bial shang if It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It © VOL. LXXVII. NO. 254 Aptorine as Second Ottawa, end CITY JOB GOES TO SCHURMANS High School Construction Due To Start Next Week | Construction of Charlottetown's| time, will have 32 academic new prestige high school will| classrooms. Prior Class ter p were \office administration space for to its first|the School Board as well as the) start the first of next week, Dr.' year of operation thé top high\city school administration. R, Gordon Lea, chairman of the School Board, announced Inst night, Dr. Lea stated he was making the announcement regarding ‘the | versity. pftwarding of the contract after a| In addition to the classrooms ting with Acting Mayor Wil-|the new school will have all the ee R. MacNeill and members |laboratory facilities for modern City Council finance commit. | high school teaching require- school grades Prince of Wales College, which, starting the 1966 fall term, will tee. He said the general con-|ments. It will algo contain a tract had been awarded to M.|high school size ‘ gymnasium, hool \library, music and guidance F. Schurman Co. and the would cost $1,043,000: He added rooms as well as a special lec- the mechanical trades contract | tute laboratory room for team for heating and had teaching. been awarded to Douglas Bros. The plans, as announced ear- a Jones, Charlottetown. lier by Dr. Lea call for construc- * No announcement was made tion of the school in the form of by Dr. Lea regarding the sub- 2" inter-related cross thus eli- trades contracts which are part ™inating long corridors and at of the general contract of the the same time providing fast Schurman Company. ;movement from classrooms. in one section to those in another. HOPEFUL OF AID The building will:also contain In connection with the cost. of were available at|UP TO 36 ON STAFF The teaching staff of the new school will number between 25 become a degree-granting uni- and 30 and the members of it! are expected to be of the highest jacademic standing. the Board ‘ean obtain. Dr. Kenneth Parker, superin- tendent of :city schools, said at) jthat time the new school would make provision for two optional \jcourses for girls, in home econo- jmics and-commerce. He stated the decision to include the lat- iter was sparked by the need of business houses for a high qual- jity office help and as a result the course Would not be an or-. dinary business training course. Instead applicants will be care- fully screened and only top qual- ity students accepted and then only from students who had at east completed Grade 11. the building the School Board chairman said this body had re- cently met with the provincial government seeking assistance Forgetfulness Of Pearson + In the financing and wad reeev- Ie Sid “Becoming Chronic” As a result he was hopeful of aid | being forthcoming. ‘We will also) By BEN WARD take advantage of the Municipal, MONCTON (CP) — Conserva- Loan Fund in our planning’, he' tive Leader Diefenbaker told a said and noted though this Fund’ press conference ‘here Friday pigs Hla eee 3 oun that Prime Minister Pearson’s ae tiful: i becomi _ would have been able to obtain, nee a” “a . ; ~ + (Essay org jt on ete He was commenting on Mr. quirements. © 7" Pearson's denial of a remark Transla “of vear the prime thinister was reparted to year eng OPM “cist have made in Toronto that . } is believed that zation |@nother election would be called and maintenance costs will add Within 18 months if the Liberals approproximately $250,000 a do not win a majority Nov. 8. year to the city budget. Mr. Diefenbaker said the Tor- The new high school,, provid- onto statement was a ‘‘contemp- ing Grades 11 and 12 education | tuous disregard of the principles fer city children for the first of democracy. Advance Polls “Tt is quite ununderstandable that anyone occupying the prime minister's office would make a statement such as that. “Tt is a threat counter to the principles of democracy.” | The Conservative leader, speaking to reporters at Mone- ton airport after his arrival from Charlottetown, said Mr. Pearson really shouldn't ‘/have worried about the chances of an- other election. PREDICTS WIN | “He'll have nothing to do with {making that decision, because ithe Conservatives are going to form the next government.” | Earlier in the day, Mr. Dief- jenbaker and his wife spent six} hours touring Kings riding on the eastern end of Prince Ed- |ward Island. | | New Wasurs | JAM vir in aes WDB. cle 5 he Guardian | . some” - Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1965. ity, East . % ao where copper conductors melt- subsequeat damage to adjoin- g over nor 40a SEVEN CENTS senate stern Distri it By Power Black Cause Sought By Line Crews eastern sections of Prince Ed- rward Island were without elec- trical power for some time Fri- day afternoon and night as the "| \Maritime Electric Company ex- perienced a major interruption at their generating etation. The trouble affected all main points on the 4,000-volt system. The three lines involved were the city line, the rural line which included Bunbury, South- port and Cherry Valley; and the transmission line through Georgetown, Montague and Sou- ris. A small portion of Charlotte- town and all lines west were not | affected. the exception of St. Peters Road as far east as St. Peters were affected when the circuit break- jers at the plant in Charlottetown were damaged, it was an- nounced by R.W. Smith, gener- jal manager of Maritime Elec- {tric. \BIT AT 3.26 | The Charlottetown area was \without electricity for approxi- |mately four and a half hours. |The interruption took place at |3.26 and everything was out un-! \¢il eight o'clock. Some sections of ithe city got power a bit earlier. Other parts of the Island east lof Charlottetown, which also joperate on the 4,000-volt system lwere without power for most of All areas in Kings County with! 4 ithe evening as workmen worked’ WEATHER in afternoon; winds Cloudyin southwest 25. Low-high 26 and 4, Sunday: mostly sunny and warm. 16 PAGES SAA LASER | eontact | At the time | squalls were | in some areas. | pointing he | tracing \ : | BUSINESS AFFECTED * jovertime in an attempt to re-. »To Open Today ; eal engineer, looks oyer dam-. .ed under heat. The _ ing equipment on the 4,900-volt | a brought in from 13,000-volt line he. AGP) ~.Canadianm the On Rhodesia: < aed parts. eipeuit 2. wets. damnay? 7 em Ne cone yes mens tole istore electricity. Hwas consid: from the western section of the. |S OTTAWAN MEP) . the two-day advance.poll. +. : 4 Te : os 8 2 -¢1 ea! x were da me ; , ; Om, Yoters start replying by ballot In the 1968 election, 85,276 4 at the: Electric plant ed which resulted in fire and juries. ARE MISSING. mot be back until some time this aan slaoealey ve cae to the politicians with the open- electars voted at advance polis,| SALISBURY (AP) — Prime; —— fmorning. | town Hospital ‘stopped when ing today of advance polis, for |This compared with the record | Minister Wilson of Britain ex- Mr. Smith said that trouble| wo. ; a Yesterday afternoon's po- (erupted in the switch gear. wer interruption interferred | with the normal. flow of | R. used themin 1962 \erted heavy pressure on Prime ar Wen ~~ 7 ; Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia | Friday. ina last-ditch effort. to the Nov. 8 federal general elec- | passengers were. lowered with- tion. py “Two circuit breakers were! P 1958. and the 11,228 of 1958 damaged which resultéd in a fire | and’ Monday from 8 ecm: to 8/MUST SIGN AFFIDAVIT ° .m. local standard time. Regu- |. Any Canadian citien or Brit- ar polis close. an hour. earlier ish subject who is 21 years of Noy. 8 but open at the same |4&¢-and has been a resident of | eaweel the white Rhodesian |government from grabbing in- dependence. , : | Informants said’ Wilson even Cattle Barns Are Jammed At Maritime Winter Fair fews from Canadian Press wires at The Guardian of- fice. Teletypes did not oper- ate from 3.26 until power jand subsequent damage to ad- |Jacent equipment on the entire, 4,000-volt system,” he added. NO ONE INJURED time. |Canada since Sept. 8, 1964—one indicated the British govern was restored at 8. ‘ invari: Sanches Any of the ‘country’s ‘ett |762r, before the issue of the ment might suspend Rhodesia’s é As a consequence, the us- aig wee ba Ok ae oe Gection wril:-snay pote early by constitution, peaking te. erase. By NEH. MATHESON here took every firize at the big |Shorthorn breeder, has a loading! ual stock market tables and : mated. 10.200.000 eligible voters | who -expect--to-—he--absent- from aeeske: — okie ‘election day. But he must be on tage of the advance poll. the voters list, Monday also is the start of; The open-door policy on ad- signing an affidavit saying he expects to hei away from home the six-day armed services vote, vance polls has been in effect) restrictions | taken ahead of time each elec- since 1960 when tion so as to allow time for bal- Were removed from the Canada loting by servicemen scattered \Elections Act. Before that only around the world. commercial travellers, Upwards of 80,000-civilian vot-|men and @ few other groups fisher- | minantly-Negro Central African ‘country under direct British ad- | racial | minstration until the iproblem is adjusted to meet London's approval. Wilson is s¢heduled to leave for home today: The white Rho- \desians feared that once he is gone the British would fly in a lot of administrators and seek ‘to take control from Smith's | government. f t ers ate expected to cast ballots ‘had the right to vote early. — sal Se Sees, Rea & et PAE LY PG SF meorermy spe ee ‘tered in the big steer show and ~ HALIFAX. -—--Phe. -big --cattle- barn here is jammed with some of the finest animals in the Can- adian cattle world. In addition to the cream of the Maritime provinces there are four Ontar- jo herds. Two of there are Angus cattle from some of the best known herds in the country. E.P. Tay- lor of Winfield Farms, Toronto — he’s the man who owned Nor- thern Dancer, Canada’s first Jate Frank Ryan have steers en- sale this afternoon and evening. Alex Lamond, fair vice presi- dent tells me that the Taylor Ottawa Gov't Has Surplus ‘tige item and they'll be out to Stories__were not for this edition. €algary-show.-They-are-tremen--/ ramp .—. and -also..every__pound.. available dous cattle, and could well re- of feed. Then they put the top peat the performance here. The deck back again, loaded the cat-| thot you couldn't go near it until dt cooled,’ said the - manager who added no one was near it at the time and sunbsequently no Kilreen herd is also strong, tle, then the feed and arrived in| though they don’t quite measure | ‘Continued on page 3, col. 3) | up to the Windfield Farms out- fit whose senior herd sire was 1964 American -faturity grand champion. aS STEER SHOW TODAY The big event today is the steer. show-! —are- 28 antl Pearson Runs ‘Into Heckling VANCCUVER (CP) — Prime inister Pearson. ran into stu- deni heckling at the University UF Campaign Report Given epee 28 te a youth ran off with the sod he has & top steer, so have a num- || ber of others. This is an event the big breeders covet as a pres- + \sods to cries of “keep going.” A About 4,000 of UBC's 16000 -|students turned out to hear Mr. *|Pearson during ‘their. lunchtime :|break from classes. le } take the big title. Mack Dixon; Clyde River had the reserve grand champion F4% last year. And that brings up a/@ story. Fulton and Mack had aig spot of unusual trouble on their ) way to Halifax Wednesday night |7 They tricked the animals ‘with one was injured.” ‘The fire itself was extin- guished quickly with carbon dioxide,”’ he said. z The main busbars (conduct- £ of British Columbia Friday and! | Ors) on the switchboard melted. These copper bars are used to carry large current in the in- sulating system. The insulators which were not are a number of things which could have ‘caus¢ed’the disriup- tion. Top possibilities. were that snow may have built-up on a main line or a piece of metal Alaska H Explosion | AMCHITKA, Alaska (AP)—As 80,000-ton thermonuclear device was exploded 2,300 feet under- | ground on Amchitka Island at /10 a.m. BST (6 p.m. ADT) Fri- |day in an experiment. to help 5 (3 | ; Ps ? ; distinguish nuclear bl t . . Kentucky Derby winner — and on Oe ae re ‘was supposed to turn to mark) broken had to be cleaned, those Leatabal earthquakes, asts from many other top Canadian enter- oe aie > ea ablat was | 729? |the start of construction of a| that were damaged had to be! The blast, four times more prises. Also from Ontario is the ~ by the i seo | 4 |eampus building. replaced. | powerful than the atomic bombs Kilreen Farms Angus herd y ene a =| Mr. Pearson-didn't seem fazed LOOK FOR SOURCE ;of the Second World War, was from Ottawa. It is owned by es- dersané. totale s Sout _ \by either occurrence. He mainly Three working crews were on | set off from -a control station state of the late Frank Ryan, and ‘Rewer ‘are <9 1 \% | |fgnored the hecklers — if, in the job last night trying to|seven miles from the capped who developed an Ottawa radio y bs the chow. IE ™ \fact, he could hear them in the locate the source of trouble, | hole. It had been delayed since station. Both Taylors Windfield |” > i5 Vactisnaia Vork Iso |f _ jeavernous university gymna- which had not been pin-pointed.| Wednesday by unfavorable: Farms herd and the herd of the 8 ae Se ‘|sium—and turned two fresh Officials at:the plant said there | weather. ; Preliminary results of blast awaited aerial inspection. It was not expected to break through the heavy plug of sand and concrete. {Ancient Cantebury Cathedral aS the ~ Sm , | Lowell Hogg, Charlottetown an OTTAWA (CP)—The federal | experienced: ‘livestock trucker. | ne | treasury ended the first half of| They had about -25 animals in, Ree g | os ® the current fiscal year Sept. 30 | the big truck on the regular a | eg. with a surplus of revenues over | floor. Atove that a top deck had les * foo expenditures amounting to| been built to accommodate about ae a) yx! Me $502,500,000, it was announced ot ee of spay top deck CRE ape = Te | Friday. : 4 8 coming. a ° 2s rt CANTERBURY, England scrapings of the paint away for couneil of ehurches at A .| . This compared with a surplus eel gh os to slip down on top ‘__|(AP)—Ancient Canterbury Ca- tests, others mingled with shop- Tuesday, Dr Rameey san tae of $396,900,000 a year earlier at/ of the cattle. The $282,426 objective in thi8 ¢hedral was desecrated with red pers in the busy streets of Cant- if the British government were the mid-point in the 1964-65 fis-|. So the lads stopped in a John year's United Fund campaign land blue paint Friday in furious erbury, watching for persons to use force if the white Rho- Decent “a treasury ended | Carter's yard in Aulac, New was 69 per cent subscribed 1aSt ipeaction to the archbishop's with any sign of ‘red or blue idesian government declared ‘n- year a budgetary def- [Brunswick where they unloaded night, officials announced. Sub-istatement that force might be paint on tlothes or hands. Still depence, “then as Christians. we a every animal — John a noted scriptions had reached $192,656. | justifiable in Rhodesia. . other pdlice took photograph: of have to say that it will be right ; : Summerside had 78 per cent, |" «11 jooks like the work of a the damage and sought finger- to use force to that end.” Z > s. |Charlottetown 69 per cent and | madman." said_-one cathedral prints. ; jthe regional high schodls aS 4 | gericiat, Dr. Michael Ramsey, Arch. RAISE PROTESTS jwhole 61 per cent, although 4) The worg “peace” was-daubed- bishop_of Canterbury. .and_pri- _ That _ statement raised pro. - y number of school areas had ,, huge red letters across a $400 mate of the Church of England, test in Rhodesia and in Eng- ; J ; jreached or exceeded their ob- jtapestry! behind the high altar. was in London at Lambeth Pal- land, including some from |Jectives. | St. Augustine’s stone chair. on ace. his official residence. A church groups. st Oa, . | Following are the details for | which many of Canterbury's 100 spokesman said: . A spokesman for Dr. Ramsey ait regional high school districts: |archbishops have been en- ‘‘Such vandalism is clearly .5iq the archbishop would zo to ’ i ot throned over the centuries. was the work of thoughtless hooli- Canterbury. today.te atiend-hie - : ota ‘Quota Teported badly damaged. Leg- gans which can serve no useful’ gincesan conference. He is due | District co eo lerid says this cathedral treasure purpore.”’ ... to preach in a small village JOSEPH. (CP) i et 2600 36 dates back to the 13th century In @ speech before the British church near Canterbury Sunday ST. JOSEPH, N.B. (CP)—|dered a new trial after two stays rm o_o a or more. : and unlikely to appear at any Reginald John Colpitts, 20, of of execution were granted it Central Que ’ The nearby tomb of Edward ica a Moncton was sentenced Friday opened last Monday in this com- Ch'town Rural 16,726 63 the Black Pri a t ; INSIDE TODAY eee ee vee : to be hanged J , Englewood 2,600 = 101 = ince, 14th-century Canterbury, the archbishop lives ig an. 19 for the munity about 16 miles east of Englewo 160 50 warrior son of King Edward III, in the old palace. within the y capital murder of penitentiary Moncton. Evangeline Son 0 |was sprayed in blue paint. A Classified ............ 14,15 high-walled cathedral enclosure, P ’ ce” J. Masterton, also "lao Gc ott Gs i. ae ne 100 eae — was streaked with WE ia. 15 He is there most weekends. / ial rr GAI Colpitts was tried and con-jday, the jury was excluded | Miscouche 1,100 3 e ce BR eg : S Most of the damage took place EXTRA HOUR NED TONIGHT victed last year on the charge from the courtroom for the sec- Montague 10,500 31 |CLOsED CHURCH ie a " in the cathedral’s Trinity chapel, of fatally stabbing 49-year-old ond time in the five-day ses-| Morell 2,400 55 | Cathedral @fficials discovered | Woesdata GEG oe ene 6 The vandals obviously had a For the annual prow! of the time residents will Jose that young witch, Marilao Graves, |Masterton Sept. 28, 1964 in the sions while admissability of a. O'Leary 3,400 48 the damage immediately after fitoriais ............ 4 800d knowledge of cathedral witches, goblins and other extra hour of daylight that Charlottetown here indicates irecreation yard of the federal note was discussed. | Souris 5,500 “@ * \an early - morning ¢ommunion — cimmerside ............ 3 ‘routine. They chose a moment " they have enjoyed: throughout the figure on the clock to prison at Dorchester. N.B. | The note, allegedly written by Stella Maris 1,350 190 service, held in a crypt below Kin Queens ‘City xe ag 3 when few officials or pilgrims haunting spectres the witching the summer months. On’ this which the hands must be mov- | He was sentenced to be Colpitts tq a fellow inmate. was | Tignish 1,60 3 | They called police and closed) pi Coumy 2 were in the building and most hour of midnight will com night daylight saving time of- ed back to bring everybody |hanged last March 3, but the introduced by the Crown as it Tyne Valley 1,600 4 \the building to visitors ee clergy were at the half-hour twice tonight and at the same ficially comes to an end. The back on standard time, — ‘Supreme Court ef Canada or- concluded its cace | TOTAL 4&3,77% 61 While some detectives took early communion service. © » 5 . me i ‘ i Ee A la aaa tee A ate ot