P.E.l. MI The provincial mixed curi- iii: hoiispiel got underway yes- u~r:t;iy .'ll the Charlottetown Curling Club. and will con- clude Saturday. Shown above is action during the 4.30 p.tri. draw as a stone is delivered during the game. Opposing RWAY team members look on as the other team prepares to sweep the stone. By RALPH CAMERON liispector A.J. Dowling yes- terday pointed out that plow o;ir"‘ai0rS and street department that are seriously affected fol- Jmring heavy snowstorms. Following any major storm, iii: to a standstill. the Inspector said he has to realign the traf- :c squad to provide police ser- 'ice for other purposes. Particularly. he stated. it is vitally necessary to have traf- fic police on duty where snow removal crew is loading he snow into trucks for trans- portation away from the centre of the city. The reason for the need of raffic police. Inspector Dowling stated. was that speed in getting he loaded trucks out of the area s important in order to make ristaiit room for others waiting 0 be loaded. This means it is as :l’ O to get the load e d across intersections as uickiy as possible. For this rea- on police must be on duty par- il('lll8l‘l_\' at corners where there are traffic lights in operation in order to prevent delay to the trucks through being held up by red lights. GOOD JOB inspector Dowliiig paid tribute to the work of the employees Tenders Are Called For Garbage Tenders for garbage collect- ion have been called by the vil- lace of Parkdale and Sherwood. The closing date in March 2. Chairman of the Sherwood Village Commissioners. Fred Cannon, said yesterday it HIS “an open tender" and the awarding of the contract would iicpend largely on the price. Sherwood and Parkdale will be using Charlottetown's new teepee incinerator. Charlotte- town garbage collection is by the firm of Jenkins and Clark. Asked if the villages would be predisposed to hand the con- tract to Jenkins and Clark. Mr. Cannon said this was not so. “If we can get the same ser- vice cheaper by another firm wc'll do it," he said. c said several people have indicated their interest in the contract, and their intentions of securing the "packer type" of truck which is required for the collection. ' lo Civic Departments charged with snow removal, many of whom work through the night in an endeavour to have streets open for travel in th e ,.,,,p1o_\-995 are not the M15; one, morning. Their efforts have to.‘ Witvh several members of do be supported, he said. by the police. . During these periods little at- ‘because windblown snow fre- ‘quently either completely buries ‘the meter or makes getting to it virtually impossible. in any event the still active motorist ignores the ‘coin c ol 1 e c tors’ even when a chance wind leav- es a parking area available. While city traffic was moving more freely yesterday than Monday. there were vast piles of snow in many city areas wait- ing removal. Though motorists generally are cooperating fully in s now removal efforts. they have one complaint heard on many sides. RCMP Plan Refresher Courses Here . Weather and vnoad conditions permitting. two oneday re- fresher courses for mom of the RCMP will it held piaipeque barrraciks ing today. Supt. A. S. McNeil lstiaited. i at the st ltanchmentis having taken coiirsesi :away_ they are in an excellent position to bring others up ix‘ “(-1, of which brings meter park. tentlon is paid to parking meters date on a wide range of proce- i(lui‘€S; at the same time senior: lmemberrs of the force will re- |f!'e'5ll the memories of others on day to day matters. They maintain the blade of the plow is not being lowered suffi- ciently. The end result is that in a relatively short time there are ‘ sets of tracks made in soft snow and as time passes the areas out- 3 side the tracks become frozen ; with the result that cars can ' easily be thrown against an on- coming vehicle if they happen to bump against the hard raised ri ge. 'k*‘k‘k*¥¥¥¥¥ COLUMBIA PICTURES presents LOCAL IN HOSPITAL Ward Island Hospital. I8 PATIENT “ostrital. for treatment. and family. Midgell. were the city Sunday. visiting lnrmer's mother. Mrs. :lt9]Pl'lnC¢ Edward Island Boo» la. (‘mode will Creek man u “ L Wont BRIEFS John R. MacDonald. Cornwall, is it patient in the Prince Ed- L.G. Anderson. 40 Maple Ave. Sherwood has entered the P.E.l. VISIT CITY Mr. and Mrs. George Bowley Cameron and his brother Hud- son Bowley. who is a patient ill SHOWING Flu! A film on Billy Graham‘: in. England. tonight at Fatt- view Baptist Church at I o'clock Md tomorrow o it : It and the dolls (all lie’: [at to “ C MiimiiHYER- ~w.mgm.....g.¢ymtertsiu-AWA- c....... SHOWS 3:30 — 7 — 9 -V-4-V-4-¥¥¥ ##- Itie tops, the iiioti-iimi alter Danny tor tlougli is lit: tile)! with Twr3.iVlil.§;tvi*iII§.i9ll£. pay with ‘L7 ear 3IEVE UWIIEIICE . sing the title song - Z on Columbia Records. EiiiiW|LL|AMS- The superintendent said it was his intention to have one-half the force in the city today with the other half attending tomorr- row. He also said Feb. 24 was the starting date for a three - day police course for all municipal police units as well as members of the Canadian National Rail- ways investzirgative staff. park wardens and representatives of the RCAF. ISLAND NEWS PAGE Eastern Ancl Central Districts The Guardian. Charlottetown, Wed. Feb. 19, 1964. 5 Career Counselling Program ‘Set For Ch’town RHS Pupils George W..Cheverie. manager. of Charlottetown office of the National Employment Service. announced yesterday the local. office has completed plans for career couselling of grade nine and 10 students of Charlottetown and surrounding districts. In co - operation with the Parkdale Lions Club and the department 0!‘ education. the Napional Employment hService,,‘ . . wll counsel more i an 500* grade nine and 10 students oflln the Charlottetown Rural Reg- igngl Hr} slfd fichoola iggicrh H; will:hire.Rs’il)fei$i‘edAlh1(cei:l villi: ctudest Z‘; N‘: 9 3" d 9 ¥‘]’° ations as the result of a head-on ::.::.r.... 51:: at on _ , e rans- ana 2: lg way a as litelg‘ griday II1l0lI'fl"t1_Etl-tF"b- short distance north of Corn- Maipequee ];’§:dl°m “SW9 "7 wall at about 11.30 yesterday men and women will ensure the success of this program, aimed at students in the grades where school drop outs inosi frequently occur. MI. lwebster said. ~NTw'ilEliii-e .Woman Hurt A special committee of thel Mrs. Aitken was a passenger Parkdale Lions Club, headed: in the front seat of a 1964 model by Ian Web s t er. is working car driven by her husband, Ro- closely with Clifford 0rforci,. bert, which collided in a narrow Special Se rvices Officer of cutting with another late mode- NES., and F ra n k Costello. ‘ car operated by Rev. George A. principal of the Charlottetown‘MacDonald of Charlottetown. Rural Regional High Sch o 0 ll The injured woman was trans- Premises and other L arrangements are being provi aldn Hospital the Vocational Institute. twenty-three occupations to ‘ dealt with has been st en rtlie windshield. physical I ferred to the Prince Edward ls- _ g by ambulancg in Chatham and extended SDU s ‘ Campbell will represent ‘ (led through the co-operation of from the Charlottetown Funer- debating record to two Wins fh1s‘,DunStal'I'8 In this Ell lmD0l‘t11“l Joseph MacLellan, principal oil at Home, where she was treated 59350“- ' _and following examination was Mr. Webster reports that Illei released to her home. Mrs. Ait.- sive response from experts in the‘ken suffered the injuries when were towed from the scene beislie was thrown forward Into ‘Breeders’ Sale Added filo Easter Beet Show ‘ A “Breeders‘ Sale" of puretplained, “that the animals of- bred beef cattle which is to be fered in the breeders’ sale be or held in conjunction with the breeding age, and the number {Easter Beef Show and Sale, will has been limited to 30. Thai. -‘be staged the forenoon of March i works out at 10 for each of the i113. it was learned last nigiitlshorthorn, Hereford and Angus ‘ from Dr. H.H. Kelly who is sec-; breeds. But in case any breed iretary of both livestock events. I does not fill its allotment of 10. »' The beef show will be staged: the balance can be made up on the afternoon of March 12, lmm 0'10 0!‘ Other 0‘ "19 1‘€m3"1' the sale of breeding animals on: "W bl’99d9~ lthe following forenoon. and the; “We expect to get out a cata- rbeef steers will be sold on the‘-logue with an extended pedi afternoon of March 13. Dr. Kel-igree to three generations, for ly explained. ‘the animals listed for breedinfl “We prefer." Dr. Kelly exn purposes", Dr. Kelly added. SDU Debating Team Wins Unanimously In Chatham St. Dunstan's University ac-i Sunday night SDU defeated complished the almost impos-il)alhousie also by a unanimous sible last night — winning ajdecision. Maritime Intercollegiate LE3-i s¢_ 1)unsran'g upiheid the ag. sue debate by a unanimous ue'ini-inative of the resolution last clsion away from home. imgm. The judges praised tn Debating the resolution: “l-te--Island debaters for their clear solved that education at tlie‘outli'ne. their development of university level be federalized". ; the topic and their presentation. senior air-ts student. Colin Mac-i Millan. Charlottetown. and sum stans will host Acadia Univer iior science student George ;sity in an attempt to win t:lie.tr Ctiaisson, Minto. N.B.. def-entedthird debate in a row. latter representing St. Thomas 1 John R. MacDonald and David St. I iencounter. The topic of this debate is- "Resolved that Can- andiada's role in promoting world r,(,;peace has been minimized by the acquisition of nuclear arms" A win on Saturday night would front—end damage. I Charlottetown. ‘ e accident was investigat-2 couraging. The interest of tlicscl Both vehicles received exten- led by the Charlottetown RCMP ivory likely result in another This Saturday night. St. Dun-» §Work Delayed By Storms RM. Rickard, project sup°r- intendent for Pigott Construct- ion Company, said yesterday that unless there is lot more ad- verse weather. the theatre sci- iou of the Fathers of Confedera- tion Memorial Building will be ready for the Dominion Drama Festival finals scheduled for here in early In referring to Sunday night's storm which dropped 15 inches of snow in the Charlot- tetown area, Mr. Rlckarrd obser- ved “The snow hurt us badly," and added “we'll lose two or three days by the time the men get in from the country." He noted that they had hoped to be finished pouring the lib- rary roofs before now but there is still one more to go. “We hope to have it finished thll week," he said. Maritime championship. ‘low- ever in the event that university wins it‘s three de- bates, a playoff would be neces- sary before the national play- offs to be staged here in March. Saturday night's debate is at 7:30 in the SDU gymnasium. . DOW’S RESTAURANT Frill Coin-sc ‘Heat ; Minute Steak . 99: i Including soup, Coffee. Dessert. i i ‘.__. -. ._.—.... 1 e iiiriin 1 iii WRIGHT shoes foprional at extra cost SURPRISE! F-85 just put you in the market for an F-85’s lower 1964 price now means you can put yourself in command of an Olds—with everything that implies. For a start, it means you’ll get a choice of outstanding engines — from the Econ-O-Way 155-hp V6 (one of the world’s few V6’s) to the swashbuckling Cutlass 290-hp V8’. And you can pick a transmission to match ’em — 3-Speed or 4-Speed Synchro-Mesh‘, or the new Jetaway aut0matic*. Then there’s handling. . .the word “great” will spring to mind as you enjoy the outstanding manoeuvrability. F-85’s convenient size makes it wonderfully nimble to drive or park. And as for style, it’s of the stand-back-and-whistle variety. All of this put you in the mood for Olds F-85? The price puts you in the market. (Cutlass V8 engine standard on Cutlass models) Model illustmted: Cutlass Holiday Coupe Oldsmobile BY -DLDSMOBILE THE PRICE SURPRISE 0F '64 A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE VISIT YOUR LOCAL QUALITY OLDSMOBILE DEALER ISLAND CHEV. - OLDS. LTD. DIAL 894-657 7 Fitzroy Street