4 Vincent Court _ofigBedford, » PEI. “Timmy” wi the Oilers. companied by last night a quarterback Bernie of the Hamilton Tige national recognition, as politely parried a couple of hecklers during his address. He also replied to a number | Ship to the purchasing oN of inquiries from several per- tons attending the meeting, with the majority of question: from perso! to the political Douglas. In his address, stated that he was “all for free enterprise system” but con- opinions of Mr. nor enterprising, In his talk he outlined the.var- ious plans of the New Democra- tic party roposed “‘a crash | Production of elect: by tidal power or coal, that could ‘TIMMY’ GETS CHEQUE-AND STICK Douglas Heckled At S'side Meet SUMMERSIDE—Speaking to | Maritimes, and also fit a relatively small audience of national power grid that could about 100 persons at a public | supply the larger Canadian cen- meeting in Summerside last eve- | ters where more power is need ning. Tommy Douglas,. national | ed leader of the New Democratic | ment Of “cormerstone industrias"” Party, displayed the parliamen- | that would tary ability that has won him oe and increased employ- he | ment s apparently opposed | cent, Mr. Douglas | Per cent in cost. tended that government by the | planned economy”, and he two old parties is neither free | that while the present | | programi” foe’ the economic de-| conte’ ovement ne velopment of the Atlantic pro-| with’ Wi Fou a vinees, that would -inelude the | Tignish as president; anit monly the | Innis of Borden as secretary- | LATE NOTICES oitin adjoining Classified. Ad: vertising section.) HAYLEY — The death Ea, formerly of Southport, » in her 83rd year. pee will arrive Tuesday evening by train and will rest the Hennessey | e0, ath occurred | Innis, in Montreal of Miss Florence | Richmond and Kenneth Mac- key stick from the Saint John defenceman. Faloney, (left) who accompanied the young- ster on the ice and spoke a few words on behalf of the campaign is an interested spectator. o “Timmy” (center) receives a cheque from Dr. k Snow on behalf of the Oilers. Along with the cheque in aid of the Easter Seals campaign the youngster also received a. hoc- Garnet Ross Is Candidate In Byelection SUMMERSIDE — Garnet Ross announced yesterday he will be in the Centre Ward | aetie’ in aarcrrecat ice March 20. Mr. Ross, who had been rumored as a possible candidate for more than a week, stated last night he had been approach- ed by a number of citizens in the ward and had agi have his name placed in nomina- into a uggested the establish- lead to other in- He stressed the importance of full employment and its relation- and increased national pro: He stated that since 1951 farm prices are down by about 20 per- and that equipment and supplies that the farmer has to have increased by about 20 tion. Mr. Ross is an engineer with the CNR and resides with his wife on Notre Dame Street. They have one son, Donald, who is a fourth year student at Prince of Wales College. Freetown Driver ment had promised “pari. Arrested Twice not charity”, the farmer melihers “On Same Day received neither. Prior to the public meeting a SUMMERSIDE — Twice ap- prehended on the same day for driving while his license was suspended, Albert Matthews of Freetown was released 3 He contended that the only answer to this problem wa: William Handrahan of ; and Mrs. Muriel Mac- treasiirer. Other members elected to the party’s county council are a. MacFarlane, Bedeque; John Fitzpatrick, Summerside; C. F. Gallant, Wellington; Mayne | Belmont; Gregory Me- Tignish; C. J. Gallant, pos court for the first offence, and went right into police court for fine of $50 or one month, im- Posed by town magistrate R.S. Hinton, for the second similar | offence. a Matthews had been first caught by RCMP driving with- out a license, and the same day Bede- | had been picked up by Sum- merside police for repeating je C fence. Innis, Borden. Douglas MacFarlane, u ing ning held in the K of C. Hall on First Street Cormier of Summerside ‘Douglas was introduced | fortelied bail of $15 when he eon led to appear on a charge of ig. ‘A member of the RCAF for- felted bail of $25 when he fai ed to appear on an intoxication charge, and a Summerside man on a similar charge was fined $20, i Re vista Parliament At A Glance THE CANADIAN PRESS MONDAY, March 4 1962 Veterans Minister Churchill announced a give ® TRAFFIC (Continued from page 1) pens! veterans the benefit of the $10 monthly | raise in old said tention” of entering into nu- clear war h with, the Us | hart Regier (CCF—Bur- | a minor amend- ment to the Small Loans Bus- inesses Act after’nearly four hours of debate. ‘TUESDAY, March ¢ The Commons meets at 13. FARE EP yeetd Sawmill Burns Cavers ny N.B. Town ‘ium * Limited a ‘merger is under. | he taken to expend the total pre- tatensils; et ee dpetion companies. producing castings istome In future, Alcan Aluminium- | and the Uphusen works, procue- ‘werke will operate three alum- ing sand castings and perma- inium fabricating stants: The | nent mould ahd die castings. 1a and Gas Co. |{a tne preyionn Three Islands Named In Arcti OTTAWA (CP)—Three Arctic islands Monday aren Geom eae Yee and two previous Canadian gov- ernors-gener: The islands in the Sverdrup Basin of the Queen meer ft the northwé group ar sttacel Vigacds Lets given the names of Vanier, Massey and Alexander, Gen. predecessors were Vincent Massey and Earl Alex- | ander of Tunis, Cabinet approval of the names for the hitherto undesignated islands was given following a recommendation by the Cana- | dian Permanent Committee on Geographical Names, B-58 Crashes At U.S. Base FORT WORTH, Tex. A B-58 jet bomber, sit one that set transcon' (AP)— lar 2] burned Carswell Air Force Base Mon- day night. The crew of three was killed. An information officer at the | base said there were no weap- ‘ons aboard the bomber. ‘The fire was reported under control 45 minutes after the crash. Thousands of persons inthe vicinity heard the explosions and saw the flames that fol- followed. Mrs. A. H. Parker, who lives about a mile from the runway, said she heard the plane's en- gines, then her house wat shaken by a dull thud. Toshed outside and saw the ee burning,” "at exploded. ‘Then in ite while there was another explo- sion.”” Both B-58 and B-52 jet bomb- ers fly out of Carsw Hudson's Bay Co. Has Good Year WINNIPEG (CP) — The Hud- Monday an- nounced a net profit of $8,893,000 | for the year ended Jan. 31, com- pared with a net profit of $7, 20,000 in the previous yer The company's, annual state | ment noted that this counts included profits of Beary ed, tor the fall year, come pared with seven weeks in the previous annual statement. The company acquired control of the ‘Morgan companies Dec. 10, 1960. The figures for the year just | ended also included a dividend from Hudson's Bay | Limited. eof Teter profits were $17.18 compared with $14,641 ar. Land ac- count surplus was $560,000. The company announced it has | a final trading atvidend | of 12 cents a share after d tion of United Kingdom tax detetinn trea the feed, sccoget of. Mt cents 8 are, payable May 1 shareholders of record et * Net trading dividends and i | account distributi wii be STi cente a thare changed after ‘adjusting sue ugust. Veterans and the Legion Home, Church, Malpeque FUNERAL NOTICE the Kensington Branch No. 9, Royal Canadian Legion, are asked to meet at 7th, at 1.00 p.m. to attend the funeral of our late comrade William Roach. Fu- neral to be held in the Kier Memorial and medals to be worn. ISLAND NEWS PAGE Summerside and Prince County The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Mar. 6, 1962. 3 Sum-HiAssembly, Meets Faloney SUMMERSIDE — Bernle Fa-| Mr. Hancox also spoke on the quarterback of| value of Easter citing milton Tiger-Cats footbi me of the benefits derived team, was the chief speaker at] from the ste, He introduced @ special assembly of Summer-| P. ‘imm; 14-year- side High School students at old ‘Vincent ‘Court or Eetee, ternoon. Mr, Faloney was speal aid. “They “Took ing on behalf of the Easter Seal|t you for help, and you can campaign for crippled children. them by giving generously by William J,| to the 1962 campaign. rs chi In the unavoidable absence of of the P.E. ter seals cam-| Mayor J. Ernest Morrison, Paign, Mr. ‘Faloney urged his | Coun. George Key welcomed the student listeners to tell their| visitors on behalf of the town, | parents to “‘put a little extra in| and presented mementoes to Mr. those pink envelopes this year.|Faloney and Ross Hawthorne, The money is used in the rehab- | public relations officer for the of crippled children,” | Faloney tour. line stewardesses, Joan used for braces, and| Currie of Alberton (MCA) and surgery. Words can't express| Marion Clark of Charlottetown ihe value of these contribu- (TCA) were also introduced to Hancox, this Faloney answered questions| Davis Lidstone, cr the audience about foot-| Summerside mdb te fiat an master of ceremonies and wel- ® and that the Montreal |comed Mr. Faloney and the| Alouettes’ Would probably be the | other visitors to the high schoo! | team to beat. assembly. Principal of High School was Khrushchev Critical | (Reuters) — Pre-|for food produce. The ie nae Reber sharply criti- | population had jum; cized the state of Soviet agricul- | 000,000 sinc ture Monday and warned that if | committee. current farm problems were not | But Khrushchev rapped a: solved by urgent measures com- | cultural leaders for the falling muni be “seriously dam- | growth rate on far.y8 He also aged. ed the occasion to hit out In a seven-hour speech to a | again st nae Soviet dictator meeting of the central commit- | Josef S tee of the Soviet communist | nt aad ‘ong of the reasons for | party, Khrushchev admitted a the current fall in the rate of | fall in the rate of agriculture | @evelopment was Stalin's advo- development and said meat sup-|cacy of grassland agriculture |plies had become inadequate. | rather than more intensive cul- The Soviet leader declared: | tivation of the soil ‘We have been fighting for 40 | The Soviet chief said 16,000,- e 1953, he told the have to do two or three times | 3,000,000 tons less meat and 17,- as much and not in the course | 000,000 tons Tess milk. of 40, but within a few year: “If we fail to solve this task | INCENTIVES NEEDED we shall confront the country | He emphasized the need for with great difficulties and pd | material incentives to spur the |eause of building commana | country’s peasants to produce will be seriously dam But he insisted the peahigiar Phone seme ot | |facentives had nothing’ to do cee production, espe- | With the capitalist pursuit gialy that of “animal ‘husban- | Profit and said they were in line ry, has been destroyed, h the Leninist doctrine of Khrushchev told the committee. |atistying material interests. Information on Khrushche' BLAMES POPULATION jarathon speech to the com The Soviet leader said a ris- | mittee’s closed - door session ing population meant a came in a summary broadcast growing increase in the der md | over Moscow radio. Khrushchev said that over the last three years, over-all agri- cultural _ production had in- creased by 33 per cent—com- pared with 27 per cent foreseen in the seven-year plan—but that the population rise and in-| creased consumption had made | the ine inadequate. | “Our population will continue to grow and we | welcome this. The Soviet Un- fon is a vast country and there room for everybody under the sun” “Apparently the population of the Soviet Union will reach be- | tween 250,000,000 and 280,000,000 in the near future,” he said. e 1959 census gave a popu- lation of 208,826,000, Cycle Champ | Killed Monday (AP) — Libero Libera of Italy, former world ene champion for the class, was killed Monday ina ‘reed accident near here. | Liberati, 34, who won the world title in 1957, was prac- ticing on wet roads when his motorcycle skidded ond crashed st a rocky wall. | Stevenson Senate Seat NEW YORK (AP)—The Jour- nal - American says it was | “broadly hinted in Democratic circles” that Adlal Stevenson, chief United States delegate at the United Nations, may be of- |fered the New York Democratic ee for the U.S. Senate thi Bavedion dodged est Decem- ber against running for the Sen | ate in Mlinois. He apparently was | influenced by assurances from im- | President Kennedy that his UN job would be broadened to give him a bigger voice in the U.S. administration. | The Journal - American says | Stevenson, twice unsuccessful as |the Democratic presidential nominee, had given Tilinois Democrats the impression he now considered New York his | home state. The Democratic nominee for |the Senate this year in New | York will oppose U.S. Senator Jacob Javits, who is seeking re- election Nation River Minors Win MAN-MADE LAKE | Lake Kariba in the Rhodesian a ition will on largest man-made lakes of the world by 1963 with an area of 2,000 square miles. ¢ of the| sharing. From the yer LADIES Pulmonary function equip- ment, donated to the Prince Edward Island Hospital yes- terday, is demonstrated by Nurse Miss V. Mobbs, while N.D. MacLean, hospital ad- ir ministrator and HH. Pension (CP) — Recipients | sr war cass allowances aged 70 and over will be able to re- Resa iie Rl aevaaneiot ceces! $10 increases in old age and blind pensions, Veterans Minis- ter Churchill announced in the Commons Monday. His announcement was greeted by opposition leaders as a victory for them. Mr. Churchill said that nere- tofore amounts received from old age pensions had always | ac: been counted as part of the come subject to the means test under the War Veterans Al- ine speed records Monday, ieee |years to achieve the present |000 tons less grain had been | lowance Act. Veterans pensions on takeoff from |level of production. Now we | produced in 1961 than planned, | and the income ceiling for the means test were increased last summer, When the old age pensions was increased thi a month from | 1, it was at first counted as in- “ AMC-Union Sharing Contract |” Seen Move For Co-Operation By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor Edward L. Cushman, vice- president of American Motors Corporation, says the company's ‘progress - sharing’ contract with the United Automobile Workers, made last fall, is part of a developing maturity in company-union relations He told a press conference and the Toronto Canadian Club these relations have passed through two phases and now are ready for a third. The first stage, following “un- enthusiastic’ acceptance of un- fons by management, tended to e one of conflict and depend- ence on power econd stage saw the two moving into ‘mutual accommodation” and ig to live with one an- other,” but still with depend- ence’ on power and without much consideration of econom- ics and the welfare of the bust- ness, “learn' yw,” sald Mr. here is need for organized co - operation rather than organized c id he feels the current contract is an advance in that direction. CITES ESSENTIALS at ee he stated, both sides recognize that thete relationship is permanent; that each recognize the needs of the other as institutions and that they work out their dif- ferences within that context.” present agreement, which runs for three years, gave something both te the union and | the company. To the unica it gave profit Profits before taxes an ammount equal to 30 per cont of the stockhold- investment is deducted Cushman, move into . | that AID DONATES EQUIPMENT ed that it was purchased with the proceeds from the fashion show and League of Mercy tea, The new equipment will be used in the diagnosis of dis- | eases of the lung. Simpson, president of the Jun- ior Ladies Aid of the hospital, which donated the unit, look on. Mrs. Simpson officially made the presentation to the bospllal yesterday, end. stat- Hike Not To Cut Of Farm Production Allowances To Veterans come under the War Veterans | announcing government policy. Allowance Act Mr, Churchill said Mr, Mr. Churchill announced that tin’s interruption wa the government h-d reconsid- | rageous, and typical of ered the situation, and would |eral party attempt to pa count the $10 increase in old | free speech. age pensions and blind aliow-| Speaker Roland Michener said ances as exempt from the in- Mr. Churchill should make any come ceiling for veterans aged | announcement he had in a face 70 and over. tual way, without arousing con- The exemption will be al: | troversy. lowed by a change in the reg-| When Mr. Churchill finished ulations governing veterans pen- | his announcement, Opposition sions and will be made retro-| Leader Pearson said it was b. 1 gratifying that an opposition The minister started his an-| point of view had been adopted nouncement Commons | by the government. Conserva- with a brief account of how the | tive MPs hooted derisively, old age pensions had been con- Dp ‘DELIGHTED’ sidered in the past as part of 1 W. Herridge (CCF—Koote- eon enone ene es Veterans nay West) said the CCF-New 0 Paul Martin (L—Essex East) | naenonieas Vo Soup, wae interrupted with a complaint! The war veterans allowance Mr. Churchill was making | was raised last June t a_political argument and not | month from $70 for single vet. erans, and to $i from $120 wr married veterans. The allowable income limft for recipitnts was raised at the same time for veterans whe have some outside income. The amount of outside income allowed would have been cut by rare oS eee cerhe employees the amount of the $10-amonth rio per cent into a fund whose ld age pension increase if the disposition is decided pon in government had, not changed discussions between company the regulatior and union; and five per cent in|, Mr. hare sai the change the form of company stock. | tion if both the veteran and his ing” in that, if the company | Wife were receiving old age does not make a profit or suf- allow. fers a loss, some deduction can be made in the amount of the annual improvement and cost- of-living factor otherwise pro- led in the contract. GET RECOGNITIONS The company, on its side, as pensions or blindness 1c Don't Neglect Slippii | FALSE TEETH false teath drop. alip or wobble Don't noyed and embarrasse outlined by Mr. Cushman, also | by such nandicaps: ASTEETH. i tlkaline (non-acld) powder to eprine got what it considers important fie I plates, Reeps false tect Tecogntions of the functions of | forearm at Give consent fel. management an efinition of ing of security and addec conto fields into which the union | fo"torp sc ee ee would not attempt to enter. un Mr. Cushman said “progress. 3 sharing” as a company eas. ophy extends beyond labor Tations into the felds of | Parker E. Hamilton Funeral Director Company policy, he stated. is to assure suppliers that it has | Service with Dignity and no wish to take over their pro- Honour. duction, and to give them a» feeling of permanence. This en- | Also 24 Hour Ambulance couraged suppliers to come up Service. liers, dealers, customers an shareholders. with new developments. Profits by dealers were above Phone 220 the average for the industry; Montague and, when profits justify, spe- returns to customers, in ad- Phone 70 dition to competitive prices, are considered. Wesco "GOLD BOND" LATEX PAINTS Morray River at Montague rink. scored two goals h for Francis Mac- In the event of fire Legion members of Wednesday, March “mally should be serviced. et 2.00 p.m. Berets FIRE PROTECTION ALBERTON AREA notify telephone operator immediately. Refrain from use of phone for other reasons until firemen are called. Avoid congesting traffic enroute and at scene of fire. U people are asked to avoid entering burning build- ings. Please check stove pipes and chimneys periodically. Oil heaters that do not operate nor- INSERTED BY ALBERTON FIRE DEPT. Dean Carpenter, Secretary FIRST QUALITY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE $2.25 ar. VELVET ENAMEL (semi-gloss) $2.79 QT. $2.35 ar. he VELVET SUPREME (satin) PORCH & PATIO pani eyoeorpbor To our paint department we have added a paint mixer to give you a choice of 360 colors. G. L. MacKENZIE INC. KENSINGTON P. O. Box 25 Phone 74