Chis sayings were featured in 5, a ~ 4 ‘ WATCHES OVER HIS YOUNG This demonstration, in Pe- king was typical of those in other locations. (CP, Wirephoto) Portraits of Mao Tse-tung, Chairman of the Chinese Com- munist, Party; and books of most of the—demonstrations held by the Red Guard during their terrorist activities ~ in China's cities this summer. Mayor Informs Council SUMMERSIDE BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN By LAUCHIE CHISHOLM The centennial year — 1967— promises to be a banner year for the town of Summerside, re- plies to letters sent out by the yor and council recently’ in- dicated Mots Mayor George Key told the regular monthly meeting — of — town council here yesterday that John Fisher, centennial head, § may be among. guests at the — 1967 Lobster Carnival in Sum- merside. Mayor Key said that a reply from Mr Fisher's ottice indicated: that he would leave the dates open for the carnival. If present plans are carri out, R.C.N. ships will be in har- bor here during the festival. The P.E.L ‘Centennial Committee had. made: two» requests;~aecord- ing to information received by ; the Mayor ‘aittd council, and Ma- | yor Key added that—neither—of-| the dates selected were those of wire and direct ‘telephone’ con} the carnival. . The Mayor will , write Hon. Paul Hellyer with ‘9@ Mayor Key stated that the De- | request s : ij ISLAND HEAD The meeting was MR. HOGAN versation. partment was defaulting on the payment, Informed but that the major portion was. 0] that J. Charles. Hogan, centen~heing paid. The local RCAF are nial committee head for the is- helpful, he said, but $300 Has-ne-| . land, would be present for & ver been paid the last three centennial meeting Monday at years Of the agreement, clause | 8 No. 1 has not been honored, he stated. _m. : iso scheduled to be in atten- : He said that the only: reason dance for two days of the carni- Councillor Schurman explained | that since the parents of the two | boys who had damaged the park facilities had reported to police, the police did not lay any charges against the hoys. Councillor MacDonald asked ‘for co-operation of the fire de- ment in the near future. as they go about the task of clean- ing flues;’’-so-that-tragedies-are not repeated this winter.” TWO CALLS ; The fire department reported eight companies who submitted | only. two calls during the month | tenders on request >of August, to a flue fire at 227 | ially in winter. At present, the lanes are to be painted and the entire area at’ that point is to be paved, : Some — discussion mayor said that information had been forthcoming from the Hali- | fax station who are applying for a. satellite; but_no- information had been available from the Moncton station. The mayor said he understood that the. proposals will have to. be-made public in the next few weeks and his sug- | gestion was to wait until then before making: any decision. He also stated that the only opposi- tion to the stations appeared to’ be from each other. The town council approved a resolution put forward by Coun- eillor Frances 0. Perry, and seconded by Councillor J. E.J Morrison. The resolution stated> that the employees of the town of Summerside subscribe to a pension_plan._Tenders-had-—heen called and awarded to Invest- ment Trust Company,:one of The plan is entirely voluntary, Elm Street, and ‘a false alarm. | Councillor (Mrs.)—Morrisen told mittee, under Councillor Morri- son will undertake a study, determine what type of reservoir would best suit the needs of the town. The present stan pipe | water tower has a useful ‘ife of | tenders were tonly two more years, council was | informed. “Councillor Schurman moved that the council go on record as Corner be ‘marked off with of National Defence’! grass and curbs, so that the i Janes will be easily seen, espec- WESTERN . FUNERALS GAVIN. FUNERAL — The fu- val next summer is the famed he knew that the money alloted RCMP. ‘Musical Ride’ -and | band. Mayor Key thanked Pre- | mier Campbell and Minister T. E. Hickey for their co-operation ,| in this project. A town centennial project for 1967, a swimming pool, still needed approval from the fe-. deral government’ centennial | committee. It has met the appro- -valof-the -provincial--body..Also_} wasn't being paid wos that tho-e was too much, “red tape". A let- ter will be forwarded fence Minister Hellyer tion here,"’ the Mayor comment- ed. : ; POLICE REPOR A police report was read from Chief S. D. A. Wannamaker, -who-listed..12- cases. under the. to De- “We ‘don’t want the Greenwood situa- the project is seeking approval criminal code, with seven con- ; neral-of Mrs. Peter J. Gavin | was held Monday morning from ithe Rooney Funeral Home to ithe Sacred Heart Church. Al- berton, where’ Requiem Mass |was celebrated by. Rev. Gerald Steele. Rev. Reginald MacDon- | ald was seated in the sanctuary. | Pall bearers were Perley Hardy, | Shirley Murphy. Walter = Mill- }man, Gerald Redmond, Chester + Smith and-Elmer. Gallant.-Flowe. ler bearers were William Nocn- as a winter works project | victions, four pending, and one "The financial report stated | dismissed. that the administration fee of There were eight under the $3000 per year as contained in | Highway Traffic Act during the the RCAF schoo! tuition agree- | Month of August, all re¥ulting in } an, Herman Durant, Bud Culle- |ton, Clarence Culleton, John Gavin and Jimmy Smith. Inter- ment was in the Church cem- etery. , The Water and Sewar Com. | the meeting. Tender was also awarded for to | the purchase of 1250 feet of. hose | for the fire dept. The tender was awarded to Hall Manufacturing Company Ltd. for $1815. Other submitted by. King Seagrave, kK. T. Holman Etd., |Search for new industry. These ‘\grams now under way. | ‘centered around a new: TV Channel. The 4 & Premier Alex B. Campbell Speaks At Annual Pfemier Alex Campbell, 34, said |Prince Edward Island was most |Monday an atmosphere of opti- anxious to follow the. trends of |mism pervades the province |sister Atlantic provinces in en- |which will do much to close the |deavoring*to attract secondary economic gap between the is- |industry and to bolster the pro- land and other provinces. jduction of the basic industries. Meeting Mr. Campbell also spoke of a gap that was becoming increas- ingly apparent in the age group between 15, and .f5, the most productive. segnient of the prov- ince’s work force. | A great deal of concern -ex. | x jisted which would be translated into action on improvements RED GUARDS needed in education, social serv- : ites, the basic industries of. fish- Continued from page: 1 ing and agriculture and the\by the name of ‘great proletar- ian cultural ‘revolution and en- lists the aid of the teen-age Red Guards. - SEEN AS RETORT : The jibe at the pontiff was a retort to his remark of Aug. 31 ‘after Red Guard attacks on Roman Catholic nuns in Peking: The Pope had said then ‘this could appear a sign of death, not life.’ he needs, however, depended to a large extent on federal partici- pation. - The premier told the annual, meeting of the Atlantic Associa- tion of Broadcasters he was con- fident that, despite disappoint- ing provisions for his province in formulas: recently proposed at’ federal-provincial talks in Ottawa, he had high hopes for studies of provincial economic and industrial incentive pro- Centennial He described the approach as the threshold to Operation P.E.I. on Agriculture and fisheries vow! Project cannot provide the level of , economy enjoyed -by all — the | ed other provinces: ? Announc : ‘LOOKS FOR INDUSTRY “The Liberal premier, in office MONTAGUE The centen- less than two months, said nial project for the Montague | area ‘will be an artificial ice | plant. in the community, skating | yesterday by Keir Clark, minis- ter of municipal affairs that this | project has been officially ap- proved by the Centennial Grants | Committee. This means that the | town of Montague and partici- | pating- areas will receive the sum_of $16, towards the rink. It was officially annouticed | He estimated that it cost the province $20,008 to’ ‘educate a student. The numbers who com- pleted their education and left for other provinces ‘‘worked out to a $3,000,000 gift annually’ from his province to others. He told broadcasters that methods of. increasing revenues could not as easily apply” in P.E.I. as’ in other provinces. A one per cent increase in sales tax in his province would pro- vide his. government with con- siderably less return that. it would the government of Sas- katchewan if a. similar tax was applied there. : + one, ' Island News Pese ric ee nd eee eats Conservatives Continued from page 1 to the Senate jn July. MENTION IN CABINET TALK Mr. Jamieson has been men- tioned as a possible Newfound- land representative in the ‘ted- eral cabinet {f Transport Min- ister’ Pickersgill retires. only opponent.’ Eric Hiscock, 45, last federal election as a Social Credit candidate. Grand Falls - White Bay-Lab- rador became vacant with the ger, who was appointed minis- provincial Liberal Aug. 1. PRELIMINARY HEARING merside, was committed }court here’ yesterday before Magistrate, W. Chester S. Mac- Donald. Neyo Bail was set at $5.000 in two Sireties of $2,500 each. ; Project to be-shared-equally~ by | the federal and provincial gov- | ernments. oe | The balance of . the cost will j be paid. by the: Montague dis- | trict, but it is hoped a further | sharing at the government level broken into and the store safe will be forthcoming through the | Missing when he came. to work Six crown witnesses were heard yesterday. ; Edward Sharbell, owner - of | Sharbell’s Store in Portage, ‘test- | ified he had discovered his store province's . municipal Winter | about 7:30 the morning of Aug- Works program. The above’ USt 8, a Monday. The safe had “grant” and~-winter~works~assist-- Contained — $1,400 to _$1,500__in ance is expected to cover ap- |Cheques, about $3,500 in cash, ‘proximately half the $36,000 | Several government bonds, three MR. MacLEOD ‘Earle MacLeod also open. Nothing had | Constable D...H. Bartlett and.| Cpl. Winston McTavish, both of | the Summerside detachment of | the RCMP, which conducted the investigation, testified to finding | ley Carter, who was appointed | He quickly overwhelmed his | a Conservative who ran in the ‘day that 3, j | | “Mr--Chatwood—defeated—Con servative Thomas Pitcher, 44 and Lorne Snell of the Nea Democrats to win the seat The three byelections leave sone vacancy in the Commons-ir |Hull, Que., where Alexis Caron died three weeks ago. No by jelection date has been set. GOLD SEIZED BOMBAY (AP) — An Indian lcustoms official announced Sun bars of contra. iband gold worth more than $1,i,--- /000.000 was seized from an jempty apartment during a mid ‘night raid in central Bombay Tesignation of Charles R. Gran- ‘Customs officials believed thr or four international rings have ter of Labrador affairs in the smuggled more: than $100,000.- government |000 worth of gold:into India dur- ling the last decade. Bail Is Set At $5,000 In Portage Theft Case SUMMERSIDE — George}taken in later Saturday and Sun-} | Michael Charles Kinch Jr., Sum-|day afternoon, when the store for | was trial after a preliminary hearing | been taken when he placed this | of the charge. of break, entry money in the safe Sunday eve- | $50 and costs or 30 days for and theft against him in county | ning. Vernon Dale Costain and Nel- ° der William Costain, Miminegash, were each fined common assault. They had prev- iously’ been .charged with as- sault causing -bodily harm te Leigh Ramsay of Campbellton, FATA AARON both of don Grady, Sgt. W. J. R. Mac- | the broken safe~on August 8, with ledger. books bearing Shar- bell’s. name and bonds and papers stref{ around it, which they took to’ the Summerside detachment headauarters: | 3 Also testifying were Summer- |For supplying for Tignish side town police Constable Gor- | Elementary School for the 1966-67 school. term also |for servicing one school | bus. Closing ~date Sept. _ Tenders Donald, _NCO_in charge ofthe Summerside RCMP -detachment and D. J. Nelson, chemistry =e : watches, a revolver, a purse con- | section, RCMP crime detection Sept. 22nd. — the plant, is expected to taining crag Rage meet laboratories in_ Sackville, New a as | ger s when he had taken | Brunswick. a bullding was completed |inventory on Saturday evening. | George R. McMahon was Terence Gavin earlier this year and it is ex- | NOTHING TAKEN crown prosecutor and Allison M. ° ? : pected all will be ready for ied The witness said he had also | Gillis was counsel for the’ac-| Secretary. forthcoming winter season. put into the safe all the money | cused. a ===] _ —-; anEEEe neu bniat the Honored Recentl | Former provincial fire mar- | y | |shal Earle MacLeod, 16 Kent |Street, has been honored by the |International Association of Fire Chiefs who have made.him-an active life member of the asso- fee F. Schurman Co. Ltd. asking that the sections in the Teachers new traffic setup at—Reed's.| Aovoint Officers Officers appointed at the first meeting of Elliot River South Teachers’ Study Group in St. |Catherine’s — School | were: President, Mrs. Violet ; MacEachern, Vice - President, Cindy MacKenzie, and _ Secret- ary. Arlene MacDougall. Meeting places were decided on ‘for each: month of the year and Mrs. MacDougall, Nine Mile Creek school, invited the teach- ers for the next meeting on Oct. 25, 1966. Mrs, some._.of the _lessos_- in._‘‘New Math." as taught by Willis Hall at Prince of Wales College this summer. The modern. methods of teaching the basic operations in arithmetic were discussed A brief period was set aside for ‘| ciation. - =| Mr. MacLeod, who fetired as provincia) fire marshal last month, has occupied the post for the past 10 years. = The international association is a world-wide organization recentiy | MacEachern. | outlined | which includes:-all North Ameri- can countries, South America jand Europe. ; Notification of Mr. MacLeod’s honor was received from Donald M. O’Brien, association general ‘ manager at New York head- quarters. : | “Questions om Teaching. and | Aids.” |. Supervisor ° J. Reginald Mac. |Donald gave an informal ad- | dress on school discipline, draw- jing on his own experience as | well as observations from auth- orities on teaching. Refreshments were served. someone parma Serre aot nota Shop Where Parking Is “A Pleasure At--- ROBINSON SUPPLIES LTD.:. 42 St. Peter’s Road ment has not been received by | convictions, and under town by- the town. for the past three years |laws, 22 convictions for seed- since inception: although “repe- | 1ng, 20 for drunk, and six others titive requests have heen made | covered by other by-laws AF ac-|_ There was only one case dur- ar acai cae by | ing the month under the Liquor | Control Act. In his juvenile activity, the DE ATHS chief reported several - thefts eee etre ener of : | bicycles. A tota 1 es wer ’ DUFFY — At the Charlotte- eereten ‘la, wih ‘ties te town Hospital Monday, ‘Septem- | covered. ber 19, 1966. Mrs. (Dr.) L.I.| There were 12 accidents dur- Duffy, 71 McGill Avenue, age 55|ing August, with seven over years, Remains will be forward-*| $100 in damages, and five under loves you ed this evening at 7 o'clock from the Charlottetown Funeral Home to her late residence. Funeral - notice later. ‘THOMAS — At the -Charlotte- town Hospital on September 19th, 1966. Mrs. Margaret Thomas formerly of North Tryon, P.E.I., in her 96th yeaft. Remains are resting at the Daw- eon Funeral Home, Crapaud from where the funeral service will be held Wednesday, Sep- tember 21st, with service com- mencing at 2 p.m. Interment. will be in Cape Traverse Free Church of Scotland cemetery. Visiting ‘hours at the funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to 10 p.m. { MacLEAN — The death occur- red at. Livingston, Mass., on Sept. 12th, 1966, of Julia Chal- mers MacLean, widow of John ‘A. MacLean, in her 68th year. Funeral was held from A. E. Long ~Memroial Chapel, North ® Cambridge. Mass, on Sept. 16, ‘1966. Rev. Nathan W_. Goff of- ficiating, assisted by Rev. Nor- man MacLean. Interment in Westview cemetery, Lexington, Mass.” sit) YOUNG — The ¢eath occurred on Sept. 10, 1966. at Memorial. | Hospital, Cambridge, Mass., of | Florence Ann Young. widow of | George Thomas Young, age 84, | disallowed | The man was sentenced to three $100 damages. ~ *The chief reported that two youths responsible for damage to Queen Elizabeth Park have paid for the damage and this will have a bearing on any other’ penalty imposed. COLLECTIONS. In collections, the chief re- ported $2926 taken in during the month ($1207 ‘from fines and costs. and $1208 from parking meters). Councillor Alex MacDonald complimented the parents of children who took their children in when they were discovered in | possession of stolen property Councillor Mollisor said that he followed with interest the case of assault causing bodily harm in which the appeal was in Supreme court. months, but according to Coun- cillor Mollison, served onty part of that term. He said that he felt politicians should stay out of itand that for such a crime, the parole board of the Detach- ment of Justice was doing an injustice. Alberton Marr: To Halifax In Helicopter Zz The day your boy - discovers he’s worth money. Open a father-and-son account for your boy, the Permanent ‘way. Do it in secret. Then surprise him on his birthday with a peek at his new- found affluence. A Canada Permanent Special Savings Account isa great way to save. Higher interest and a deposit book of his very own. Set a 129 Kent Street, 892-2417 Donald Stanhope, MANAGER . Savings example for all your children. Canada Permanent has two types of high interest accounts— Regular for chequing and Special for savings. Canada Permanent is Canada’s largest trust and mortgage complex. Established 1855— Federally incorporated and supervised, , Do it the Permanent way. CANADA ruven SAVINGS * TRUST SERVICES » MORTGAGES Have a vacation that’s different. Britain and Europe will be _ free of summer tourists and you'll see*both as they really are after the crowds have gone home.. In addition to renewing family ties, you'll be able to catch new theatre seasons and, because distances are so short, you can hop across to the Continent and ski the most famous slopes in the world. If you like you can explore fascinating Eastern Europe, or run away to sea and Cruise the Mediterranea. Go on, indulge yourself...take a tour! A winter tour fs a peaceful tour; it gives you time to look and learn, steep yourself in the atmosphere and culture of countries already ancient before. Canada was born, Ask about tour IT-ACP-7 to Head home for Britain and Furope this winter! Air Canada offers you a twice-weekly service from Halifax to If you have family ties in Britain, there are people who are longing to see you. They've never given up Hope that you'll come home on a visit someday. Go on over with Air Canada and see them, this winter. After all, winter is the cosy, hello-there sort of time to visit with the family, drop in on friends and relations. They're waiting for you,/so let your homing instinct take over. You'll be making people who matter, so happy. Glasgow and London. France, Spain and Morocco. You'll fly Air Canada to Paris where the tour begins, and return via Lisbon with Canadian Pacific Airlines. Travel and accommodation, just You'll save money, too! Air Canada is continuing the low, low 14-21 day summer Economy Excursion return fares all winter long. This winter Air Canada offers two weekly flights to Glasgow and: on to: London — the gateway to all Europe. One of these flights is Halifax's own service, originating and ter- minating in Halifax. Check-with your travel agent — he’s your specialist in trips home to Britain and Europe. Ask him about Air Canada’s “Fly Now — Pay Later” plan, including air fare and tour costs, Will this be the year you go home? ; 14-21 day Economy Excursion return fares: MONC TON - LONDON $299; MONCTON - GLASGOW $267 ewe years. Funeral was held from} HALIFAX (CP) ><. Benjamin A. E. Long Memorial Chapel, |Gaudet, 65, of Alberton, P.E.1., North» Cambridge. on Sept: 12. /was brought here by RCAF He- 1966.. Rev. William MacDuffie |licopter late Monday to under- officiating. Interment took'place|go surgery for an . undeter- at. Puritan: »Lawn Memorial |mined illness. No other details Park, Peabody, Masa. lwere available, ’ ~ Canada Permanent Trust Company 825 Market St« Summerside THE LINKLETTER TRAVEL AGENCY Phone 436-3030 Also Open Friday Evening and Saturday Morning. —