— 7 See 100,000PersonsCombine To Collect Election Data TORONTO (CP) Fast and its membership, the 275 private complete coverage of Monday’s Stations served by its subsidiary election news will come through Broadcast News, the CBC and the combined effort of about the private television network 100,000 people scattered around ©'Y: every voting corner of Canada OP's staff of 300 works with This army of mainly behind- those of its newspapers, Cana- the-scenes workers will assem- dian National and Canadian Pa- ble and collate the returns for cific Telecommunications, the The Canadian Press, the na- private broadcasters and about tional news co-operative; aud 97,000 electoral officials to col IN KINGS COUNTY Mark your ballot this way .. “McQUAID, Melvin J. : ; Barrister Souris MULLIN, Tobias W. aN C.N.R. Employee Summerside VOTE JOHN MULLALLY ‘| MAKE YOUR VOTE ‘COUNT FOR MORE _ VOTE LIBERAL ‘ Gnserted by Kings County Liberal Assn.) GOODWIL SAL for the 103 da'ly newspapers in lect figures from. the 263 con- ee aE stituencies, put them into news form and distribute them The process of vote-counting starts as soon as the polis close im Newfoundland at 7 p.m. local time. START WITH TRICKLE Starting with a trickle and steadily growing to a torrent the returns will stream from the cities. rural areas and remote arctic polls to a special com- piling staff at CP's head office - 2 Toronto. A few flow of pro- gressive reports will start a few minutes after the Newfoundland polls close: The general picture will be given in compact sta- tistical detail at frequent inter- vals. Returns may not be published in newspapers or broadcast in any province before the close of pols in that province. This complies with a 1938 Election | Act amendment following ‘claims that speedy CP report- ing of 1985 federal election re- !turns in the East affected votiny |in the West. election report is Douglas Ama- ron, general news editor at head office amd a veteran of CP service in Canada ans as & war correspondent. The writing team at CP’s 1 BUY CARS "ss" Alse I trade up or down or sell X Fr for you. Foreign or American. | Pay Thru the Nose I SELL CARS ALSO Oey tea + Store Hours Today - Cha 9. rlottetown : 00 - 5.30 Summerside : : 8.30 - Noon KIMBALL C. ACORN 4-8641 OU & REPAIRS Storey Electric Ltd TL Stationery, wedding invitations, invoices, statements and all your job printing re- uirements. All jobs guaranteed. GUARDIAN - PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY Phone 4-8506 Chief organizer of the CP) a The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat. Nov. 6. 1965. | Turkish Cc election centre will be headed by Graham Trotter, assistan: chief of oureau at Ottawa, and will include Dave McIntosh and Ben Ward' of Cs parliamen- tary staff, who shared can- paign coverage of the party leaders with seven other Ot- tawa and Quebec writers. Mc- Intosh’ Wilh write the main stor- ies for Tuesday morning papers, and Ward for evening papers. Johan LeBlanc, of Toronto staff, will write the Ontario result, COVER LEADERS CP will have staff men on hand tw cover what the leaders say and night — Stewart MacLeod with Prime Minister Pearson in Ot tawa, Ken Clark with Conserva- tive Leader Diefenbaker in Prince Albert, Sask.; Michael Gillan with T. C. Douglas’ New Democratic Party, in Vancou- | ‘ver. Stuart Lake with Social Credit Leader Thompson at Red Deer, Alfa., and Donat Valos with Creditiste Leader Real Caouette at Rouyn, Que. Wire- photo staff, and transmitters have been assigned to all lead- ers. The Ottawa parliamentary bureau under Fraser MacDou- gall will provide interpretative and. other stories as develop- ments warrant, Regional coverage, the basis of CP's election-night service has been organized for the At- jlantic provinces by Jack Bray- ley, Halifax bureau chief; for Quebec by Montreal chief Wil- liam Stewart, for Ontario by Lioyd McDonald, chief of On- tario Service; for Manitoba by Winnipeg chief Fred Chafe; for Saskatchewan, Alberta.and the | Northwest Territories by Ed- /monton chief A. B. Garrett. and ‘for British Columbia and the Yukon by Vancouver chief K. J. | Mietheral. . USING COMPUTERS The CBC and CTV, which re- ceive CP’s report, also are col- 'lecting returns independently. Each is using a computer sys- ;tem to speed, the totalling of votes and to spot trends. facts into the memory file of computer : Election-night figures will ‘be added and the results. go into another machine turning the can be read by TV cameras. its resources to bring “‘the fast- lest and most thorough returns set up by International Business dicated by the computer should be 95- to 97-per-cent accurate. PRIVATE STATIONS HELP | Returns collected by some will be incorporated into the re- 4 do election day and | | CTV, with a dozen affiliates | -\from St. John's, Nfld., to Van- /couver, has had a crew of tech- | nicians feeding 50,000 political | its Canadian General Eelectric | for, three months, | \findings. into typed form that | The CBC has marshalled all | 'possible.’’ It will use more than | $1,000,000 worth of equipment | Machines. TBM says trends in- | private stations served by CP | sults assembled by CP and it | will be incorporated into the re- | sults assembled by CP and its | member newspapers and car- | ried on its 50,000 miles of leased teleprinter wires Closeness of the result will | ‘determine when a winner is known. CP’s fastest decision on the national outcome was in the Progressive Conservative land- slide of 1958—just 62 minutes after the close of polls in On- tario and Quebec. In 1963 CP reported only two hours 21 min- utes after the Ontario-Quebec lclose that the Liberals would jhave th largs group, and in | Liberals had won but with a ma- jority unlikely On election night in 1963, CP tabulated a record 97 per cent of the 7,894,000 voles cast. Coverage on the outcome of the service vote—which will be added to Monday's civilian count later in the week—will be provided on the Saturday = or ‘Sunday after the election, de- |pending when it is made public jat Ottawa. In 1963 the service |vote shifted one seat—Hastings |South—from the Conservative to the Liberal column. FUNERAL HELD | CANBERRA (Reuters) — Dr. Merbert V. Evatt, 71, who was a former UN General Assembly president, high court judge, leader of the. Australian Labor }party and Australian represen- jtative in Winston Churchill's |wartime cabinet, was buried here Thursday after a state fu- neral. ASK AID GENEVA (Reuters) — The League of Red Cross Societies | Thursday asked its 106 member societies for 95,000 Swiss francs ($21,850) in cash and medical supplies to aid 50,000 refugees from Portuguese “Guinea now | camped in neighboring Senegal. GEN BRIEFS — ACTI RE-ELECT If You Wont ~ In Ottawa for Kings prus are iacea With stark ag- | ypriots Make Claim icc ~"Yhe Turxisn statemem is iar ; from the truth from beginning He said Greek-Cypriot forces to. end,"’ Kyprianou said. ‘Ob. aged included.” — Threatened By Greek Group isis: tn “tnsocen’"wemes snd cet with our infrmation. UNITED NATIONS (AP) — sion remained high. Turkey told the United Nations was no violence Friday on Seecurity Council Friday that 10,-| After Eralph spoke, U.S. Am- 000 Turkish-Cypriots are threat-|bassador Arthur J. Goldberg ened with aggression by Greek-|asked UN Sec Cypriots facts do not bear out the charge. | The charge was levelled by |CEASEFIRE OBSERVED Turkish Ambassador Orhan| Thant replied that he had Eralp at an emergency meeting /been informed by the UN com- of the 11 - nation council re-|™and on Cyprus that as of 10:07 quested by Turkey to deal with |P-™. Cyprus time Friday a new fighting between Greek. |ceasefire in the Famagusta area and Turkish-Cypriots in Fama-|was being observed, Thant gusta. \added that both sides had been Dispatches from Famagusta Siven strict orders to comply said heavy firing occurred With the ceasefire. Thursday night and scattered| Eralp declared that ‘‘once ter, Thant's report repudiate Eralp’s charge. in Be port city of |Thant whether he had ony’ lata | : fovernment countered that’ the |Cypren = sumation 18 SUNDAY SPECIALS shooting Friday morning. Ten-\again Turkish-Cypriots on Cy- Prince Edward Island © Curling Association at Belvedere Golf and Winter Club Saturday, Nov. 13th 3:00 p.m. 4 ON b at THIS is how the Liberals and John Mullally helped Kings Co. New |2.mile fishing limit. Greek-Cypriot foreign minis) Back yard rabbit runs pr~ Spyros Kyprianou, cited vided a source of food for Gev- mn an effort omens during the Second Wor d |War. at ROYALTY OAKS | DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT | Dining Room Specials fried halibut with lemon point reast beef a jos with horse- radish sauce reast beef a jus with horse- reast chicken with cranberry Flavor Crisp CHICKEN AS= 1,19 fried chicken, french fries, cole slaw & roll Monday thru Thursday - 5 p.m. to 12:30 am. Friday & Saturday oe 5 Le to 1:00 a.m. Sunday open day. & -night 11. a.m. to-12:30 a.m. Remember for the quiet luxury of white linen dining or the carefree convenience of curb service. ROYALTY OAKS DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT St. Peters Rd. | Sherwood | VOTE -LIBERAL areas scheduled to receive extra Govern- ment grants and aid, make your count for more RE-ELECT John Mullally. Inserted by the Kings County Liberal Association i |) New post offices built at Cardigan, Murray 7) Harbor, St. Peters and Morell. 2) Atlantic Development assistance for . Georgetown and Montague developments. 3) Improved farm credit, crop insurance and 9) _ price for farm produce. a: 4) Many miles of new paved roads in the 10) County through Roads to Resources Pro- gram. . I) 5) New subsidies on wooden fishing vessels. ' 12) 6) Kings ’County now included in designated. Provided interest free loans to university students, ” $10.00 a month youth allowance in- troduced. i ae Improved harbour and wharf facilities Canada Pension Plan. Reduced unemployment to lowest in 9 years, created 48,000 new jobs, put un- unemployment insurance fund back in good financial standing. i i ~ 7