last year. Mr. DeCoste attended public school in Charlottetown and up- went overseas as a reinforce- ment for the Second Seige Bat- tery. He was a member of the occupation army in Cologne, RIVARD (Continued from page 1) male jury, composed strongly of mixed Mexican - America claims was the “ ficer’’ for Rivard’in dope trans- Groleau’s lawyer, Lawrence Mann, argued that the prosecu- tion’s two chief witnesses—ad- mitted dope - runners Joseph Michel Caron and Roger Beau- chemin—had exonerated Gro- leau. who testified Mexico City to Montreal with a never. encountered Groleau in dealings with Rivard, from whom he said he-got his orders and payoff. . The lawyer also cited Caron’s testimony that, before setting out on the Mexican trip on which he was caught, he had ployee of the Charlottetown Post | on graduation he joined the Ar- | _| my and in the First Word War Germany, following the war. | He was awarded a number of | drop-off at Flint, Mich., said he ~ Island News Page Eastern and Central Districts The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., Sept. 18, 1965. 5| W.V. De Coste Dies At Age 66° William V. (Bill) DeCoste of jdecorations for his overseas ser- | vice. | When he returned from over- Seas Mr. DeCoste attended bus- jiness school and afterwards he jjoined the postal service. | In the interval between World |War One and World War Two. |DeCoste was Reginmental Ser- jgeant Major of the old Prince | Edward Island Highlanders. Surviving are: his wife, the former Pearl Vessey; three ;Sons, William Jr. and Ralph, /both living in Vancouver and Vincepf “in Boston, _Mass.;two | daughters, Theresa at home and |Pearl, Mrs. Kenneth Pope, Kit- chener, Ont. and one brother, Fred, of Charlottetown. been instructed not tell Groleau about it. He also testified, though, hat Groleau was in on some earlier deals. . SAY EVIDENCE INVALID ms,| For the defendants generally, |the lawyers claimed that all es- sential evidence against the four had come from self-con- fessed co-conspirators and there- fore was not valid without cor- roboration,. which it did not have. Also, they contended that the co - conspirators’: evidence ments” such as promises of se le poet i heating sys- “ ' immunity from prosecution and | '™. you do no ve & ° © tain any case, bo conpiscy [EEANOX heating eviem eat el Progressive Conservative proven, ‘ One dit of evidence I duced by the prosecution te-| Palmer Electric Association ‘ore case - % : fore resting is case shortly at-| Dial 894-8543 - Ch’town /UCt. 8 DUE Goesnt Know where, party headquarters said Fri- day. A spokesman said Mr. announced earlier his campaign kickoff rally Wilfred H. McAulay of Bell; Telephone Co., flown here from) Montreal,. testified_as_to the lo | Thompson Opens cation of a series of pay phone) Campaign Oct. 8 booths in that city. One was at) i the Lava Curb Service Eatery,) OTTAWA (CP)—Social | a Rivard hangout, and had the| Leader Robert Thompson hopes | would be in Vancouver Oct. 3 to open his campaign formally |b t the Social Credit League of Caron had testified that a note ? British Columbia “are 10t written in French which was Milsiow pleated pot guilty to @| they want it just then.” handed to him before he set. out | rge ving without Attempts were being from Mexico City with his last care and attention. His case Wa8| .i1-h the meeting 7 2 | ‘load, and bearing instructions| adjourned until Oct. for checking in after crossing) trial. : into the U.S., bore the notation| Lovett “au 72,” which was interpreted, Lorne MacSwain, both of Murray | @s meaning he was to call the, River,. were each charged with | writer at a phone number end- | theft of blueberries valued at | ing with those digits. A hand-| writing expert testified the note) ‘was written by Rivard. | Suspended Sentence Handed Out |mumber 625-9072. 8 5 six weeks. were given except for the first two of causing a disturbance. Three men were fined $20 and in Barrie, Ont., : costs for the illegal possession the Ontario Young Socreds to-. Elsie Carlyne Bingley, South- | of liquor. night. port, was given a suspended ‘sentence by Magistrate . James B. Johnston when slie ‘pleaded guilty to a charge of theft. of less than $50 in Queen's County | ‘Magistrate’s Court yesterday. Wendell MacLeod Drake, | SOMETHING To Think About... | If your furnace is over 10 years old, you may be money ahead |to give it a good. close look! 'HERE'S WHY: |The usual “life expectancy” of |ordinary furnaces is about 10 years. BUT EVEN MORE | IMPORTANT There have been so many wonr- derful_ improvements —in. the-last 10 years you-have a right to be discontented if you don’t have a eseeenincnnnnmismsl Progressive Conservative Nominating Convention Queens County The Progressive Conservative nominat- ing convention for Queens County will be held at the Community Centre on Monday, Sept. 20 at 8 o'clock.p.m. Each poll is invited to send five delegates. Queens County ive of- ae [oes CeO SSoorescar- 200g, ; May We Accommodate FIV PP OOO OD OPIS POG I ODT OOOO OG OOOOOO | IN MEMORIAM | MRS. (Dr.) JAMES WALSH , DIED SEPT. 19, 1964 Remembered by Family. KINGS COUNTY. her uncle Joseph A. MacLean of}, ,°3 33 a.m. and 5.14 p.m. At| THE CAMERA EXPERTS | . Burklang ee formerly |Rustico at 1205 p.m. High tide| Proaressive Conservative . Th Saat Sunday at Charlottetown 4.17 rog e.. JEHOVAW’S WITNESSES __|a.m. and 6.28 p.m. At Rustico at “N-DOYLE’S MON. -yYonald A Moffatt, eoeae 12.03 a.m. and 1.31 p.m. Sum- THRU THRU N e gk . mutister of the Charlottetown|merside tide eighteen minutes * . C Congregation of the Jehovah’s|later than Charlottetown.. Sun! SUN. RADIO .& TV ou. ominating onvention Witnesses, anounced—yesterday |rises today at 6.56 a.m. and sets _ SERVICE a a ae tae a aan at 7.18 p.m. Rises Sunday at| “ON THE SPOT REPAIRS” end made to : aoe Circuit Assembly of the sect at\Qn nvicr ee DIAL 4-4305 ; the Montague ee seit H ist 3 x School from Friday, : = ‘ ° Sunday, Sept. 26. Annual Meeti CELEBRATES sirTupay | St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church ng Heath Macquarrie MP in the ix aca MONTAGUE. - ; last four parliaments today cele- brates his 46th birthday. It is al- so the 70th birhday of Progres- sive Conservative leader John Diéfenbaker. The two men ex- . changed congratulatoty mess "aces on the occasion. CARD PARTY The results of the card party played Thursday night at the 38th Anniversary Service =o Sunday, Sept. 19th At 7:30 PM. Corfimunity Centre are: door pre hMre— eG = - - igi ia isc ome « Special prize, Josephine Blanc ard.‘ laties first Mrs. James Guest Speaker: Rev. J. Alan Munro, B.A., M.C., Pendergast: ladies’ second, Mar- D.D., Moderator of the 91st General Assembly. garet Creamer, gents” first, John Hagerty; gents’ ‘second, A. S.| MacLeod; consolation, Mrs. E. Lawler and—Art LeClair, and freezeout, Dr. A hi Bowness and ‘MONTAGUE REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL 8.00 P. M. WEDNESDAY, September 22nd: 99 00H99999G90000000008 available in . - ‘Charlottetown at-- aya | 167 Queen St. Paar RENEE ‘ AT... “4 | Burke Electric | | 112 Kent St. cect om menionctos Sine here ee | AVAILABLENOW || - Available Now “At | oo : | |. "Open Mondary Nights” | DOMINION a Hearing Aids - _, WEEKEND MAGAZINE TOOMBS | Sy aA RT WEEKEND MAGAZINE —PAGETT ) - ON DISPLAY NOW t PITTSBURGH . —PAGE31.. « i -to_clean_up_ wash. It washes up to 15 pounds in a single loda, so you'll wash less often. : your present wash isn’t coimug as clean as Sit. ete Bt @ ag ates a Second Floor at... soo aenreeweeneeri asain eee UAE Die} 2-1221 | “YOUR FAVORITE SHOPPING CENTRE! 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